Weimar Mansilla2026-03-222026-03-22202210.35429/jtms.2022.22.8.22.32https://doi.org/10.35429/jtms.2022.22.8.22.32https://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/73426This article aims to analyze the characteristics of gay macho approach through the stigma that makes their peers, the criteria considered by the political and social implications that can raise awareness of sexist respecting gays behavior of other sexual orientations lgby (lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans). Masculinity in sectarian groups is the result of a conservation and fundamentalist patriarchal society in good standing to prosecute a patriarchy rooted City constitutional capital of Bolivia Sucre. The stigmatization of the gay personality when it acts against the heteronormatilidad being effete, effeminate or too obvious; these behavioral attitudes behavior is condemned as little accepted by others and even homosexuals themselves categorized as not visible, discrete or closet.enPatriarchyLesbianClosetPoliticsPsychologySocial psychologyStigma (botany)HomosexualityMasculinityGender studiesMale chauvinist stigmatization among homosexual peers in Sucre Boliviaarticle