United Kingdom is not but ever thing else is but not these:
china
japan
but the biggest gay's are in in this order
1.Pakistan
2.USA - Scotland
3.And all the rest
If you are referring to the legal status of Homosexuality itself, as per say not being illegal to be an homosexual, then basically all developed countries don't penalize people for being homosexual. Basically most countries in the world specially the ones with a western culture.
If you're referring to same sex marriage then only 10 countries in the world legalized it: Sweden, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Iceland, Norway, Netherlands, South Africa, Argentina and Canada.
Nazi Germany under penal code paragraph l75. if the perpetrator was an officer of the Armed Forces or the Police, it was a capital crime.
Homosexual acts were against the law. They still are in some countries.
many politicians in many different countries have done this.
nopeAdded: Not in the US.
Some countries still have laws forbidding same sex activity, so in those countries gay guys are breaking the law. If they do it in private, carefully, they may not be charged. In countries where homosexuality has been decriminalized, or was never a crime, then gay guys are not breaking the law.
People can know they are gay at the age of 12 and younger. It is not against the law anywhere to BE gay. Is is against the law to have sex with anyone under the Age of Consent, which is usually 16 or 17 years in most places.
There is no law against it, and there have been gay people in cartoons, many of whom have had partners or who dated. See related links for a list of gay cartoon characters.
Not yet.
Gay people in Malta have limited protections and few rights, but it is not against the law to be gay or to live with a same-sex partner. There are also a few gay clubs there.
in most countries it is against the law to hit anyone, it is usually called "common assault"
Yes, there are probably as many gay men in Kenya as in other countries, anything up to 10% of the population, even though homosexuality is illegal in Kenya and frowned on by most of the general public. This does not mean it is wrong, just against the state law.
There is no law against it and some openly gay people have served in Congress. No one can say what the future will bring.
Gay people are equal, but in some countries, the law doesn't reflect that. The problem stems mainly from old misguided beliefs.