Very interesting video that goes into far more depth about the situation of queer people in China than a lot of English-language media does. It's actually nuanced and researched; not just "China Bad" nonsense (it does mention the state surveillance meme and there's a brief jab at "Tankies" in the beginning - somewhat deserved IMO - but other than that it's mostly nuanced).
The big takeaway I got from it is that nationalism, patriarchy, Confucianism, and the birth rate are the biggest factors for why queer rights aren't expanding. Basically there are systemic issues but it's largely cultural & social taboos that are the deciding factor. In general I'd say it looks like China is behind the West on queer rights but only by maybe two or three decades and not anymore near the level of somewhere like Uganda or Saudi Arabia as anti-China libs keep trying to claim.
Not great, but room for improvement. I have faith that conditions will improve.
I watched this video like a year ago, and maybe it mentioned here or somewhere else, but i do remember hearing that the more reactionary sides of China when it comes to queernes are generally in the country side.
It's important to keep in kind that China is a massive country with one of the largest populations in the world, amongst also being a civilisation that has been around for thousands of years, it's stupid to think all chinese people are a monolith and view queernes the same, i know amongst young people in China queernes is viewed a lot better and pro-queer sentiments are growing.
It's also really dumb for rightwing and China bad people to try and depict China as this hell for queer people, it mostly comes from the fact that all they know about China is what western media and governments say about it.