I tend to see everyone as people, regardless of culture, colour, age, gender or sexual orientation, as I know and get on with people who vary on all of these.
While we're on this topic,


Speaking personally again, everyone in my generation and from my general background is in the same boat- coming to terms with who they are, trying to find a mode of self-perception that gives meaning to your life, while both acknowledging the diversity and avoiding dangerous factionism. Where is the balance to be found? How do you define yourself? What is your culture and what does it mean to say that is your culture? How do you both honour the diversity that represents your community and background while also establishing a strong sense of your own cultural heritage? What does it mean to you to say "I am a male/female", "I am heterosexual/homosexual/bisexual/whatever", "I am a (insert religion or equivalent)? Everyone constructs the answer to these questions differently, and some will reject any conclusive answer at all. What it means to attach a certain label to yourself depends upon each person, so taking note of the label but ignoring the process that led to them accepting such a label is an error.
This, in my experience, is what those who talk about "diversity" and "equality" and "respect" from a distance don't understand. They are only interested in imposing boxes on people, ignoring each individual's right to self-determination and self-expression by insisting "you are (this), from (this group). Your lot in life is (this)". It encourages factionalism that wouldn't exist otherwise. Only the person themselves can tell you what it means to be a member of a certain group, and each person will have a different answer.
This is one reason why I love the Star Trek universe and Trek lit in particular so much- it deals with the complexities of relationships between the self, a particular society/culture and a whole web of societies and cultures. I started a thread not long ago on (more or less) this basic topic.
