On a SXSW panel discussion about the intersection of LGBT issues and
sports, Athlete Ally’s Hudson Taylor shared his thoughts on the surprising lack of Olympic athletes who publicly spoke out in Sochi about Russia’s anti-gay laws.
Taylor
said he was originally optimistic about using the international
spotlight of the Olympic platform to advocate for LGBT equality and
pointed to the numerous current and former athletes (and even Rihanna) who embraced his Principle 6 protest campaign
before the Games began. Ultimately, however, Taylor said that the dozen
or so Olympic athletes who both competed in Sochi and were also backers
of his Principle 6 campaign failed to garner the medals that would have
provided them with the necessary media coverage to truly make a lasting
statement.
But despite the missed opportunity, Taylor said he was looking
ahead to the 2018 World Cup in Russia) and the 2022 World Cup in Qatar
as future opportunities to use an international sporting event to shine a
light on discriminatory laws. Qatar remains one of the countries where homosexuality is still illegal.
“While the reality is we’ve seen a lot of
progress in the sports world over the last few years, we still have a
long way to go,” Taylor said. “There are still a lot of closeted
athletes. There are still people being bullied, being isolated because
of their sexual orientation. We still only have one [gay athlete] in the
NBA and maybe one in the [upcoming] NFL.”
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