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^ so you accept the hip modern gay anthrops but disregard frumpy Mead?
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
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I think this is an extremist viewpoint tbh. As a Brit, i know full well that some shameful things have occurred because of the British in its long history, but i DO take offence at this particular view.
 
	 
	If you consider Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Malta, are the British to be given credit for their tolerance??? Of course not.
Its one thing to be responsible for introducing crappy laws decades in the past, quite another to suggest that those laws are to blame. Its the people that count, and their culture.


^ so you accept the hip modern gay anthrops but disregard frumpy Mead?
You cannot blame the British for this, for to do so, where do you stop? We could blame the Italians, if they hadn't have invaded the British Isles during the Roman Empire, we wouldn't have been so inspired by Christianity...
Yet YOU seem to be ignoring the fact that those sodomy laws being present or not are irrelevant. I just gave you some examples of non-British controlled nations who have just as harsh punishments for homosexuality. Its not the laws that are the problem, its the dominance of religious fundamentalism.
 
	I am not saturated with pride lol. I am saturated with rationality. You are cherry-picking what is historical fact and applying that to the troubles of homosexuals in Africa today, whilst ignoring those former British controlled nations that do not have sodomy laws (South Africa and Sierra Leone) and ignoring those non British ones that do (Liberia, Mauritania and Angola - the examples i gave).
You pointed out yourself by using Algeria as an example, that it was religion responsible for their anti-gay laws ultimately, before the french got there. The fact that those laws may not have existed in African nations prior to British occupation, is largely irrelevant, because its the nations today that have their own control over their own laws. If they choose to maintain anti-gay stances, its not because the British had visited. Its because they are influenced by their religious beliefs. There is no pride involved whatsoever in standing up and saying, "let's get something straight". That is all that i have done.
The maps don't lie, you're correct. That bears little relevance to human interpretation unfortunately. If you wanna continue to ignore the exceptions that fundamentally prove that its far more than British history which is responsible for Anti-gay Africa, be my guest, its not my mind being self-constricted.
Uganda’s just-enacted antigay law is having further financial repercussions: the World Bank has indefinitely delayed action on a loan to the nation because of the legislation.
House minority leader Nancy Pelosi and other members of Congress as well as former member Barney Frank had spoken to World Bank president Jim Yong Kim to share their concerns about the law, BuzzFeed reports.
I'd be hard pressed to blame the British for the sodomy laws/homosexuality problems in those countries, mostly because the former colonies that *don't* have them are a handful of few with same-sex marriage and protections. The disparity between former British colonies is too extreme to place 'blame' on anyone. It would be much more useful to examine heteronormativity, biology as an ideology, and other invalidation ideologies within the 'state sponsored homophobic' countries.
Can't really assume other countries are bastions of human rights, either. Canada has a treacherous track record -- particularly with LGBT folk. The state did not persecute sexual minorities, it just used the medical system as a tool of oppression in its absence. Same-sex marriage came through a legal evolution, not revolution. We conveniently like to ignore addressing contentious issues in Canada.
No, what's simple is colonial laws don't mean anything when it comes to culture, or the absence/existence of said laws. Just because something looks pretty on paper doesn't make it true [ex. sexual minorities in South Africa] -- back to what DreamTeam said. A sexual minority in Mali is going to have the same shitty experience as a sexual minority in the CAR, Uganda, Nigeria. By dividing countries into what's legal and illegal, you're blatantly ignoring the sociology behind the law. Which is precisely what TX-Beau is speaking of in post #77. It's of no use to examine something as absolute.
"More than half of the world's remaining "sodomy" laws -criminalizing consensual homosexual conduct - are relics of British colonial rule, Human Rights Watch showed in a report published today.
...
The Human Rights Watch report shows, however, that British colonial rulers brought in these laws because they saw the conquered cultures as morally lax on sexuality. The British also wanted to defend their own colonists against the "corrupting" effect of the colonies.
...
Versions of Section 377 spread across the British Empire, from Africa to Southeast Asia. Through it, British colonists imposed one view on sexuality, by force, on all their colonized peoples.
"
'Sodomy' Laws Show Survival of Colonial Injustice
This material was published by the HRC in a report from 2008
"More than half of the world's remaining "sodomy" laws -criminalizing consensual homosexual conduct - are relics of British colonial rule, Human Rights Watch showed in a report published today.
...
The Human Rights Watch report shows, however, that British colonial rulers brought in these laws because they saw the conquered cultures as morally lax on sexuality. The British also wanted to defend their own colonists against the "corrupting" effect of the colonies.
...
Versions of Section 377 spread across the British Empire, from Africa to Southeast Asia. Through it, British colonists imposed one view on sexuality, by force, on all their colonized peoples.
"
'Sodomy' Laws Show Survival of Colonial Injustice
Are you sure all of these places had negative opinions on homosexuality forced on them? That entire argument rests on the idea that there was no homophobia until GB pushed it on them, but at least in the case of India, I really don't think that was the case.
