I may be wrong, or partly right, but I get the impression that, for many gays and lesbians, they have set their sights of a movement. They seek to establish themselves as unique and different from the hetrosexual society. Out and Proud.
I realise I do continually denigate the feminists but I honestly see them as ominous. They seem to be seeking the reconstruction of th most basic elements of humanity. They attack the (hetrosexual) relationships between men and women as being oppressive and imposed, by men. They are essentially a westen movement. Paying lipservice to the problems of non-western women, but effectively cutting themselves from them and even attempting to undermine the efforts against FGM by associating it with western fashion.
The gays and lesbians, I believe, find it difficult to identify with the integrationist notions of transgenderd people. Almost all of us seek to live as we are, normal lives, without fuss. Few of us seek to be openly identified as trans.
Hre in the UK, Stonewall UK, while it appears to be patient with transgendred people, is clearly behaving with some hostiity. It seems unlikely they would honour a journalist who, while praising gays, attacked Jews, or blacks.
But I suggest, the significant factor here is the Labour Party, to which the feminists and Stonewall have alligned themselves. The leader of Stonewall is a Labour activist. Like all such activists, his first priority is to Labour. His organisation is part of the Labour struggle, where their priorities will be achieved with a Labour victory.
In the US, the situaton doesn't, on the face of it, appear quite so bleak. Most gay organisations call themselves LGBT, it seems.
But we remain the weak cousins there. How many have given more than token support to Nikki Araguz as she struggles for the justice she clearly deserves?