Lbian, gay, bisexual, and transgenr (LGBT) people Sat Vcent and the Grenad face bias-motivated vlence and discrimatn their daily life, Human Rights Watch said a report released today. The legislature should repeal the untry’s lonial-era laws that crimalize nsensual same-sex nduct and pass prehensive civil legislatn prohibg discrimatn based on sexual orientatn and genr inty. The 58-page report, “‘They Can Harass Us Bee of the Laws’: Vlence and Discrimatn agast LGBT People Sat Vcent and the Grenad,” expos the physil and verbal asslts, fay vlence, homelsns, workplace harassment, bullyg, and sexual vlence that sexual and genr mori face unr the shadow of discrimatory laws. Those rponsible for mistreatment clu people close to LGBT people – fay members, neighbors, workers, classmat, and teachers – as well as strangers and police officers.
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15 EVERYDAY WORDS ED AS GAY SLURS DIFFERENT LANGUAG
There’s nothg teenage boys love more than llg each other gay on the school playground. And y, do show that homophobia is alive and well, but they uld at least get a b more imagative wh . Look beyond the English language, and you’ll fd words ed as gay slurs that are jt, well…ordary.
Unbelievably, thgs you might e to season your soup wh (or to make that soup ) are ed as rogatory homophobic terms. In Visayan the Philipp, they like to ll gay men ‘monmon’, which roughly translat to someone who sucks ck while recievg anal.
Faggot don’t actually mean gay, was an ordary word, claimed by the straights to e as a slur.