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    44 commenti

    1. cooleslaw01 on

      nice, but does that mean that in like 3 years we’ll be back in 2001 according to this graph?

    2. SexAfterTheKill on

      I thought this would have been approved like 30 to 40 years ago!

    3. Minute_Attempt3063 on

      Sad that it has taken this long in some countries, but better late then never.

    4. RusTheCrow on

      What do the colors mean? Or is it just an aesthetic choice?

    5. this makes it sound like they are only allowed to get married in those countres for one year..

    6. DrCatholicGuilt on

      I’m surprised Greece was so late to the party they started

    7. andresrecuero on

      Why Northern Ireland doesn’t approve it in 2014 like Great Britain ???

    8. Skyswimsky on

      I’ve always been under the impression that this had been done a long time ago. Crazy. Or maybe not. I suppose you can argue that the act of marriage has a religious background so while it’s ‘generally accepted’ that gay couples exist, marriage does not. Which wouldn’t even be such big of an issue if not for perks being attached to marriage. Like in Germany you save on taxes I believe.

      I’d also be curious to see a similar graph for something related to trans right. From my own experience a lot of people seem way more accepting of LGB than the T or Q, so to say.

    9. undersquirl on

      Romania – 2530

      Even then probably not. I’m saying this as a Romanian.

    10. SinisterCheese on

      There are people in Finland who to this day still bang on about “Real marriage” as in: “Gay people shouldn’t get married because the bible says so”.

      In which case I have since the beginning fought them with this. “*Ok. Lets say gays can’t get married, but instead they get Plömplöm. Plömplöm includes all the same inheritance, tax, property and other legal rights including custody of potential children, and it is purely a legal framework… Lets sweeten the deal, people who are part of the Lutherian Church of Finland are not elligible for Plömplöm.*” For some reason…. they aren’t for Plömplöm either.

      Hmm… Maybe it wasn’t about the bible and making Jeebus sad afterall?

      (Those who don’t get the joke… I just took the things which belong to *marriage* as a legal structure and added a silly made up label for them).

    11. Blitzer161 on

      I don’t see Italy here… **Oh wait, I fucking forgot I live in an extremely bigoted country**

      God my country really needs to do better

    12. Perceuxx on

      The year 2016 is clearly marked, but has no new countries? Is this to signify the passing of Harambe?

    13. TheLinden on

      Even Liechtenstein allows same-sex marriage and they have like 100 gays maybe meanwhile my country keeps doing r******d justifications on why it’s ok to discriminate certain groups of people.

      I don’t even have to list those reasons here because in every country across the planet they use the same stupid arguments.

    14. LyannaTarg on

      And then there is us (Italy) where we are still waiting for a government courageous enough to do this…

      If only the left was bold enough against these alt right parties… and if only the left will risk doing and talking about something good for a change instead of saying: “we are not them” maybe then we will have real progress.

      Alas this will not be the case.

    15. ElementalChicken on

      NEDERLAND NUMMER 1 🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱🇳🇱

    16. Dirty-Dancer777 on

      The Bulgarian Constitution says that marriage is an union between a man and a woman, so it won’t happen there.

    17. justaprettyturtle on

      Ehhh ….. 🙁 .. i wish we were somewhere on this graph

    18. tiorancio on

      I’m always surprised of how in Spain we went from horribly homophobic to one of the gayest countries in the world in 20 years.

    19. Kuhler_boy on

      I knew the time would come, where people will point at alice weidel to show how the AgD is “totally not homophobic.”

    20. Zanian19 on

      For what it’s worth, we were at least the first (1989) in the world to recognize same sex relationships, giving 95% of regular marriage rights.

      Not sure why it took so long for the last bit.

    21. Available-Road123 on

      Liechtenstein, Andorran and Malta got gay marriage, but abortions are still illegal there…

    22. Scottishnorwegian on

      Wow I didn’t know it was neccecary in Liechtenstein. Do they even have enough room for a ceremony?/s

    23. SocialistDerpNerd on

      Has the Prince of Liechtenstein actually given his consent to that? Afaik he is extremely conservative and actually does veto some decisions made by parliament

    24. museum_lifestyle on

      Gay population in Liechenstein: 1. He still can’t get married.

    25. Sagaincolours on

      Denmark should have an addendum: Same sex unions were legalised in 1989 (as the first country in the world).

      The 2012 was just to update the law from differentiating between “legal union” and “marriage”, to that a union of two adults is always called a marriage, no matter the sexes of the two people.

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