In a new neighborhood that promised fresh beginnings, a woman and her wife found themselves shadowed by the sting of quiet prejudice. A neighbor’s petty, exclusionary remarks cut deep, turning what should have been a warm welcome into a subtle battle for acceptance. Yet, amidst this initial coldness, the couple discovered a community where kindness outshone ignorance, where most neighbors embraced them without question.
Determined not to let bigotry fester in silence, she chose to raise her voice, reaching out to each family with courage and grace. Her resolve to confront prejudice head-on transformed a personal struggle into a collective call for understanding, proving that change begins with speaking up and standing together against intolerance.

AITA for asking 10 neighbors to have a talk with a homophobic neighbor? I didn’t expect they all would… But all did, one after another, and angered her more.



















According to social psychologist Dr. Robert Cialdini, conformity and social proof are powerful drivers of behavior. When the OP engaged multiple neighbors, they created a situation where the isolated neighbor faced intense social pressure from the perceived majority opinion within the community. While the OP’s goal was boundary setting against discriminatory remarks, the method amplified the conflict by turning a private disagreement into a public, collective action.
The OP’s strategy relied on leveraging social capital among the ‘nice’ neighbors. While effective in demonstrating the unacceptability of the neighbor’s behavior to the collective, it failed to account for the defensive reaction of the targeted individual. When the neighbor felt cornered by multiple visits—which she correctly identified as coordinated—her response shifted from defensive annoyance to outright anger, framing the OP’s actions as harassment. This highlights the critical difference between private assertion and community mobilization.
The OP’s actions were understandable given their prior negative experiences where subtle complaints failed. However, a more constructive path might have involved establishing a boundary directly with the neighbor first, and only escalating to neighbors for support or mediation if the initial direct communication failed. In future situations, focusing on direct ‘I’ statements regarding behavior rather than immediately mobilizing external pressure can lead to less explosive outcomes.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.

NTA.






if she didn’t want people to lecture her against being a bigoted a-hole, then she shouldn’t be a bigoted a-hole! Honestly I’d get more neighbors on it as well! Start throwing her language back at her!

Personally I’d start making a timeline of events and saving any comments she made against you (online) that you can, so that way if the harassment continues you can go to the police to charge her with harassment (or if the police won’t help, a local pro LGBT advocacy group to pressure the cops)

The original poster (OP) acted based on past experience, believing that direct, collective confrontation was the only way to address clear bigotry and establish boundaries in a new community. This strategy resulted in an intense backlash from the neighbor, who felt targeted and harassed by what she perceived as a coordinated intervention.
Was the OP justified in using a ‘squeaky wheel’ approach, mobilizing the community to address the neighbor’s initial unwelcoming and bigoted comments, or did their strategy cross the line into harassment by leveraging social pressure against the neighbor?







