i read the 10% number was basically a rumor started by Dr. Kinsey in the 1920's. reading some of the history around that time makes me think his statistical analysis was not up to current low standards.
i read another report that a US survey done face to face indicated 2.5% gay but an internet survey conducted gave 6%.
just some critical thinking so we can spread the word as it may be.
you see some surveys where the sample size is like 300.
just cant see how any relevant decisions can be made with that small a sample size when the general population of gays could possible vary 2-15% depending on location.
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Well, stats and surveys are not that accurate because there are a lot of people who still in the closet!
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We had a thread about this a few months ago I think. People have these kinds of misconceptions all the time, another famous statistic is the amount of the population employed in law enforcement, something under 1%, which people vastly overestimate because of television. If a minority is visible, people notice them more, and their minds jump to weird conclusions. I've had people insist to my face that Muslims will be overpopulating Canada and outnumbering whites within 10 years, despite the fact that they are roughly 300,000 Muslims in Canada.
tl;dr people are stupid.
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2.5%? 3%? 4.5%? 6%? 10%? or 25%?
Not one of those percentages matters when it comes to equality... Equality is equality, whether there is 2.5% of the population or 25% of it. Period!!
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As for Doctor Kinsey's findings, they were compiled from statistics made by himself and his services over a set sample of people who accepted to talk about their sexuality. We have no guarantee that the numbers were correct, but it was a start to discussing the plurality and variety of sexual conducts and orientations... He may have counted 10% of people who had tried same sex experiences, whether they were living in exclusive same sex couples and partnerships or not... If you count all the men who have sex with men and who don't count themselves as gay, then it will definitely bump up the percentage... There was a scale of 1 to 6 in which Kinsey placed people's preferences going from the exclusively straight to the exclusively gay... So 10% may correspond to the sum of people who were not on the far end of the scale of straightness (ie exclusive). I'd be willing to believe that 10% of the population have experimented same sex intercourse at some point in their lives, whether they've made it a lifestyle or not.
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I like the Kinsey scale thing. It makes a lot of sense to me. Most guys I like aren't actually gay, but are prepared to fool around. If anything, I'd say the percentages, under any system, would show a lower population of gay people than is actually the case. So many gay people are in the closet, married with families and so on.
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