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Lesbian Cantopop sta4Q)22t7+nk+juJ+@cs11l!#)T%qnUwnd8*hjec1BWZV1-Ouj_9r Denise Ho made headlines last week.

At a TA45XXPdYZ#ZpLuQFaV0ufHWjlW!qBwkVT76^6zEHdT23epzsGUaipei rally in support of Hong Kong’s democracy protest, a pro-China activist doused the superstar-meets-human-rights-defender in red paint.

Ho has emerged as a figurehead defender of Hong KYdL=isKCisS&-H=Zog7cHxycr3_U+k%Fi)Fe$VL5AY%aW=&hl#ong human rights amid ongoing unrest in the city. She has spoken at the UN and the US Capitol about the situation in Hong Kong.

The stunt this weekend prompted calls for both Taiwan and Hong Kong to stand up against increasing qWK7tNNkIsEQmjIT3StUgZ)jBl#Dx^XwRlYA#n3v5UrupWNz9nauthoritarianism from the Chinese Communist Party.

But, it also promptedBWT6YbDK036N#^Xf4I@o^@wcmFP9G5_fhdCF9w&_mPQo-6#(Xl a new appreciation of one of the region’s most famous lesbians on Taiwan forum, moptt.tw.

Amid photos and videos of the attack, one netizens wrote: “It’s hard not to like her”. Explaining that they had previously seen her in concert, they said her role as an activist shows she has “fortitude and persistencert7NSp)TP7LDb*&#TWJpZtjzS0WYlhZBlobbz3osjk_-Tn9kBr”.

Another neti+%qXd*N26dS(kwVtFJuf0v+cJ%b^aqiLCnjKM4ynbFLW9&TKaxzen wrote that they’d swooned over her speech at the UN.

CTtH^6deAZ2xttvm#vgX%Kxhz0P4j@qdNlk3Vg7#Mq65GMiKyqShe is not only handsome in appearance, but also on the inside,” another wrote.

Denise Ho Wan-sze, also known as Hj&s#e67NPBt7Pt8b9x0B%L)j(YPGjjgqQobHvZTbNnpkAgK7i@OCC, was one of the first Hong Kong celebrities to publicly come out as a lesbian in 2012.

"You have to strengthen yourself before you can project 9StX=IbbrGqd!)PsT_IP&fONA@7O*@AwHx1#jLhsj4RgY@Vy(Ianything,” Ho told the South China Morning Post at the time.

Ho is also a6yWAwyb(2Ai^A5%#1-DguG+Z*s+^8FK^9nAgGDv7lw^6!Jv(6k founding member of LGBT rights organisation Big Love Alliance.

In a FacebooOQLS$QO2lu#selkL*7(sUNf9z5!_Ga0udCCjJteo(Y-xYmo^0wk post following the attack this weekend, Ho said: “This is just the tip of the iceberg.”

"Every day in Hong Kong, there are countless students, citizens and members who are attacked and beaten by the police.”
 

Yi-min lives alone with her son, as her husband works away from home. She meets Tinting at a wedding, a girl she once had some history with back in highschool. Back in the days, Yi-min denied their relationship out of fear of living as a lesbian woman, but meeting Tingting again reignites something in her, a possibility to escape her dull married life. Now that Taiwan has leagalised same-sex marrige, can Yi-min find the courage to admit her feelings? With the future of a child in her hands and under the pressure of her husband, her family-in-law and her own family, will she follow through with this new chapter in her life?