There's this biphobic stereotype that coming out as bi is a stepping stone to coming out as gay. Which is of course not the case, but people who believe it often base that belief on having personally observed people around them first coming out as bi and then as gay. My counter to this is usually that I've also observed the reverse; people first coming out as gay, then later as bi/pan. That doesn't mean that coming out as gay is a "stepping stone" to coming out as bi or pan.
But I do think these dual phenomena, people coming out first as bi/pan, then as gay, and people coming out as gay, then as bi/pan, is interesting. So I want to muse a bit about why this happens.
"Anglo-Saxon"
But the issue isn't just that "Anglo-Saxon" is currently being used by white supremacists as if by chance. The historians who coined the term, inventing the idea of an "Anglo-Saxon people" that never existed, crafted a white nationalist narrative which was ready-made for use by nazis.
@ItsMorgan sorry our name is just a handful of deities and a bad pun. two bad p–three bad—ah, you get the point
defen #ass tration
a bug, not a feature.
Genderless* cyberfae & co. at your service
assigned adult by the inexorable passage of time
don't use he/him or she/her pronouns for any of us without express permission
note that if we ever make you uncomfortable in any way please tell us so we know to stop. we're not always good at figuring these things out on our own