Before I begin, I'd like to say that my hackles rise every time I hear the term "privilege." I think it's because I saw the word abused so horribly in college. So, if my response here seems bitter, I apologize in advance. Also, I am gay rather than bisexual, so my responses won't actually be from a bisexual perspective.
Let's face it - it's easier to be straight and live a life of heterosexuality.
Assuming one is heterosexual, yes. Many non-heterosexuals find the effort and cost of attempting to live that life unbearable, and so come out.
Now personally as a gay dude I'm finding it easier for bisexual guys to play around with gay guys (with nothing serious) and do the relationship talk with the girls (serious play).
I have not personally found that to be the case. Half the guys i have ever been involved with were bisexual, and it wasn't social pressures that caused them to eventually choose to settle down with women (in those cases when they did in fact settle down with women).
Then there's cases of life I've stumbled upon, like finding out some people I knew were bi from them having profiles on hookup sites. Of course, they passed off, and played as completely straight guys. Ironically (or appropriately) they were sporty dudes too, with quite the attitude.
I'm not even sure what you're saying here. If they're proclaiming their sexuality on their MySpace pages, then they're apparently not in the closet, and I'm not even sure what you mean when you say "they played it off."
So how do you bi guys defend yourself - because I know it's a hell of a lot easier for your family/friends/society to see you as a straight man in a straight relationship as opposed to a could-be-straight but is currently-fucking-a-guy sort of person.
That, I think is a sticky question. First off, this seems to be more a rant about people staying in the closet. If a bisexual man is out, then he deals with it by dating men or women as he likes. If he is closeted, then he sticks to dating women and having sex with men on the side
just as some closeted gay men do.
What your complaint seems to be is "If you choose to remain in the closet, you may still enjoy the sex," or even "Even if you remain in the closet, you could possibly build a life with the one you love." I suspect he former more than the latter, since finding someone who honestly loves and understands you has, in my experience, rarely been helped by letting social pressure dictate your partners.
To which I say, so what? It puts bi guys in more or less the same boat as most straight men (having sex with and building a family with women) or a closeted gay man (having sex with men and building a family with women). If this is a shot directly at heterosexual privilege. why is it aimed at bisexuals? And if it's a shot at the behavior of closet cases, why (again) is it aimed at bisexuals?
How do you deal with this power inequality?
can you explain what you mean by "power inequality"?
Either way you seem to be upsetting the gays and the straights.
Ain't that the truth? But here's a different perspective:
Bisexuals face homophobia from straight society (many of whom define gay as having same-sex activity, even if one also has opposite-sex partners) and biphobia from gay society (for many reasons discussed on this board) with not much space left in the middle.
If a bisexual man is going to have to cave to social pressure and "pick a side," why
wouldn't he choose the identity that carries the most privilege? Why trade in his old closet for an even smaller one?
And as a gay guy it makes me insecure of ever going out with a bi guy knowing that he might possibly snap and run off to an easier life where his sexuality isn't ridiculed, knowing I can't compete with a girl.
Personally, I'd consider that to be very much your problem. Who's to say you can't compete with a girl? Who's to say that he's that interested in being accepted by society? how likely is ist that your boyfriend is just going to "snap?" Is it just that easy to "go back?"
The bi men and women I have known were every bit as swift to take up the pride flag as the gay guys and lesbians I've known.
Maybe you're not giving bisexual men enough credit?
If leading an outwardly straight life is so preferable, why did you ever come out? You could do the same things - lead a "straight" lifestyle. build a relationship and possibly a family with a girl you probably don't love, and have sex with no strings attached with men in secret. Does biexuality really provide
that big an advantage to this plan?
My but I'm inquisitive tonight.