When Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam recently told reporters that only a 鈥済rowing minority鈥 of Singaporeans want the highly controversial Section 377A of Singapore鈥檚 Penal Code repealed, it was a little hard to believe. This is 2018 after all 鈥 surely there鈥檚 enough woke-ness going around to ensure that Singapore is ready to remove an archaic law that criminalizes gay men?
Alas, it appears that love does not win here. Since India officially abolished the same colonial-era ruling, the divisive issue about doing away with Section 377A of the Penal Code has been propelled once again into national discussion, with renewed calls for reform. As well as a renewed call to keep the 157-year-old law intact.
Here鈥檚 the score as of this article’s writing. A petition urging the government to abolish Section 377A has garnered . Then, there’s the opposing petition demanding that the legislation 鈥 an unenforced law that prohibits any 鈥渁ct of gross indecency鈥 between two male men 鈥 remain unchanged. That one has gathered . Wew.
One explanation provided is that the Change.org platform allows people to sign it as many times as they want, and is easy enough for bots to be used.
Most of the signatories are supporting the decision to keep Section 377A on religious grounds, citing holy books and sacred texts on why they don鈥檛 want LGBTQ lifestyles to be accepted 鈥 and certainly, they鈥檙e well within their rights to express their beliefs, as much as we may disagree. But a glimpse through all the comments left behind on the petition prompts us to seriously question their line of thought (and for some, their sanity).
Seriously, go check out posted on the petition 鈥 some are truly baffling in their leaps of logic and maturity in mindsets. Here鈥檙e just a sample of the colorful commentary; read 鈥榚m and weep.











