@Endofwar - you are trying to put other people in so many “us” vs “them” categories, and I think it pushes people away a bit.
Mentioning “Christian” to most of my LGBTQ friends doesn’t lead them to shut down with me. Why? *They know me as a person first.* Not a category or a label. Vice versa.
It’s actually prohibited by law in the US for therapists to refuse help based on race, color, gender, religion... etc. As a Christian myself (although I’m *very* reluctant to use that term for other reasons) I have been to therapists of various religious worldviews and sexual orientations. None of them limited or refused help because I used the word Christian. I had a lesbian therapist who knew of my faith and we talked about it. She didn’t share my faith and she also did not limit her help in any way. At all. She was one of the most helpful therapists I’ve seen. And frankly, the therapists who have happened to also be Christian have provided the least help, but it didn’t have to do with faith. They simply didn’t have the training to deal with trauma. Again, it’s been about symptoms and behavior. Not religion and sexual orientation.
Bringing this back to politics more directly - let’s consider the Austin Texas bombing and labeling. The white perp was called “troubled.” Implying they were in need of help.
Many people pointed out that if he had been black or middle eastern, they would have been immediately labeled as a terrorist. The Austin chief of police eventually realized his error, and labeled the perp a domestic terrorist.
If Cruz had been African American, there isn’t a greater chance he would have been better helped. There is a greater chance he would have been shot during one of his many interactions with police.
Racism and discrimination is real. But in the US it’s not usually against Christians and white kids, and not nearly to the same scale. Mentioning he was being bullied by a black kid is actually frankly more likely to get help. Not less. It also goes wayyyy too far to imply he became a murderer because he was bullied by a black kid or suffered reverse racism.
It would be fair to say that Americans as a culture do need to learn to listen to each other more and shut down less.
I don’t think you are experiencing people shutting down because you use terms like Christian and etc. I think it’s because you use labels to categorize and separate others as us vs them. Rather than to describe yourself. For example, if you are describing yourself as being gay, that’s one thing. But when you are pointing out the sexuality of others, and doing so as if it lessens the value of their viewpoints, that’s totally different. That is what creates divides between people. You don’t want people to reject your viewpoint because you could be labeled by some as conservative. But yet you are pushing away viewpoints of others because they could be labeled as gay and etc. You are doing what I don’t think you want people to do to you.
@EveHarrington - I agree. Plus, why is his college acceptance status tweet worthy in the first place? Why is it news? Is there really not bigger news in the world? Why tweet about it negatively too? Kudos to the one political commentator and to Hobbs for apologizing. Hope they all move on...