How many people experience same-sex attraction?
by Jason Park
Pro-gay advocates claim that 10% of the population is homosexual. More
conservative estimates place the figure at 1–3%. However, estimates are
problematic not only because it is hard to get accurate information, but also
because it is difficult to define what homosexuality is. Do you include in the
numbers everyone who has had a homosexual thought, or just those who have had a
homosexual experience? How many experiences or thoughts qualify? Some people are
reluctant to admit homosexual experiences, while others exaggerate the numbers.
Further, since it is to the political advantage of those who seek to normalize
homosexuality to establish the practice as widespread, you must be cautious
about the studies that are reported.
Kinsey research
Alfred C. Kinsey conducted research on human sexuality in the late 1940s and
early 1950s and published his findings in Sexual Behavior in the Human Male11
and Sexual Behavior in the Human Female.12 Kinsey ranked his
findings on a seven-point scale with exclusive heterosexuality at zero and
exclusive homosexuality at six.13 Among twenty-five–year-old males in
the United States, he claimed that 79% were at zero (exclusively heterosexual)
and 2.9% were at six (exclusively homo-sexual).14 He claimed the
following about white American males between the ages of sixteen and fifty-five:15
Ë 10% were "more or less exclusively homosexual (i.e., rate 5 or 6)
for at least three years."
Ë 8% were "exclusively homosexual (i.e., rate 6) for at least three
years."
Ë 4% were "exclusively homosexual throughout their lives, after the
onset of adolescence."
His findings showed that 10% of the males had seven or more homosexual
experiences. Further, he claimed that as many as 37% had some kind of homosexual
experience after adolescence.
Kinsey’s research methodologies have been questioned. Although he used a
large number of subjects—they took sex histories on more than 18,000 people and
used data from 5,000 men and 6,000 women—he did not use methods of random
sampling that scientists commonly use today. His subjects came from boarding
houses, college fraternities, prisons, mental wards, and wherever else he could
get them. As many as 20–25% had prison experience and 5% may have been male
prostitutes. Since one would expect that this group would have higher than
average homosexual experiences, the findings of Kinsey’s studies may not be
representative of the population as a whole.16
Current research
There has been significant research since the 1950s to indicate that the
occurrence of homosexuality in America and in other countries is much lower than
the Kinsey statistics would indicate.17 Milton Diamond of the John A.
Burns School of Medicine at the University of Hawaii analyzed studies of
populations in the United States, Scandinavia, Asia, and Europe, and found that
including all individuals who have ever engaged in any kind of
same-sex behavior, the numbers would be "5–6 percent for males and 2–3 percent
for females."18
A large study by the Alan Guttmacher Institute reported in 1993 that of
sexually-active men aged 20–39, only 2.3% had any same-gender sexual activity
and only 1.1% reported exclusive homosexual contact during the last ten years.19
Perhaps the largest and most scientifically-based modern survey was concluded
in 1994 by academics at the University of Chicago’s National Opinion Research
Center.20 They asked 210 pages of questions of 3,432 Americans, ages
eighteen to fifty-nine, and published their findings in The Social
Organization of Sexuality.21 On the subject of homosexuality,
this survey found the following:
Have you had sex with someone of your gender?
- 2.7% of men (and 1.3% of women) had sex in the past year
- 7.1% of men (and 3.8% of women) had sex since puberty
Are you sexually attracted to people of the same gender?
- 6.2% of men (and 4.4% of women) said yes
The survey also showed larger percentages in urban areas. The twelve largest
cities in the United States showed more than 9% of men identifying themselves as
homosexual, as opposed to only 1% in rural areas. Since homosexual people tend
to migrate from the rural areas and suburbs to larger cities, these larger urban
groups feed the percept-ion that a larger percentage of the total population is
homosexual. Click here for even
more modern studies.
Conclusions on existing research
Different studies show different findings. Kinsey claimed that 4–10% of the
male population was more or less exclusively homosexual for at least three
years. Other research since that time shows the figure to be a more conservative
1–3%. However, if you consider everyone who has had homosexual contact since
puberty, the numbers are more in the neighborhood of 5–10%.
Whatever the numbers, homosexual problems are significant and touch the lives
of many people. If we use the conservative figure of 5%, of the ten million
members of the Church there are 500,000 who have some degree of homosexual
problems. And if you count their parents, spouses, brothers and sisters, it
could add up to nearly three million members of the Church directly
affected.22 Add to that grandparents, uncles, aunts, and
concerned Church leaders, and you can see that many more people are affected.
Endnotes:
11. Alfred C. Kinsey, et. al., Sexual
Behavior in the Human Male, W. B. Saunders Company, Philadelphia, 1948.
12. Sexual Behavior in the Human Female,
1953.
13. Sexual Behavior in the Human Male,
Alfred C. Kinsey, et. al., W. B. Saunders Company, Philadelphia, 1948, p. 638.
14. Sexual Behavior in the Human Male,
Alfred C. Kinsey, et. al., W. B. Saunders Company, Philadelphia, 1948, p. 651.
15. Sexual Behavior in the Human Male,
Alfred C. Kinsey, et. al., W. B. Saunders Company, Philadelphia, 1948, p. 651
16. Homosexuality in America: Exposing the
Myths, American Family Association, Tupelo, MS, 1994, pp. 9–10.
17. See Setting the Record Straight: What
Research Really Says About the Social Consequences of Homosexuality, Larry
Burtoft, Ph.D., Focus on the Family, Colorado Springs, Colorado, 1995, p. 23.
18. See “Homosexuality and Bisexuality in
Different Populations,” Milton Diamond, Archives of Sexual Behavior,
1993, vol. 22, no. 4, p. 303.
19. “The Sexual Behavior of Men in the United
States,” John O. G. Billy et. al., Family Planning Perspectives,
March/April 1993, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 52–60.
20. See “Sex in America,” U.S. News & World
Report, Oct. 17, 1994, pp. 74–81, and “Now for the Truth About Americans and
Sex,” Time, 17 Oct. 1994, pp. 62–71.
21. The Social Organization of Sexuality,
University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, 1994. A smaller companion volume is
published as Sex in America: A Definitive Survey, Gina Kolata, Little,
Brown and Company, Boston, MA, 1994.
22. Figures used in this estimate: 5% of 10
million members of the Church equals 500,000 who struggle with homosexual
problems; 200,000 spouses (about 40% are or have been married according to
NARTH survey results); 1,000,000 parents; 1,150,000 siblings (average 2.3
siblings per family in the Church according to a 1981 survey by the Church’s
Correlation Research Division); giving a total of 2.85 million. The figures
for the United States would be 5% of 270 million equals 13.5 million; 5.4
million spouses; 27 million parents; 14.85 million siblings (average 1.1 per
family according to “Family Life: Holding Together Better Than Most,” The
Economist, vol. 22, Feb. 97, pp. 28–29.); giving a total of 60.75 million
in the USA.
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