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Straight men have a lot of gay sex, study shows


Scott

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This is now a discussion about the definition of gay, straight, bi. Is it important to define it?

 

I know gay guys who are mistaken for being straight, and straight guys who are thought to be gay, and guess what: They don't mind. It doesn't matter. As long as anybody is happy with what he is doing, and is not trying to tell the other guys that he is doing something wrong or bad, or even trying to change him, it is irrelevant.

 

Academics introduced the term MSM because it is difficult if not impossible to agree on what constitutes gay, bi, straight. I kind of like that because it's factual and does not require putting people into categories.

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2 minutes ago, MaeJoMTB said:

Gay, person who exclusively want sex with the same gender.

Hetero, person who exclusively wants sex with the opposite gender.

Bi, person who takes it where they can get it.

 

Absolutely easy to define ......... unless you have an agenda (or fantasy) to push.

That's your definition. The world isn't that simple, I'm afraid; as other people have other definitions. Which you have already seen in this thread.

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39 minutes ago, Songlaw said:

While you could, theoretically, define an alligator as a sofa, I would challenge you to recline on it. 

Is the alligator stuffed?

 

Given the nature of this thread I couldn't resist. 

 

 

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Not sure how the "straighter than straight" guys can come to terms with the fact that they have , at some time in Thailand, found a lady-boy sexually attractive, and not even been aware of it.

At some point, gay or not, we have all looked at, desired sexually, been attracted to a beautiful sexy woman who is in fact a man.

 

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1 hour ago, onthemoon said:

No, this metaphor doesn't work. However, what you say makes sense but what others say also makes sense. 

 

A man who has had sex with a man once (and maybe didn't like it so much that he would do it again, or maybe he was drunk, or maybe he was in jail) is not gay. Very much like a man who has had sex with a woman once but notes that he does prefer men and does not want to repeat his experience is not straight.

 

The world is not black & white, I'm afraid.

It’s not a metaphor. A point is being made about arbitrary definitions. 

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4 minutes ago, Songlaw said:

The world is not black & white, I'm afraid.

 

And there is the answer.... Gone are the days of straight/gay, black/white etc etc

These days there are a myriad of colours and genders...

It's a pretty world :partytime2:

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19 hours ago, Songlaw said:

 I have been as open to new and interesting experiences as is humanly possible throughout my life, but as far as I can determine, this is a physiological barrier that cannot be overridden by a neurotypically-wired, heterosexual male. 

Don’t want to have sex with guys? Great. Don’t. You might choose pistachio ice cream over strawberry. Absolutely up to you. And about as interesting a choice to well-adjusted others.

 

But your aversion to male-male sexuality is not a hard-wired feature of your brain.

 

It’s cultural and social conditioning. “Normal” men in cultures outside the Judeo/Christian/Muslim sphere generally  do not share your distaste. They may not be interested in gay sex, but there’s no revulsion or disgust. We might look at pre-Christian Greece, Persia and Japan, for example, or some modern Polynesian cultures to see a completely different set of social norms that do not include anti-homophilic sentiments. 

 

 

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1 hour ago, midzo said:

Don’t want to have sex with guys? Great. Don’t. You might choose pistachio ice cream over strawberry. Absolutely up to you. And about as interesting a choice to well-adjusted others.

 

But your aversion to male-male sexuality is not a hard-wired feature of your brain.

 

It’s cultural and social conditioning. “Normal” men in cultures outside the Judeo/Christian/Muslim sphere generally  do not share your distaste. They may not be interested in gay sex, but there’s no revulsion or disgust. We might look at pre-Christian Greece, Persia and Japan, for example, or some modern Polynesian cultures to see a completely different set of social norms that do not include anti-homophilic sentiments. 

 

 

Who said anything about revulsion or disgust?

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1 hour ago, MaeJoMTB said:

It's the definition in the dictionary.

You may want it to be different, and you may want there to be more that 2 sexes, but there aren't, it's just a fantasy.

<snipped>

You may wish to be defined by a dictionary; others may not.  

 

And just to throw a spanner in the works:

 

image.png

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5 hours ago, Chou Anou said:

Um...you're new here, aren't you? Learn who's who and what's what before you open your big <deleted> mouth.

 

 

are you saying light hearted remarks on an entertaining topic is forbidden?

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On 5/1/2018 at 3:05 PM, Krataiboy said:

Nothing particularly revelationary about this Pink piece. Numerous surveys have shown that many, if not most, men who identify as heterosexual have a sexual experience with another man at some time in their lives. The same goes for women, only more so.

 

Such activity is hardly surprising. How else can an individual discover where they stand on the spectrum of human sexual activity, with all that implies in terms of having lasting, committed relationships?

 

The author of one of the studies cited the Pink article, Ritch C. Savin-Williams, has written extensively in support of his conviction that nobody is one hundred percent heterosexual, including this fascinating Time magazine article:

 

http://time.com/5026092/mostly-straight-sexual-identity-bisexual-gay/

Thats total, Bolox, speaking for yourself here, me thinks.  

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16 hours ago, Jingthing said:

You're obsessed with labeling other people. What's most important is how people identify themselves. There are people that are truly bisexual, they usually know that themselves, but not everyone that has had sex sometime in their lives with both sexes is bisexual. NOT EVEN CLOSE.

 

There are times where it's important to know about genders of sex partners regardless of labeling. Such as the category MSM (Men that have sex with men). This is something medical professionals are concerned about because there are specific health risks with that. But just being a MSM in a recent time frame doesn't mean the person either is gay or bi or identifies as gay or bi for life. For examples, prison environments, gay for pay, short term fluidity, etc.

Pass me the Sick Bucket !   :sick:

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6 hours ago, steven2018 said:

We have emerged into multi-sexual beings. As our races becomes more globally homogeneous, our sexual encounters become more diverse. Sort of like the 1960s drug movement, it is now an expressive movement of sex.

 

 

 

 

Thank you , Julian Clary.  :giggle:

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