Ok. I'm breaking my 'last post on this issue' post.
Some dumb comments have been made for me not to be able to ignore them.
1. Whoever said 'straight guys don't refer to themselves as straight-acting, so why should SA's?'. The reason is, because its a GAY term. It'd pretty stupid for a straight guy to be identifying himself with a term that in part says, 'i'm gay'. What a dumb-ass comment.
2. This leads me to the repeated assumptions that SA guys must be insecure, or partially closeted. Whilst this may very well be true of some such guys, it doesn't stand up to scrutiny. You can argue all the 'in my experiences...' all you want, but there are other people with just as valid 'other' experiences. For example, i came out to friends when i was 18, and to my family when i was 21. At the time i was 18, i knew a guy who was 24. There was no way that you wouldn't at least suspect his sexuality as soon as you spent a few moments talking to him, yet was he out of the closet?? Only to his friends.
Just because SA guys may not talk about their sexuality to all and sundry, doesn't mean they aren't out. My friends, my family, my workmates, some acquaintances, and some random people who've seen my profile on Facebook all know i'm gay. They are the people that it matters to me to know. I don't wear a rainbow bracelet, that don't make me or any other SA guy automatically in some kind of self-exclusion zone from being the people we are.
3. This needs re-iterating unfortunately, its straight-acting, NOT acting straight.
4. If you accept at a base level, that all men are masculine, by virtue of their gender identity alone. Anyone who uses the term 'femme', are identifying themselves as having much more feminine qualities, in perhaps appearance as well as mannerisms, whereas 'camp' would potentially identify a masculine looking guy, but with feminine behavioral traits. A 'butch' guy is identifying himself as being ultra-masculine. SA guys are identifying themselves as being an average joe in terms of masculinity. In this sense, since the average joe of any male is typically heterosexual, it is not unsurprising that the term 'straight-acting' has developed to describe a man who has typical levels of masculinity but who is otherwise gay. Masculine can be considered to suffice in identifying non-feminine, but if we are going to use terms to clarify what level our masculinity we are, just like femme guys do, its obscure to say masculine, because as men, that's to be assumed. Does masculine mean you're not feminine, or does it mean you happen to like leather a lot, and have a freddy mercury tache? It clarifies only one point.