This research paper is about the gay rights. It is followed by the situations and the causes of a person choosing to be a gay other than being inherited. The right fight has been initiated 224 years from now, and today we see the society accepting LGBT people in the society and reserving their rights. This further tells about the rights they pose today in the society.
Table of Content
Abstracti
Table of Contentii
Introduction2
Causes of Homosexual Desire if Not Inherited3
Discussion4
American Gay Rights Movement4
LGBT Rights5
Conclusion6
References7
Appendix8
Gay Rights
Introduction
Bonnie Newman was 29, when she left her family and friends, was conducted the interview with her. It affected her relation to the very extent, because the relatives and friends were not able to understand what she has become or interest has diverted. Her family has many questions and due to the generation gap, they were not able to understand her feelings and thoughts. In her family, her cousin was a gay; this was not what made her lean over being a gay too. She always felt different from her family and friends, listening to the talks of girl marriage never fascinated her, and she felt that was not a perfect fit for the world nor was the world perfect fit for her. She has not had a crush over a boy, or a football player like her friends did dreamt. She has never let her feelings out to her friends or to the family because she knew that no one would understand her. She changed the attitude of being a girl who poses a happy go lucky nature. She was not even accepted by the employers when they came to know about her girlfriend and so did her friends left her when they came to know about her feelings and likings. The thing that prompts her to go to Washington DC was the girl she was dating, who was a Brazilian national fighting for her rights. They both were on terms with being second-class citizens in their own way. Even though, she was born in Meriden Ct, but Bonnie felt like her girlfriend's struggle was her struggle too in many ways. She started relating herself to those who stood with her at Stonewall or with the Mattachine Society. It helped her gain the strength to come out to the family and friends. After hearing so many stories of strength and hope, she knew she could do it as well. She also knew that she was not alone anymore. She finally had true sense of community that she did not have before. She intellectually knew she was not the only gay person on the planet but it truly helped seeing all those people gathered together for a common goal. . In many ways, the march was like throwing a stone into a pond. It has rippling effects. It is not really the first ring of the march that is the largest or the most effective, but it was the one that had the closet to impact. Therefore, in many ways she thought that is what happens with those types of things when people, ...