Posted 16 September 2006 - 05:23 AM
Affecting the minds of young ones? I hardly think that the gay and bisexual population is going to become so large as to outnumber the amount of straight people, so influence would be pretty balanced, if anything. However, I highly doubt that the gay community would have any major effect on young minds at all. Sexual orientation is a matter of attraction: gay, lesbian, bisexual, straight, and asexual are all legitimate lifestyles, but children as young as eleven years old are extremely unlikely in either gender to feel drawn towards either gender. Children will not feel attracted to anyone until they encounter puberty, at which time they can begin to discern their own orientations. Therefore, a seven-year-old thinking she is a lesbian is ridiculous. Second, what terrible detrimental effect would there be if that seven-year-old thinks she is a lesbian? The situation being highly unlikely as it is in theory besides, it is entirely unimagineable for a girl of that age to be leading a queer philandering sex life. In short, the augmentation to the communities with alternative lifestyles will have little to no effect on the youth whatsoever.
As to the original topic:
My school is a very formal, very conservative Catholic boys school as well. The rainbow crew is rightly very timid of displaying their colours for fear of being lynched, in a matter of speaking. However, the most conservative boys are developing in a world that is gradually drifting towards liberalism, at least in the westernmost parts of the globe. Whereas the most conservative amongst us could theoretically secede from society and go live off in a gated Christian community somewhere, it is simply not practical. What is more practical, on the other hand, is to learn acceptance and humility. The different lifestyles aid in that essential learning, however sparse those alternative lifestyles may be. This enlightenment is even congruous with the Catholic viewpoint, the base of which is on the liberal side of Christianity, though by no means the most open-minded. Catholicism holds an acceptance for different persuasions, so long as those persuasions do not dominate human sexual nature. To put it more bluntly, gay is OK so long as the pants stay on.
I wish there were even ore diversity in the school. Diversity also brings about a certain sense of understanding. For example, a white man who has lived a sheltered life is going to be rather upset when he is confronted by an ethnic man pleading for food. That is a fact of life. The sheltered man may still respond positively or negatively, but the step outside of his comfort zone he must make greatly disturbs him, and he feels intimidated. The situation is not the sheltered man's fault, either, for the situation could have been such that he had simply never been exposed to the proper elements to handle his encounter with more composure. The more diversity and the more cultures to which we are exposed, the more empathetic, accepting, and enlightened we can become.