An Essay: Injustice Against Homosexuals

By Rachel Krech, published May 05, 2008
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One of the biggest social injustices going on in the world today is the discrimination against gay and lesbian individuals. Blatant and latent discrimination surrounds gay communities all over the world and hatred towards these individuals ranges according to how conservative the law or citizens of the country or region are in their morals. In the African country of Angola, homosexuals are often sent to labor camps, and in Somalia, public executions are common for men and women deemed homosexual by their communities. While both of these punishments are undoubtedly cruel and harsh, things are not much different in the United States. The U.S. has been dealing with gay rights controversies heavily over the recent years and the topic remains in the forefront in recent elections. While violence isn't condoned against gays in the United States, discrimination comes in the form of cultural or religious morals.

Generally, right-wing conservative lawmakers are working hard to make sure that gay rights, including domestic partnership and gay unions, are kept out of the country in the form of laws. Many times, heavy religious morals held by a large portion of U.S. citizens begin to make separating church and state impossible, especially in rural areas and in the South. States and even the federal government have declared that it is their sole right to determine and define what exactly marriage is. This in itself is discrimination and leaves many gays outcasts in society, even though as U.S. citizens, they are given the same constitutional rights and freedoms as any other citizen.

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