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Translation (via Google translate):
aphobia in numbers
21% of asexual people under 30 had their family coming out invalidated, 17% by people within their circle of friends, and 14% by people in the LGBTQ world +
data taken from the annual survey of the “Collettivo Asessuale Carrodibuoi” association, visible on carrodibuoi.it
discrimination against asexual people is called aphobia
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Acephobia & Anti-asexual hate crime
Excerpt:
«What is anti-asexual hate crime?
Any offence should be treated as an anti-asexual hate crime if the person who experienced it or anyone else feels it was an expression of acephobia. Anti-asexual hate crime can include verbal abuse and violence from neighbours or strangers. Because people’s asexual identity is not always visible to strangers, anti-asexual abuse can often be concentrated in settings where the targeted person and perpetrator know each other. That can include verbal abuse or unwanted sexual touching from acquaintances and anti-asexual domestic abuse from family or partners. This also includes actual and threats of so-called “corrective” rape, to “fix” the person’s orientation.
These crimes are less easy to recognise but it is equally important to record and address them in a manner that addresses their motivation of hostility. To qualify to be recorded as a hate incident, a report needn’t include anti-asexual language. It is enough for a reporting person to perceive that it was motivated by acephobia.»
Read the whole article here.