Charlington Posted Wednesday at 02:14 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:14 PM https://theconversation.com/young-women-are-identifying-as-less-straight-young-men-not-so-much-283936?utm_medium=article_clipboard_share&utm_source=theconversation.com It makes sense since many young female celebs who come out as bi, pan, or queer, still end up dating and marrying men. While with men it seems we’re pretty much hardwired one way or the other, gay or straight. Not to discredit or say bisexuality/pansexuality doesn’t exist with men. But bi/pansexual labels are definitely more common with women. marylander1940 and Lotus-eater 1 1
marylander1940 Posted Wednesday at 02:26 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:26 PM Lotus-eater, wsc, Charlington and 2 others 1 4
Lotus-eater Posted yesterday at 01:34 AM Posted yesterday at 01:34 AM Their study relies on a biased sample. It "examined 15 years of responses from more than 10,000 public university undergraduates in New York state between 2011 and 2026." College students in New York is not a good sample of NY let alone the U.S. Also, the hotbed of gender/queer studies is academia and females are more susceptible to social contagion, so it's not surprising that females (less hardwired and more susceptible to social contagion) are more likely to label themselves that way than males. Charlington and + Vegas_Millennial 2
+ sniper Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago Judging by the number of married-to-women men playing in damn near every steamroom I have ever been in, I just don't believe there are more actually bisexual women. Just more are coming out because it's less of a hindrance in finding an opposite sex life partner. Reproductive reality is a big thumb on the scale of the sex you choose for a spouse if you want kids. And it's a bigger thumb on the scale for men because when the missing ingredient is a teaspoon of semen, that's a whole lot easier to get than an egg, a uterus and nine months from the woman that uterus belongs to. Nue2thegame 1
BSR Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 10 hours ago, Lotus-eater said: Their study relies on a biased sample. It "examined 15 years of responses from more than 10,000 public university undergraduates in New York state between 2011 and 2026." College students in New York is not a good sample of NY let alone the U.S. Also, the hotbed of gender/queer studies is academia and females are more susceptible to social contagion, so it's not surprising that females (less hardwired and more susceptible to social contagion) are more likely to label themselves that way than males. A friend of mine went to Mt. Holyoke, said there were a sh!t-ton of 4-year lesbians. Plenty had girlfriends during undergrad but never looked back after graduation. + Vegas_Millennial 1
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