Contents:
CANADA: LAW COULD LOCK UP RELIG PEOPLE FOR FIVE YEARS IF THEY RIST CHILD’S ‘TRANSN,’ GAY INTY
Evangelil Prottants, most often the vanguard of antigay protts, have been a visible prence Canadian polil life, but they are much ls fluential than their Amerin s, nstutg ls than 10% of the overall populatn (Malloy, 2011). At tim this has led Canadians to believe that their society is more acceptg than is, though this turn has helped legimize explicly homophobic polil disurse. Individual unns, mostly the public sector, began supportg lbian and gay claims the 1980s, and the next a good part of the overall labor movement was assertively backg the LGBT e and soon takg on issu of genr inty as well as sexual orientatn.
(Discrimatory elements remaed, for example, a higher age of nsent for homosexual activy, though most of the were stck down by urt lgs later s. This effectively postponed engagement wh the polilly and religly load qutn of marriage—an issue that also had much potential for broang anti-gay mobilizatn and dividg the LGBT movement. Durg the terwar perd there was also ltle evince of the kd of bar scene wh strong lbian or gay clientele that emerged other untri.
The were equently subject to police harassment, and Canada experienced a versn of the McCarthye attack on homosexualy as damagg to societal morals and a threat to natnal secury (Ksman & Gentile, 2011). Gay and lbian activism, however, would emerge only slowly and sporadilly.