LGBT rights (Ajax): Difference between revisions
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| Antiquity. | | Antiquity. | ||
| Although reassignment or corrective surgery is permitted, there is currently no mechanism by which a person can officially or legally change their assigned gender. | | Although reassignment or corrective surgery is permitted, there is currently no mechanism by which a person can officially or legally change their assigned gender. | ||
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|rowspan="2"|{{flag|Velikoslavia}} | |||
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| {{No}} | |||
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|The Liberation Act of 1998 formally permitted events such as pride but allows public and private venues to refuse to host such events at will. | |||
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|Entities may not discriminate based on sexuality and refuse employment to a homosexual individual but are permitted to refuse to participate and provide services for events such as pride. Businesses are also permitted to limit employee's right to express themselves on the job with bracelets and clothing provided the policy is universal. | |||
|Couples are permitted to be openly practicing but no legal mechanism exists to form a legally recognized marriage. | |||
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|Velikoslavia has no mechanism for recognizing gender changes within the law nor is reassignment surgery offered but transgender individuals may legally go to other nations to seek reassignment surgery. | |||
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|rowspan="2"|{{flag|Vardana}} | |rowspan="2"|{{flag|Vardana}} | ||
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|No restrictions in regards to adoption by married couples have ever been in place | |No restrictions in regards to adoption by married couples have ever been in place | ||
|Sex changed are not considered valid in Vardana | |Sex changed are not considered valid in Vardana | ||
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|rowspan="2"|{{flag|Yisrael}} | |rowspan="2"|{{flag|Yisrael}} |
Revision as of 16:45, 11 February 2022
Country | Right to practice same-sex activity | Right to freedom of expression | Right to serve in military | Legal protection against discrimination | Legal recognition of same-sex relations | Right to adoption | Right to change gender |
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Ascalzar | Partial | Partial | No | No | No | No | No |
Criminalized since 1633; not always prosecuted. | Promoting "immoral" and criminal behavior is considered sedition and carries a prison sentence; not always prosecuted. | Same-sex relations in the military warrant immediate dishonorable discharge. | None exist. | Never legalized. | Never allowed. | Criminalized. | |
Gelonia | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
Never illegal. | Never allowed. | Sex changed are not considered valid in Gelonia; though citizens may have gender confirmation surgery abroad, their legal sex will remain unchanged. | |||||
Ghant | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
Never criminalized | Never criminalized | Never criminalized | Since antiquity | Since antiquity | Since antiquity | Never, gender changes are not recognized as legally valid | |
Latium | Partial | Partial | Yes | No | No | No | No |
Anti-gay laws and sodomy laws were repealed in the 1990s, and later re-enacted in the 2014 Renewed Morality Acts; not always prosecuted | Never illegal; no laws in place | Marriage in Latium is only legally recognized between a man and a woman. | Only married couples have the right to adopt. | Gender changes are not regarded as valid. | |||
Lyncanestria | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
Stigmatized during the Audonian Empire, criminalized across Lyncanestria upon unification in 1871 with penalty of forced sterilization from 1911 onwards. Sterilization no longer enforced from 1993 onwards, with criminalization of same-sex activity officially lifted in 2007. | The Imperial Charter grants freedom of speech since 1888; caveats existed which prevented publication of "obscenity" which many interpreted as homosexual relations. Obscenity clause repealed in 1991. | Never illegal. | Original discrimination protections were done on the basis of sex, age and race. Protection to classes based on sexual orientation was added in 2014. | Civil unions were introduced in 2014 for same-sex couples, which afforded similar rights as marriage. Civil unions were abolished in 2016. | Never allowed. | Sex changed are not considered valid in Lyncanestria; though citizens may have gender confirmation surgery abroad, their legal sex will remain unchanged. | |
Mutul | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | No | No |
Never illegal. However, a certain social stigma exist, where it is considered "childish" for a man or a woman to keep having homosexuals relationships beyond adolescence. | Homosexuals activities are under the jurisdiction of the divinity known as Chin and are freely expressed through his cult, in the same way that heterosexuals activities are under the tutelage of Ix Chak. | Never illegal | With the recognition of the Cult of Chin, the Divine Throne has put under its protection its priests and practitioners and therefore they are granted the same level of protections as other cults. | Two individuals of the same sex cannot marry in the Mutul, as the ritual is performed under the watch of Ix Chel, goddess of fertility and of motherhood. However, the Cult of Chin offer a similar contract, legally recognized by the Divine Throne, that can only be made between a man and a man, or a woman and another woman, and offer the exact same protection as a marriage. An individual can only take one or either of these contracts, not both, as polygamy is illegal. | The "Chin marriage" does not allow for the couple to adopt children, which is one of the few differences it has with a "Chel Marriage". | gender changes are not regarded as valid. The concept of gender has also yet to reach and influence both the Mutulese society and its body of laws, and as such transexuals are perceived as transvestites, which is generally considered to be the attribute of the Chin Cult's sacred prostitutes. | |
Ottonia | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Never illegal | Never illegal | Never illegal | 1952 (part of comprehensive anti-discrimination legislation covering a number of factors) | Antiquity | Antiquity | Never illegal, but prior to 2010 was possible only via the deliberate (if de facto permitted) misuse of processes intended for the correction of errors in public records. In 2010 the frequent unofficial use of these mechanisms was codified and made explicitly legal, and provisions for a third gender (N for "non-gender" or "non-binary") in official documentation were written. | |
Seonko | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Partial | No | Yes |
Yes, same sex sexual activity has never been prosecuted | Freedom of expression is guaranteed | All LGBTQ people are permitted to enlist in the military | Several cities have extensive protections from discrimination, nationwide policies awaiting legislation | Same sex marriages are not legal but those performed overseas may be registered, some cities recognise partnerships | No, currently same sex couples are not eligible to adopt however joint adoption is under consideration | Legal to undergo gender change surgery since 1998 and self identification allowed since 2017 | |
Sydalon | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
Sodomy is illegal in Sydalon, and regularly prosecuted. | Laws make homosexuality a public indecency and are illegal. | Prior to 1989 no laws were in place. In 2010, the doctrine of don't ask, don't tell was implemented. | There are no protections regarding sexual orientation. | While Sydalon holds no statutory law on this matter, the Constitution uses church law relating to marriages as controlling. | Only married couples have the right to adopt. | Gender changes are not regarded as valid. | |
Tyreseia | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Illegal under several pre-unification states, but never illegal in united Tyreseia. | Legally enshrined in the 1871 Charter of Rights and Freedoms. | Never illegal in united Tyreseia due to military necessity. | Legally enshrined in the 1871 Charter of Rights and Freedoms. | Since early antiquity, but proscribed under Latin rule; legalized in 1948. | Never illegal. | Never illegal and practiced since early antiquity. The right to identify as non-binary or another gender was formally established in 1993, but was practiced informally in numerous communes and municipalities decades earlier. | |
Uluujol | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
Never illegal. | Never illegal. | Never illegal. | Protections codified in 2012. | Antiquity. | Antiquity. | Although reassignment or corrective surgery is permitted, there is currently no mechanism by which a person can officially or legally change their assigned gender. | |
Velikoslavia | Yes | Partial | Yes | Partial | No | No | Partial |
The Liberation Act of 1998 formally permitted events such as pride but allows public and private venues to refuse to host such events at will. | Entities may not discriminate based on sexuality and refuse employment to a homosexual individual but are permitted to refuse to participate and provide services for events such as pride. Businesses are also permitted to limit employee's right to express themselves on the job with bracelets and clothing provided the policy is universal. | Couples are permitted to be openly practicing but no legal mechanism exists to form a legally recognized marriage. | Velikoslavia has no mechanism for recognizing gender changes within the law nor is reassignment surgery offered but transgender individuals may legally go to other nations to seek reassignment surgery. | ||||
Vardana | Yes | Partial | Partial | Yes | No | Yes | No |
Never illegal. | No restrictions in regards to adoption by married couples have ever been in place | Sex changed are not considered valid in Vardana | |||||
Yisrael | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
Homosexual acts are illegal and carry a prison sentence. | Advocacy of gay lifestyle movements is prohibited as a political crime. | "Closeted" soldiers who are exposed are dishonorably discharged and given a special legal leniency to denounce their citizenship and be expelled or face a criminal prosecution. | Marriage has been defined as a union between man and woman since c. 1000 CE; in reaction to the legalization of rights to gays in neighboring Fakolana, the Royal Knesset passed a statute reaffirming the definition of marriage and increased criminal penalties. | Transgenderism is considered a mental illness and the patient is directed to seek psychiatric help. |