Monday, February 10, 2014

Why Michael Sam being gay matters ... at least for now

In all the talk last night about Michael Sam coming out as gay, I saw this on the Twitter machine last night.
It's entirely possible he's saying "so what" because Sam's sexuality is truly irrelevant to him, and if so, great. As I replied, although I didn't get a response in return.
But I can't help but think that a lot of comments in this vein (and I saw several) were of the "DON'T MAKE ME TALK ABOUT GAY PEOPLE! SHOVED DOWN MY THROAT! AAAAAAHHHH!" variety.

I never heard of Michael Sam until late yesterday afternoon, when I realized that by then it was pointless to try and avoid Olympic spoilers and checked out my Twitter. I read that in spite of his gaudy stats at Missouri, he was a mid- to late-round prospect at best before the announcement, that he could be the classic "tweener" -- too small to play defensive end, not agile enough to play linebacker.

In a perfect world, his sexuality wouldn't matter. If a team thinks he'll help them, they'll draft him. If he's good enough to stick, he'll stick. If he's a good guy in the locker room, his teammates will respect him, even if they don't agree with how he lives his life. (Throw that many people together for that long, and there are going to be lots of disagreements about a lot of things, but things tend to work themselves out most of the time. Why should sexuality be any different?)

But we don't live in a perfect world. We live in a world where:

  • in many parts of the country, you can be fired for being gay. (I'll go with the Snopes definition and not the simple "You can be fired for being gay in 29 states.")
  • same-sex marriage is only legal in 17 states and the District of Columbia, and that has all come within the past 10 years.
  • suspending someone for homophobic remarks is compared to rolling the tanks into Tiananmen Square.
  • because it's still a topic of discussion whether Jason Collins is still unemployed because he's gay or Chris Kluwe doesn't have a job in the NFL because of his gay-right stance, even though it's not unreasonable to think there are other factors.
  • NFL personnel men can say Sam's draft stock has already gone down because presence would "chemically imbalance an NFL locker room and meeting room." Mind you, these are men who could knowingly draft players with positive drug tests or criminal arrests in the hopes that they'll get on the straight-and-narrow and the understanding they may not. Meanwhile, Michael Sam isn't going to get any more gay ... or any less gay, for that matter. He is who he is.
There is going to be a first openly gay NFL player, whether or not Sam sticks. And it will be a big deal with the attendant media circus when it happens ... but it will go away.

And there will always be people who don't like homosexuals, even if there 100 Michael Sams, just like there will always be people who don't like blacks or Hispanics or feminists or whomever.

But eventually, maybe we'll reach the day when being gay is something most people say "so what" over.

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