It’s official: #Estonia has legalised marriage equality. We join other Nordic nations with this historic decision.
I’m proud of my country. We’re building a society where everyone’s rights are respected and people can love freely.
The decision will enter into force from 2024. pic.twitter.com/tQJdO70eEo
— Kaja Kallas (@kajakallas) June 20, 2023
Is Estonia Eastern, Central, or Northern Europe?
Regardless, it’s a former communist state, and it is surrounded by countries who do not appreciate anal.
There is really no chance this would have happened this early in Estonia if it was not for the country tying its identity even tighter to America in the wake of the Ukraine war.
“Evil Russia doesn’t like anal – our American saviors love sticking things in each other’s assholes – the choice is clear!”
Estonia’s parliament approved on Tuesday a law to legalise same-sex marriage, making it the first central European country to do so.
Same-sex marriage is legal in much of western Europe but not in central European countries which were once under communist rule and members of the Moscow-led Warsaw Pact alliance but now members of NATO and, largely, the EU.
The bill received 55 votes in the 101-seat parliament, from the coalition of liberal and social democratic parties which Kallas has assembled following her strong win in the 2023 election.
“My message (to central Europe) is that it’s a difficult fight, but marriage and love is something that you have to promote,” Prime Minister Kaja Kallas told Reuters after the vote.
“We have developed a lot in those 30 years, since we have freed ourselves from the (Soviet) occupation. We are equals among same-value countries,” she added.
The law will come into effect from 2024.
In the largely secular Baltic country of 1.3 million, 53% of the population supported same-sex marriage in a 2023 poll by the Centre for Human Rights. A decade ago the number was 34%.
However, 38% of Estonians still consider homosexuality to be unacceptable. Same-sex marriage is opposed by the ethnic-Russian minority, which constitutes a quarter of the country, with only 40% of them supporting it.
Gay people in Estonia tend to remain discreet about their identity, and half have experienced harassment recently, according to government.
There is no country thus far that does anal marriage and does not then give homosexuals direct, legal access to kidnapped children through the “gay adoption” system.
That’s really what the whole program is about.
Maybe if you faggots didn’t let women run your country, you wouldn’t be at war with “mean daddy” Putin in the first place, and therefore wouldn’t need to send your kids to get raped by faggots?
Kaja Kallas