Sounds very optimistic. I expect that in a country where male-male sex is illegal, gay and bisexual men are likely to suffer substantially from homophobia (whether institutional or cultural) even if the law is not enforced. There are also implications on transgender women, especially those who haven’t had SRS (apparently you can change your legal gender in Singapore iff you had SRS).
Sounds very optimistic. I expect that in a country where male-male sex is illegal, gay and bisexual men are likely to suffer substantially from homophobia (whether institutional or cultural) even if the law is not enforced. There are also implications on transgender women, especially those who haven’t had SRS (apparently you can change your legal gender in Singapore iff you had SRS).
Yeah, fair enough. I’d ask people who live in Singapore (and ideally, who are also gay or transgender) what it’s like.