I think it was awful of @nytimes to publish. Triggering for me to read— not because the writer mentioned my nearly ending my life— but seeing a public person’s sexuality being discussed is upsetting.

I think the Gaylors should be ashamed of themselves. They are doing exactly what LGTBQ+ have fought against for decades now - people making assumptions about their own lives and sexuality - but they’re masking it because it’s Taylor.

I’m in the camp of anything that’s not public is just that - not public. Even if it were true (and all signs point to it not being true), then it’d be disrespectful of us to talk about it unless she made it public. Think about it, you’re going out of your way to talk about something that she explicitly has hidden from the rest of the world. That doesn’t make you a better fan, it makes you a gossip and not an ally.

/rant.

  • Slurpey@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Regardless of good or bad, right and wrong, she DECIDED to make a living by having other human listen and look at her. That was her choice. She’s very successful at it. She knew the risk, there’s nothing surprising about such a gossip or sad. That’s part of the job she CHOSE to do. If you’re a sewage worker (which I highly respect) you know you will get into shit. Same here. Different shit.

    • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.techOPM
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      6 months ago

      That’s some real nice victim blaming you got right there. “Hey everyone, she’s famous, she basically deserves it”.

      Or we can call out people being jerks when we see it - regardless of who it’s targeted at.

      I don’t care if it’s Taylor Swift or the quiet kid at school who doesn’t have any friends - making assumptions about gender or sexuality is wrong.