Many LGBTQ Americans face a lot of discrimination and support for transgender rights remain divisive. Many right-wing people and the highly religious oppose same-sex marriages.
@@ooo8188 its just that the UK has a much higher Global Acceptance Index score than the US which is because the US has many more anti-trans laws and barely any anti-discrimination laws while the UK has lots
Chad, accepting countries = "Each to their own" mentality. No hate, just love. Just be yourself, bro. Progressive and advanced countries. Don't believe in fairy-tales unlike *other* countries. Be like these countries.
lmao wym with Brazil being acceptable towards LGBT? i mean, most people are fine with it outside their families, but if someone in the family becomes gay then people starting being sus of it. And well, that is an anormal thing since back in the 1960s Brazil was definetly a catholic nation, having for example the "Marcha pela Família e TFP" (March for the Family and the TFP)
Denmark has an LGBTQ acceptance rate score of 70%, and Sweden of 65%. Compared to countries like Belgium and the United Kingdom with acceptance rate scores of 80% and higher.
The problem is that here in the States, one can be 100% perfectly ok with gay and lesbian marriage and equality, but then still be called anti lgbtq if one disagrees with any of the trans agenda, like say letting biological boys/men compete against biological girls/women in physically demanding sporting events.
People can be called homophobic for basically anything these days. There was a doctor who got banned because he ‘disrespected’ the identity of a woke trans person.
@@fishbinkywho’s more likely to agree to any propaganda, a person who doesn’t fully agree with an agenda or a person who blindly calls someone a homophobe for not fully agreeing with an agenda?
I was looking at the first map thinking this isnt even drawn properly. Then it hit me, this is Europe, a land much like terabithea to us american poors. Weve heard tales, but such a place may as well be made up to us. We could never afford to travel there, hell, we cant afford healthcare. But my ceo is a billionaire, so theres that.
@@ZackShark1 they just used outdated information, their data was from 2016, because now yes Spain is like 6th-9th most LGBTQ friendly depending on the study
@@Lv-nq9qz No; anyone who stands for the moral code of the Bible or questions the homosexual or transgender agenda is legally penalized. So you can't have it both ways.
@@joanl.7543 Freedom of religion doesn't mean freedom to hate you can be religious and accepting of LGBTQ most people in countries like the UK support LGBT regardless of religious affiliation.
@@BenDBeast a. Nobody hates anyone. This is about moral codes, not hate. You can consider someone as violating the moral code without hating that person in the least. b. All monotheistic religions have historically had a very strong and uncompromising position against any sexual act that is not heterosexual. This is because the bodies of all higher animals are unambiguously oriented towards opposite sex unions which generate offspring as their basic purpose. To deny that homosexual couplings have a totally different character from this is to deny a reality that is smack in the face. c. If I want to believe in (for instance) the Catholic religion in a way that has integrity and consistency I must affirm her moral code as it relates to sex. To force me to deny that code is to force me to change that religion in a severe and utterly destructive manner, much like a "token" sacrifice to the gods might have done in ancient Rome. So there is no religious freedom where people are coerced with regards to this issue. As I said above, we can't have it both ways.
p.s. I am only sticking to monotheistic religion to avoid getting into the weeds respecting what other religions may or may not teach and I have no way to speak to that as a Christian. But this is not simply a "monotheism" thing. The body itself makes it evident.