You're post just screams of entitlement. You live in the west so you think everything else should confirm to your standards - the world doesn't work that way.
Go back a 100 years and ask about legalising LGBT rights in the west and see how that goes. A lot of these countries are 100+ years behind in terms of cultural development. Most of these places you can't even show skin as a woman for god's sake. It's what happens a new country develops based off oil wealth only 50 years ago - you don't suddenly spawn in western society that's taken 500+ years to develop. That's what I'm saying, go beyond the arrogance and understand how and why other countries are different.
I don't think it's entitlement to advocate and push for human rights, and criticising countries on a football forum isn't even that anyway. It's important to look at why countries and societies are the way they are, but that doesn't mean it's arrogant to criticise certain things. While it's hard to change societies' attitudes across the globe, laws can change. And sometimes foreign pressure is part of the reason things change, so I think to say the world doesn't work that way isn't always true, and could also just be described as apathy.
Many countries sanctioned South Africa over their apartheid policies for instance. You could even argue all this noise about LGBT rights during the world cup is already having an effect, no matter how small. To even have the emir of Qatar directly address the issue, saying everyone is welcome is a pretty significant step if you think about it. That may be just to appease the Western press, but it's a start. On top of that Qatar introduced some labour reforms in response to the criticism of working conditions. Again, cynically it may just be appeasement for good press but it's better than nothing.
Also, in neighbouring Bahrain homosexuality isn't illegal by the way. However:
In September 2013, it was announced that all
Gulf Cooperative Countries had agreed to discuss a proposal to establish some form of, yet unknown, testing in order to ban gay foreigners from entering any of the countries.
[3][4] However, it has been suggested that concern for hosting
2022 FIFA World Cup in
Qatar, and fears for controversy in a case that football fans would have been screened, made officials backtrack the plans and insist that it was a mere proposal.
[5]
Small steps, but it's something isn't it?
Isn't it also kind of arrogant to argue this cultural development angle? It makes no sense to compare countries and come up with some arbitrary x years behind timeline, as these things aren't linear. For all we know some countries may never legalise homosexuality, but that doesn't mean we as individuals have to shut up about it because it's a different cultural context and history.