Gay quiz questions
Riese
Riese is the year-old Co-Founder of as well as an award-winning author, video-maker, LGBTQ+ Marketing consultant and aspiring cyber-performance artist who grew up in Michigan, lost her mind in Fresh York and now lives in Los Angeles. Her labor has appeared in nine books, magazines including Marie Claire and Curve, and all over the web including Nylon, Queerty, Nerve, Bitch, Emily Books and Jezebel. She had a very accepted personal blog once upon a period, and then she recapped The L Word, and then she had the idea to form this place, and now here we all are! In , she was nominated for a GLAAD Award for Outstanding Digital Journalism. She's Jewish. Pursue her on twitter and instagram.
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Am I gay? Take this quiz to find out (or not)
‘Am I gay?’ quizzes were commonplace in my internet search history as a closeted tween.
I have vivid memories of combing through each questionnaire, predominantly on BuzzFeed, answering questions about my favourite animal (guinea pig), fantasize job (acrobat turned weather reporter) and the sports I played (tennis). I also have vivid memories of manipulating each response to seem straighter than I was.
“What’s your favourite colour?”
Pink, I’d answer. Delay, no – grey! That’ll do the trick!
The test would inevitably spit out an answer: “You are 72% straight.”
Good enough, I’d think, looking at the obviously fabricated score. Sounds about right.
Cut to offer day, and I’ve arrive to realise that these quizzes are a gay rite of passage – and something I still take part in as a year-old, % queer adult … just to make sure I’m, y’know, % gay.
I’m not talking about the sincere online questionnaires genuinely aimed at decoding sexuality. No – I mean the extremely restrictive, undoubtedly sarcastic, completely unscientific quizzes that pro
LGBT Trivia
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Legal | Icons | History | Culture | Health | Grab Bag
Legal
Q: Which of the following countries have legalized same-sex marriage?
- Netherlands
- Spain
- Belgium
- Canada
- South Africa
- All of them
A: All of them
Q: Which President made it illegal for the US Government to employ gay and woman loving woman people?
A: Dwight D. Eisenhower, in Executive Order in There was fear that they could be blackmailed in to committing treason. No such incident is known to have occurred, but these laws were not repealed until and federal security clearances were not permitted to gays and lesbians until
Q: What is Lawrence vs Texas?
A: The Supreme Court Case that outlawed Texas anti-sodomy laws and served as a precedent for the banning of sodomy laws around the country.
Q: In what nation did the first large-scale queer rights movement begin?
A: Germany, in the s.
Q: What was the first express to outlaw discrimination based on sexual orientation?
A: Wisconsin, in
Q: In how many states c Gay History Trivia Questions, Answers, and Fun Facts
Answer: Molly Wood
Alexander Wood, a merchant and magistrate, was searching a rape case in A woman who claimed to acquire been raped, did not grasp who her attacker was but did state that she scratched the genitals of her attacker. Wood inspected the genitals of a number of suspects in order to try and locate the attacker. It was suggested that the rape did not happen, the victim did not exist, and that Wood had made the whole thing up in order to satisfy his homosexual urges. There was no evidence that Wood acted inappropriately; however, he was ridiculed and given the nickname "Molly Wood." At the time, "Molly" was a derogatory term for lesbian men.
Years later, Wood purchased land that was given the nickname "Molly Wood's Bush" and this area is now part of Toronto's gay village. In , the business association for the area erected a statue of Alexander Wood and a beer was named for him. A play based on Wood's life was launched in called "Molly Wood".
Gay History Trivia Questions, Answers, and Fun Facts
Alexander Wood, a merchant and magistrate, was searching a rape case in A woman who claimed to acquire been raped, did not grasp who her attacker was but did state that she scratched the genitals of her attacker. Wood inspected the genitals of a number of suspects in order to try and locate the attacker. It was suggested that the rape did not happen, the victim did not exist, and that Wood had made the whole thing up in order to satisfy his homosexual urges. There was no evidence that Wood acted inappropriately; however, he was ridiculed and given the nickname "Molly Wood." At the time, "Molly" was a derogatory term for lesbian men.
Years later, Wood purchased land that was given the nickname "Molly Wood's Bush" and this area is now part of Toronto's gay village. In , the business association for the area erected a statue of Alexander Wood and a beer was named for him. A play based on Wood's life was launched in called "Molly Wood".