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SHOCKING REVELATION;There’s only one thing we need to know about Taylor Swift’s sexuality

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" I WAS Left crying in a lock bathroom on my birthday and my boyfriend never show up Taylor Swift Reveal secret behind her Past relationship.

 

Anee Marks pointed to Swift’s propensity for “dropping hairpins” – coded hints indicating that someone identifies as belonging to the LBGT+ community.

She called attention to Swift’s aesthetic choices (rainbow dress motifs, hair in the colours of the bisexual pride flag) and suggested Swift’s dances on her Eras Tour could be interpreted as a tribute to lesbian artist Loie Fuller.

 

The article also acknowledged that, taken “in isolation”, these hairpins could be “meaningless or accidental” – but that together, “they suggest to queer people that she is one of us”.

It might sound like an interesting idea – after all, Swift content is a guaranteed page-turner, for diehard Swifties (like me) and casual consumers alike. But I have a massive problem with idle speculation over someone’s (anyone’s!) sexuality: and I think you should, too.

Why? Well, as a lifelong fan, I might have Swift’s birthday and list of former boyfriends in my head without even trying; and I might know all the lyrics to her most obscure B-sides, but I have no idea how Swift identifies in terms of her sexual orientation. And that doesn’t bother me in the slightest.

And that’s it, isn’t it? An individual’s sexuality and relationship – whether they’re a celebrity or otherwise – simply isn’t anyone else’s business (or Golden Globe joke fodder). End of.

We read so much invitation into celebrity status (I’m including myself in this): justify our urge to gossip because of someone’s fame and success, as if that gives us licence to a window into their private lives. We discuss, confer and assume based on the parts of their lives they willingly (or less willingly) share. And it’s wrong. It’s always been wrong.

In response to The New York Times piece, a source allegedly close to Swift told CNN: “Because of her massive success, in this moment there is a Taylor-shaped hole in people’s ethics”, adding, “there seems to be no boundary some journalists won’t cross when writing about Taylor, regardless of how invasive, untrue, and inappropriate it is.”

It’s 2024; yet we’re still having to insist upon an individual’s right to share details about their sexuality themselves, rather than taking it upon ourselves to share those details for them. Why haven’t we moved on?

I have an outlandish idea, where Swift is concerned. I’ve followed her for years; have read countless about her private life. I’ve argued before that she deserves privacy, just like the rest of us.

So, when it comes to her sexuality (and everything else): what if we just… left her alone? What if we stopped speculating about her in public, and instead left her to share details about her private life as and when she sees fit?

There’s only one thing we need to know about Swift’s sexuality. The answer is… nothing. Nothing at all.

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