![best homemade first time gay videos best homemade first time gay videos](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/d4/75/53/d475534f3d31870ae3c2a1247ad26a3c.jpg)
![best homemade first time gay videos best homemade first time gay videos](https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/41LKsdiiInL._SY346_.jpg)
Thousands of gay and bisexual men were still being arrested for consenting, victimless behaviour – often as a result of police entrapment operations using officers acting as agents provocateurs. Despite the partial decriminalisation of homosexuality in 1967, many aspects of gay male life remained illegal. In 1972, homosexuality was still viewed as an illness, lesbian mothers had their kids taken off them by the courts, you could be sacked from your job for being LGBT+ and the police were at war with our community. The increasing acceptance of LGBTs is another big change. Looking back over the last 50 years, it is extraordinary how Pride has grown from one march with less than a thousand people to over 150 nationwide events with a combined attendance of a million. Because we were same-sex kissing in public, which was an arrestable offence in those days, it was also a gesture of defiance. I won one of the games and my prize was a long, deep kiss with a gorgeous French gay activist who had come over from Paris to join us. We played camped-up versions of party games like spin the bottle and drop the hanky. Everyone brought food, booze, dope and music. When the march arrived at Hyde Park, there was no festival or entertainment – just an impromptu DIY queer picnic, what we called a “Gay Day”.