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I am in luck it is legal in my country to be gay.
I can not marry or adopt children but that may change if the time comes.
Where is the slowmotion button for my life?
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It's illegal in my country to be gay T_T
It is legal here in the US, but I don't live in one of the states where I can get married. I do live in a state where my husband and I can (and did) get a "civil union", which in this state, is marriage without the name, or the federal or international recognition. In 5-10 years I'm guessing the legislators will turn our civil union into marriage, but it probably won't be recognized by the federal government in that time. I also live in a state where we can adopt either individually or as a couple.
The laws are confusing, complicated and inconsistent here in the US.
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I live in Iceland and here gay people have the same rights as the straight people. I'm allowed to get married... in a church, adopt and everything else. The only thing we haven't been allowed to do yet is give blood.
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In Spain is legal to be gay, get married and adopt. Best regards dudes!
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Here in Italy you can fuck men if you wish, but as far as the law is concerned homosexuality doesn't exist. We have a lot of gay bashings, though they are rarely reported because mostly it's a pretty useless thing to do. Sexual assaults are also common, particularly among lesbians, gay minors, transvestites, and transsexuals. Verbal abuse is tolerated even in the parliament.
It's perfectly legal to be gay anywhere. An unjust law is no law at all.
http://25.media.tumblr.com/0952f1c69...8snho1_500.gif
You tried it Ms. Thing.
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Gays have always been. Million years ago we gay dinosaurs. Who needs laws nor 3rd party acceptance to do what you wanna do? I say fuck it to modern society everywhere and don't git me started bout fuckin ma own sex. I cut yous lame white people fat ass off! lol
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We ignore it. We'd rather pay fines than allow gay marriage anywhere near the Vatican. That is, gay marriage or any law that doesn't conform to the Catholic idea that the non-straight population should be oppressed.
Well yeah I guess being gay is "legal" in the United States but only just barely. Anti-sodomy laws were on the books into the 1980's. The USA is not in the forefront of any Gay Rights Movement. What's worse is that we find out that it's in no small part American Neo-fundamentalists "missionaries" that are actors behinds the scenes in truly fucked up countries like Uganda.
"Let all the poisons that lurk in the mud hatch out. "...Tiberius Claudius Nero Caesar
There's value in hearing what the rules really are, not just what the laws say they are. Particularly when there is tremendous subtlety. You'd be surprised how many non-Americans believed that the Prop 8 vote in California affected the entire USA. Or how few Americans understand that in much of Europe, while you can get married or "not-married" (civil unions, civil partnerships), you can't adopt (the reverse is true in much of the USA - we can adopt, but we can't get married or "not-married"). Hearing the hodge podge of rules and regulations from real people helps us understand how silly all of it is.
Actually, they're still on the books in 13 or 14 or 18 states (depending on which unreliable source you cite). Lawrence v Texas made them unenforceable, but that was in 2003. And Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas still have gays-only anti-sodomy laws on the books.
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Dave, I never said or intimated anything contrary to this. I'm mystified as to why you'd quote a link I posted and assume that was my intention. As to "what the rules really are", that's a highly subjective statement. Whether laws are administered fairly or consistently will vary with the person asked, and whether or not those laws are enforced or not is highly subjective to the context in which the laws were violated and whom the involved parties are. Often this is based on little more than arbitrary decisions by the person or persons whose task it is to enforce the laws on any of a number of levels. There are societal, cultural and various other considerations to take into account when one defines "being gay" in any sense, let alone a legal one. OP didn't define what he meant. Therefore I posted a link to a page that listed the legal conditions which were gay-specific.
Last edited by Bentschi; 1st December 2011 at 05:12.
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In Australia, it's legal to be gay but can't marry yet, although we can register as a couple and receive all the same rights and benefits. Most people are very accepting though and more and more are now supporting gay marriage, and there has been slow but definitely steady progress on that front, which is good. So yeah I'm lucky to be here.
And I honestly don't understand why people are so against gay rights and marriage equality; It has absolutely no effect on any other their lives, why waste that much energy protesting it?
And whether by religion or government, no matter how you want to try and justify it, it's still just prejudice. You're prohibiting a group of people from accessing common rights purely because of who they are, that's prejudice.We've come a long way as a society to respect the rights of people of different ethnicities and genders, yet when it comes to gays, suddenly everyone's like "nononononononono".
Civil union is a nice start but seperate but equal is never truly equal. Civil union will still identify gay marriage as different or out of the ordinary.
And it's so easy to legalise gay marriage. Just have to change the definition of marriage from "between a man and a woman" to "between two people". It costs the government nothing.
One day society will look back at this era the same way we look back at slavery.
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i live in egypt and its ( no fuck'n way ) u cant even say that ur gay and its sooooooo hard 2 find another gay ppl here thats y being gay in egypt isnt fun and gay supposed to be fun , so ya
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Here in Sweden gay people have the same rights as straight people adoption, marriage etc. Just not allowed to give blood, but they are talking about changing the law about that one.![]()