Manila Pride more than doubled its record number of attendees on Saturday (29 June). Established in 1994 on the 25-year anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, Metro Manila Pride itself turned 25 this year. Estimates from the Marikina Sports Center recorded around 70,000 attendees showing up to brave intermittent rain. This is a huge jump from last year´s attendance of 25,000 people. This year´s theme was "Resist Together", aiming to shine a spotlight on how far the LGBT rights movement has come both at home and abroad.
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If it's any consolation, many people in lots of Asian countries have somewhat similar views on the LGBT community - although I believe hardly any others actually consider us as being "circus clowns". That's vastly over the top. In your country no doubt it is because there is a stereotype of the queeny, outrageous gay ladyboy fed by endless TV programmes and movies.
You are who you are. Your profile says you are 46 and very much in the closet. That's your choice. But if everyone stays in the closet, surely nothing much is going to change. Consider the example of Taiwan to the north. Recent generations of Chinese were always assumed to be very homophobic. In Taiwan the gay movement only really developed a couple of decades or so ago with a small group of Taiwan citizens who sincerely believed that they could do something about rights for the LGBT community. That movement grew and grew and became grass roots. The fantastic Taipei Gay Pride Parade - 140,000 marchers last year - has always been a Parade of ordinary gay citizens, their boyfriends, parents, siblings, straight men and women with her young kids and many tourists. Hardly any are flamboyant queens. I suspect there are not enough Filipino men and women from all classes of society prepared to get together to develop and grow a similar grass roots movement. You cannot impose from above. You have to grow from within.
They are your family. And you create your own reality. If you just sit back and accept the status quo, what do you expect is going to happen? You can moan about life and aspects of life, or you can do something about it.
I do agree with you about Tagalog - one of the ugliest spoken languages of all
Taipei's Parade is the largest in Asia (apart from Tel Aviv) and numbers have been growing annually. I have been at 7 tof the last 8 Taipei Parades and they are always a fantastic fun day with other events spread over the week-end. Attendance estimate at my first in 2011 was 50,000 participants. So it has been growly substantially every year with many guys flying in from all over Asia to join their Taiwanese LGBT colleagues. There are always groups from Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Hong Kong, South Korea and Japan. I have even seen a group from Bhutan.
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