church stuff
@avi I attended a UU church for a while. Among the attendees were atheists, agnostics, many kinds of pagans, a few Jewish families, and Christians, but most non-religious ex-Christians who had been fucked over by the church in some way. They all came together because they genuinely loved the community and the feeling of love they got from the service, which was usually about being a good humanist. I actually started loving church when it was about the community and not the pageantry
church stuff
@pexl My family attends a UU church, even though they're Jewish. I can't stand going because the local community is homophobic in this creepy smiling way. They're currently debating, in 2019, if they should display a rainbow flag or if it would ruin wedding photos. And going to sit in a church is also super uncomfortable for me, since I was raised by Catholics who did not like my Jewish background.
church stuff
@pexl It's kind of infuriating, because they're a community pillar for a lot of local activism. The straight activists I know here, in general, have an issue with not taking gay rights seriously. The local UU is just a symptom of it, not a driver, but it certainly does not help -- especially if you are trying to organize an action and they're one of the few places you could get a room to run a fundraiser or plan an action