I'd be interested in knowing what detail of dialogue or behavior leads you to conclude this.
My pleasure, Jeff! It took me a long time to come to this conclusion, myself. The scene is very subtle and potentially misleading. Now I think it's one of the many brilliant things in the movie.
OMT clearly knows Jack was gay ("Tell you what, I know where Brokeback Mountain is"), but he never says anything specifically negative about that. The key part is when he talks about how Jack always used to say he was gonna bring Ennis del Mar up and lick this damn ranch into shape. "He had some half-baked notion the two of you was going to move up here, build a cabin, help run the place. ... He's going to split with his wife and come back here." But, he complains sarcastically, Jack's ideas "never come to pass."
So what is he objecting to? The prospect of Jack leaving his wife for another man? Nope. He seems to have no big problem with that. His main complaint is that Jack
didn't follow through with the plan. (Probably he actually could use the help). OMT calls Jack's notion half-baked, which it sort of was. But he doesn't say it's immoral or wrong or shameful or anything like that. He taunts Ennis with the news of the "other fella," yet says nothing really homophobic there, either. Even his understanding that this info will hurt Ennis implies, in a perverse way, his calm acknowledgement of their sexuality. He never says anything that he might not just as easily say if everyone involved were straight.
I love this, because both we viewers and Ennis are led to expect from the get-go that OMT will be homophobic. After all, though Ennis' dad was the worst kind of homophobe, he was otherwise a respectable guy in Ennis' eyes (fine roper, "he was right," etc.). Jack always unequivocally described OMT as a bad dad -- never taught Jack a thing, never went to see him ride, can't be pleased, no way. So here's a gay man's dad, an older Western rancher, known to be an asshole -- just imagine what a homophobe HE must be. But ... surprise!
My take on it is that this scene has multiple purposes. It's another case in which you can't judge characters by appearance. It helps explain why Jack had a healthier attitude about his sexuality than Ennis did.
Most importantly, it shows Ennis that he's been wrong all these years. He has never met anyone in his life, probably, who isn't homophobic, as far as he knows. He assumes everyone is -- assumes, in fact, that they're "right," it's just a law of the universe that homosexuality is bad. Yet here is evidence that his fears were overblown and his assumptions incorrect.
BTW, the most potentially convincing counterargument to this interpretation is OMT's emphasis on Jack's going into "the family plot." For a long time, I took that to be an allusion to "family values," with OMT saying Jack had violated them by being gay. But someone else who agreed with my interpretation of OMT theorized that it's actually a slap at Ennis -- Ennis disappointed Jack and therefore doesn't deserve the ashes. In other words, Jack's ashes belong with his parents, his family, not with the guy who consistently refused to create a family with Jack.
Scott, I was just about to post this when I saw your post. I agree with you, and our answers don't even really overlap! I'm glad to see more support for the idea. Thanks!
