Name: Anonymous 2019-02-23 18:07
People have it all wrong, here's the real reason:
It's not a choice, people are born with it.
You probably have gay genes in your DNA, but, unless they were turned on in your mother’s womb, they remain coiled up and silent. A recent groundbreaking study from UCLA found that, by looking at a group of men, some gay, some straight, and looking at epigenetic tags in nine different sites, they could predict with 70% accuracy their sexual orientation.
So, what conditions in the uterus turn on those gay genes? So, for a male, your chances of homosexuality increase in proportion to the number of previous baby boys who inhabited your mother’s uterus. So, for every older biological brother you have, your chances of being born gay go up 33%.
Long before we invented the pill, nature devised homosexuality as a prescription for birth control. After four straight, heterosexual males, nature says, “Enough already!,” and the mom’s immune system switches on the epigenetic switch so a gay male is born into the family. This one will not be overburdening the clan with yet more mouths to feed in the next generation – sometimes more isn’t better – and he’s not going to be killing his brother in a fight over who gets the girl. Thankfully, the sexual minority these days have many options for having kids of their own, and I have a hunch my gay son may bless us with grandchildren before our three straight children do.
So, another gene, this one on the X chromosome, is called a “male-loving gene,” because, when it shows up in a female, she tends to mate early and have a lot of kids, but, when the male-loving gene shows up in a male, it predisposes to homosexuality.
It's not a choice, people are born with it.