But at least you're here now, talking in circles as usual.
Again, I cut our trip a day short, so I didn't see anything in person intentionally. Caught some social media videos that made me think it was not a popular or crowd luring event. If anything based on some comments (not all nice) on social media, it was in probably not a great business decision.Beer Baron said:
That's all fine and dandy, but it seems the event at the ski resort was well attended and businesses were willingly participating. Does that not show that the society there has found it to be acceptable? The poster in question is free to disagree with that and go home instead, which he did.
Zobel said:
No individual has particular right to dictate to any other what is and isn't normative. That's a collective question in society.
Some of both. Lots of it is just lip service and pandering, and there's a big debate about that among LGBT people actually, about how overly commercialized it is. There are a ton of memes like this one to that effect, and there's a lot of truth in them:10andBOUNCE said:
Do you feel like all of the attention on it from across the spectrum is genuine and welcomed or just lip service so companies pander to a minority demographic? Maybe both? Or maybe it doesn't matter?
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I guess the weirdness comes to me when people act surprised that a massive shift in what is considered normal is not easily received by most people. Especially when for one month out of the year it becomes an all out cultural blitz.
I actually heard someone talking the other day to the idea that we were never designed to have the amount of information we have in today's world. The way we are all connected now all over the world. I think I kind of agree with that. We are all on information overload all the time instead of just experiencing life as it comes to us every day. Obviously there has been some great good that has come from the interconnectedness of life before technology, but it is interesting to think about how much we do have at our fingertips all the time and some of the consequences of that.Beer Baron said:
Among those who are upset with pride as a concept, I really do wonder how much pride-related content they see organically vs. second-hand from a source that shows them content they would have never otherwise seen, packaged as something they should be mad about.
Beer Baron said:
Yeah I fully agree with all of that. I was just thinking on my way home that I don't see a lot of pride month content and I'm definitely in the demographic. I do see some, and I realize I probably have a different definition of a quantity that counts as a "bombardment," but I think some on the right may see a lot more of it than I do because they frequent sources who aggregate and package it. I don't really see much secondary pride stuff.
I haven't really noticed much of a difference. On social media a few accounts I've liked posted something on June 1 like they always do. Local news has run a couple stories. There's a pride section on my Netflix, but I don't know if everyone sees that or if it's custom to me based on that creepy algorithm BS. Pretty typical for me in most years I'd say. As for downtown, you usually see more stuff down there in August because that's when all our events happen - I've heard the reason for that is so they don't have to compete with Dallas and Houston in June.Quote:
This. I was working in Austin today, and I didn't see anything overt other than the flag at the police station visible from 35. I feel the material is more subdued this year.
Zobel said:
Agree, this year is way down.