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 Originally Posted by Mr.Banana
You're moving the goalpost now.
A minute ago you gave an off the wall example about a left-handed person having to deal with people snickering behind his back. Well short, ugly, bald, old, and bespectacled people probably deal with that same thing. But why is that your only definition of "privilege"?
or why does it have to involve the denial of service?
bald men can get jobs. But over their lifetimes, on average, they'll make less than men with hair. Same goes for women with small breasts. or fat people. You can't pinpoint one specific event of discrimination. But it clearly exists.
One of us is not following the conversation. The left-handed example was an analogy to being gay, something you are which you have no control over. Indeed there are many things people get discriminated over. If one has never personally experienced that, they may not recognize it when it happens to others, or at least not fully understand how it feels. Hence the question about your experiences of discrimination. The denial of service part was due to the subject we were having, about gays being refused service, whether cakes or church ceremonies. Yes, there are instances or institutional discrimination which are far more subtle, which one may never even notice, but I wasn't talking about them when gauging why you seem to lack empathy for gays.
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