NotHardUp1
What? Me? Really?
Before I address the title, I have to admit I'm not dating and not expecting to partner, but may try again after I leave Alabama.
But, as I lay here reading JUB, CBS Saturday Morning is on in the background, and an eHarmony commercial popped up with a gay couple on a bike or scooter and the pitch of "date someone who gets you," or something close to that.
It caught my attention because I had thougth eHarmony didn't match gays, although I do have some gnawing sensation that I'd seen something in print before that made me wonder if they had changed. So, I looked online and read that they did not before 2019. At the beginning, they didn't at all allow gays access, but beginning in 2009, amid multiple lawsuits alleging discrimination, they launch a [separate but equal] site named Compatible Partners. There was a lot of circumlocution and denial as they settled their lawsuits. They also suffered financially.
Now, they appear to be out and proud in the marketing. It makes me wonder what the LGBTQ predominant attitude toward corporations that "repent." I mean, ultimately all corporations were anti-gay just decades ago, so not being eager to embrace equality was a charge that all of them would be guilty of. But, ya gotta buy toothpaste.
And, I understand the appeal to "support gay-owned businesses" and allies, but I also understand that sounds exactly like the rationalizations I hear from people wanting to support Christian-owned businesses, or the very long-ignored prejudice of Jewish alliances and/or kosher establishments, or in some areas, Catholic or Mormon closed ranks. I freely confess that if a business uses an overtly Christian or Hebrew "virtuous" business name, I don't use them, as it feels too much like exploiting religion for gain. And, truth be known, I'm no more likely to buy from a business that goes overboard to look gay friendly.
I'm an advocate of businesses being businesses, not cartels or self-selecting social organizations. If any patron gets treated unfairly or rudely because of a prejudice of the business or its owner or employee, then I'm all for that being publicized and letting the chips fall where they may. But I don't want to see commerce be one more segregation tool in a society increasingly polarized.
All that said, my feelings are not absolute. I'm all for Mike Lindell getting locked in a basement pit somewhere and not being fed.
But, as I lay here reading JUB, CBS Saturday Morning is on in the background, and an eHarmony commercial popped up with a gay couple on a bike or scooter and the pitch of "date someone who gets you," or something close to that.
It caught my attention because I had thougth eHarmony didn't match gays, although I do have some gnawing sensation that I'd seen something in print before that made me wonder if they had changed. So, I looked online and read that they did not before 2019. At the beginning, they didn't at all allow gays access, but beginning in 2009, amid multiple lawsuits alleging discrimination, they launch a [separate but equal] site named Compatible Partners. There was a lot of circumlocution and denial as they settled their lawsuits. They also suffered financially.
Now, they appear to be out and proud in the marketing. It makes me wonder what the LGBTQ predominant attitude toward corporations that "repent." I mean, ultimately all corporations were anti-gay just decades ago, so not being eager to embrace equality was a charge that all of them would be guilty of. But, ya gotta buy toothpaste.
And, I understand the appeal to "support gay-owned businesses" and allies, but I also understand that sounds exactly like the rationalizations I hear from people wanting to support Christian-owned businesses, or the very long-ignored prejudice of Jewish alliances and/or kosher establishments, or in some areas, Catholic or Mormon closed ranks. I freely confess that if a business uses an overtly Christian or Hebrew "virtuous" business name, I don't use them, as it feels too much like exploiting religion for gain. And, truth be known, I'm no more likely to buy from a business that goes overboard to look gay friendly.
I'm an advocate of businesses being businesses, not cartels or self-selecting social organizations. If any patron gets treated unfairly or rudely because of a prejudice of the business or its owner or employee, then I'm all for that being publicized and letting the chips fall where they may. But I don't want to see commerce be one more segregation tool in a society increasingly polarized.
All that said, my feelings are not absolute. I'm all for Mike Lindell getting locked in a basement pit somewhere and not being fed.


