In all instances of the definition, I do not see your idea of this community. We do not all live together, we don't share a common location, we don't have a common history, we don't have a common social, economic and political interest,...I simply don't see your definition of community up there.
"If you're gay, ipso facto you're a member of the community."
To reuse an old example, under Hitler, if you grew up in Germany, you were ipso facto part of the Hitler Youth.
 
See that's my problem, I don't like people telling me what I am a part of, I take care of those decisions for my own person, thank you.
		
		
	 
First of all, I don't respect 
any online dictionary anymore.  Bring me the OED and we'll discuss definitions, but I think you and I both know 
what we're talking about without resorting to Messrs Mirram & Webster.
 
Second of all, why are you so 
defensive about this subject, trydegrau?  What harm does it do you to admit to being part of a community of which you are clearly a part?  What is 
taken from you when I call you part of the gay community because you are gay?  You're 
here, after all, participating in an online community of gays and gay-friendly bisexuals and straights.  Why can't you 
be a part of it?
 
Your simile of all Third-Reich Germans belonging to the Hitler Youth as the same as all gays belonging to the gay community is a false simile, and the fallacy is contained in the words used: all Germans belong to the 
German community, but only if they 
participate in the Hitler Youth are they Hitler Youth.  Now, of course, the overwhelming majority of young Germans during the Third Reich 
did belong to the Hitler Youth because it 
was compulsory, and very few wished to rock the boat to such an extent as to defy the Nazis and get themselves and their families sent to a concentration camp.  They 
chose to comply with compulsory participation.
 
Nevertheless, Germans cannot claim to 
no longer be part of the German community just because it doesn't suit them.  A person born in Germany of German parents and raised in Germany speaking the German language and eating German food in German schools cannot stop being German, not ever; he can move to Australia, speak Bantu, practice Buddhism, eat Thai food and wear a Sari, but he's still a German: his Germanity (if I may coin a word) is an inescapable part of who he is.
 
In the instance of Gay, you cannot stop being gay, you cannot completely divorce yourself from the gay community because it is who you are.  And unless you feel that you chose homosexuality at some time in later life, it 
is one of the communities of your origin... just as if you were adopted, you are still a genetic part of the family of your origin 
as well as the family of your upbringing.  You can choose to not participate in the family of your origin, but it has nevertheless shaped who you are.
 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			You want to call me a deserter or a sideliner, fine, if that makes ya'll feel better. I know that I am my own person, with freedom of association.
"But you're one of us, nevertheless." You are gay and I am gay, that's all we have in common, I don't have to like or dislike you.
		
		
	 
I did not cally 
you a deserter or a sideliner; I merely pointed out that there are those within the community who are such.  People who contribute nothing to the community are leeches, but I do not claim to know whether or not you contribute to your community.  All I know about you is what I've read of your opinions here, and that's not enough to judge on (if I were inclined to judge, which I am not).  
 
However, I do say you are part of this community whether you like it or not.  Your sexuality, no matter how much you insist it's only a 
small part of your whole person, has shaped who you are.  The desire I see in your posts to dissociate from this part of yourself disturbs me, it makes me think that maybe you're unhappy with yourself.  And I don't like to see my fellow creatures unhappy, that's why I argue with you on this point.  I don't presume to 
know you, I am merely reacting to what I 
do know of you.  I'm perfectly willing to be wrong.
 
Finally, just because you're part of a community does not mean that you have to agree with, or even like, everyone else in that community.  To return to the simile of families, I don't agree with my Grandmother's political or religious beliefs, but I love her anyway and I contribute to her well-being, just as she contributes to mine... because we belong to the Manners Family, which is a community of people with one thing in common, plus some shared history and a specific proximity of living in the same house.  
 
And there are parts of my family with whom I 
would prefer to not be associated.  I strongly dislike my mother, I'm not very fond of some of my cousins, and I have an aunt that I actively loathe.  But I cannot say that I am no longer 
part of that family.  I'm not an 
active part of that side of my family, I do not contribute to their well-being nor they to mine; nevertheless I am related to them and always will be, they have shaped me and left their mark on me, just as I have shaped and marked them.
 
In the gay community, there are whole 
gangs of people I don't like or with whom I disagree... Log Cabin Republicans, ACTUP, barebackers, snotty club-queens, whatever.  I certainly never signed anything 
promising to be buddies with everyone in the community.  But that doesn't make either me or them any less part of the gay community.  We are all gay, we are all part of the gay community.  That's all there is to it.
 
If you do not wish to be an 
active member in the gay community, you needn't be.  But if you take advantage of some of the benefits of a community (legal rights, for instance, or group sex) without contributing something to that community, yes I will call you a leech.  And though I can't be bothered to look, I'm sure Mirram & Webster would back me up.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			So what you are all saying (correct me if I'm wrong) is that, being gay = compulsory membership with the gay community = expected to contribute something.
What is this, gay fascism?
By your example, if I align myself with any given political party, it makes me a lifetime supporter, with an expectation to contribute to the party ... This is totally illogical.
		
		
	 
Well, you're wrong.  I did not say that "being gay = 
compulsory membership with the gay community"... what I said was being gay = membership with the gay community."  It's not compulsory, it just 
is.  Not all dogs are brown dogs, but all dogs are part of the 
genus canis; not all gays are alike, except in that they're all gay.  That's what the gay community is, it exists because it exists, and if you're not an active part of that community, what are you?
 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			I guess I should repeat myself...regardless of how other people see things, I decide for my own free person what groups and communities I am, and am not, part of.
		
		
	 
Did I say you have to join a club, pay dues, wear a uniform?  Did I say you have to toe the party line, that you have to believe as I believe, that you have to put in X number of hours in community service?  No, I said no such thing and would never suggest it.  
That is fascism.  
 
But did you choose to be born into your family?  Or your country?  And if you leave your family or country, do you 
cease to be part of it?  Or do you merely cease to be an 
active part in it?  
 
Even if you don't wish to be, you 
are part of the gay community, just as you are part of the community of your family, of your nation, of the species 
homo sapiens... whether you like it or not.  We can agree to disagree on the dictionary definition of community, but by my definition (and Mirram & Webster's, defs. 1c, d, and g) you're in it with us, you're part of this community just because you're gay.
 
You are what you are, you are what you were, and you are what you will be... all at once, no one thing gets replaced by another, no one piece is bigger or more important than the other, no one piece can exist without the other.