(May 16, 2012 at 2:46 am)Godschild Wrote: To the contrary, I have looked into it and what you have quoted is what's there, nothing but speculation, thanks for bring these things up. One more thing genetics can necessarily be rejected because of this, in most cases when one identical twin shows homosexual tendencies the other does not. Since identical twins share exactly the same genes there must be choice involved.
Using the type of language you do shows immaturity, ask a psychologist.
http://discovermagazine.com/2007/jun/born-gay
Quote:The second study was an examination of twins by psychologist Michael Bailey of Northwestern University. Among identical twins, he found that if one was gay, the other had a 50 percent chance of also being gay. Among fraternal twins, who do not share the same DNA, there was only a 20 percent chance.Now try and tell me genetics don't play a roll in determining sexual orientation. Another thing you might want to think about. Could you be gay if you wanted to? Think about it honestly. Could you really be physically attracted to another guy if you wanted to? I know I couldn't. That's because sexual orientation isn't a choice.
Even with that, it's pointless. Choice is still part of personal freedom. Even if you chose to be gay, it's still your right to choose.