Quote:
Originally Posted by someone123
This kind of thing annoys me because I've had friends who are obviously gay or trans and got harassed for it over and over (it's pretty much the norm for any person who does not conform closely to gender/sex expectations) while one justification bigots bring up is that homosexuality is just behaviour and so if you get picked out of a crowd for being GLBT it's your own fault for acting wrong. Aside from being cruel this is obviously a complete fantasy.
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Yeah, it is annoying. And trust me, I did not like at all having to accommodate homophobia. I am nearly 100% certain the Conspicuously Gay Guy did not realize anything - it wasn't the first time we shuffled people around, we had done it plenty of times already (some of the positions have certain downsides and you don't want to force people to do the same thing all day long if you can help it) and I made sure to do it in a way that didn't raise suspicion.
Also to answer theman23, of course there's no written trace of anything - I would certainly not leave a paper trail showing I officially implemented an homophobe's complaint - which I technically did not: they didn't want to work with that guy (for reasons that were pretty obvious) so I shuffled some people around and everyone was happy afterwards, problem solved.
If some other (good) employee says "hey, you know what, I just don't really like working with [other employee]", I'm likely going to accommodate that, if I can. I don't even need a reason. In fact, not giving me a reason makes me more likely to grant the request. If you say the only reason you don't want to work with that collegue is because the collegue is black, you're making it way more difficult for me to oblige.