Malaysia's government halted a music festival in the capital Kuala Lumpur on Saturday, a day after the frontman of British pop rock band The 1975 kissed a male bandmate onstage and criticised the country's anti-LGBT laws.
Just the other day, I saw a comment on Lemmy lamenting how artists skip over Malaysia for their world tours. This should make it very clear why that is the case.
Good on the band, but it just makes me think more people should make an effort to fully boycott all countries with regressive laws like this. Embargo them.
i think the one person in the article makes a good point about how this sort of thing can make it more difficult for lgbt people actually living in malaysia, but overall i’d say i think that this is a super great thing overall. it’s ridiculous and terrible how intolerant and stuck in the past some countries are.
everyone should abso-fucking-lutely protest against any laws that discriminate against consenting adults' sexualities, as it's literally a human rights violation
if a country gets their titties and/or testies in a twist cause of a wittle gay kiss, but would be totally fine if a straight couple did the same shit, then they deserve constant reminders that they're on the wrong side of history
edit 1: the fuck is a countey? meant country
edit 2: thank you mods :) for context, original comment was arguing that they should respect the laws of the country
I will concede that probably they should not have even bothered playing in Malaysia at all. However, protesting garbage laws is the right thing to do. Slavery was legal in the U.S. at one point. It was illegal(even in the North, where slavery itself was banned) to help escaped slaves evade the authorities. What I'm saying here is, some laws don't deserve to be "respected". This is an evil law, one that should be mocked, scorned, and flaunted.
I will concede that probably they should not have even bothered playing in Malaysia at all.
on the other hand: playing has highlighted the irrational response of Malaysia's government and regressive laws, so in the end i'd say it worked out pretty well