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So, this is my answer, including stuff I've seen other people get consistently wrong:
1) On the whole GLBT people look and act just like straight people, there's no such thing as reliable "gaydar"(**). Don't freak out when a "normal" person turns out to be GLBT (especially T) or make assumptions about a "gay acting" person.
1a)Straight is not the default, don't just assume any "normal acting" person is interested in people of the opposite sex and not in those of the same sex (or that those distinctions even apply). No, not even if they have/had a partner of the opposite sex.
1b)Don't freak out if people don't assume you're straight. They're just covering all bases, not "accusing" you of being lesbian or gay.
2)Asexuals exist. They are not going to grow out of it. They are not secretly gay. They don't need to "try it and see".
3) Straight people do not get to "reclaim" "gay"/"fag" etc as insults/negative adjectives etc. Not even if the context has nothing to do with sexuality.
4) Intersex and trans* people exist and have feelings. It doesn't suddenly become ok to make fun of them if you use words like "hermaphrodite" and "shemale".
5) Sexuality and identity are complicated and a matter of personal choice. You don't get to say "She had a boyfriend, she's not a lesbian" or "He said that guy is cute, he's not an asexual".
5b) These things also change. Someone can be enthusiastically straight, and then become gay/lesbian, and then identify as a pansexual etc, and not be "lying".
6) GLBT doesn't begin to cover it. (I'm not 100% up on all the varieties of sexuality myself, I must admit)
7) (After reading comments on that post) Sexuality is not actually just about sex. As with straight people, it's all mixed up with love and companionship and all that stuff in a sometimes very complicated way.
So what do you guys think?
EDIT: I'm not going to correct this post since I'd be rewriting it forever and I think it acts an interesting snapshot into the brain of a well meaning but somewhat clueless straight person. But it's definitely flawed, and there's lots of important additions and discussion in the comments.
(*)to keep answers private, she said it was ok to mention it existed
(**)Well, not for straight people, anyway :)
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I grew up being aware that some people "Were just born" with attractions to the same gender, or "in the wrong body"(*), I don't remember ever not being actively against homophobia and transphobia as I perceived them. (Although I didn't think of them as related until I was a lot older)
But it's only when I got to uni that I encountered the idea of polyamory etc as legitimate lifestyles and sexualities rather than unhealthy deviance, brief experimentation, or philosophic/religious etc choice. I'm still at a much earlier stage of gaining understanding on these issues so I tend to think of them separately. I have a feeling if I wrote a post about it I'd just embarrass myself :/
I've been meaning to go on more of a learning-about-queer-theory self education journey like I have been with racism, I have a LOT of not-heteronormative friends who might appreciate me being less clueless without having to educate me themselves.
(*)These being my simplistic child-of-the-80s understandings
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Careful with that book, though -- it might make you more radical than your LGBT friends, and wouldn't that be annoying? ;-)
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I'm already more radical than most of my POC friends :) (I try very hard not to do the "Let me, the educated white person, explain your experiences to you because you are WRONG about racism" thing since, um, yes. Not so much with the helpfulness)