XPost: rec.audio.opinion, alt.religion.scientology   
   From: spam@spam.com   
      
   On Mon, 30 Aug 2010 05:10:57 -0500, flipper wrote:   
      
   >On Mon, 30 Aug 2010 09:34:58 GMT, spam@spam.com (Don Pearce) wrote:   
   >   
   >>On Mon, 30 Aug 2010 04:26:02 -0500, flipper wrote:   
   >>   
   >>>On Mon, 30 Aug 2010 06:55:39 GMT, spam@spam.com (Don Pearce) wrote:   
   >>>   
   >>>>On Sun, 29 Aug 2010 19:07:09 -0700 (PDT), "Shhhh!!!! I'm Listening to   
   >>>>Reason!" wrote:   
   >>>>   
   >>>>>> >What about that whole random thing?   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>> That's part of it. As long as you have two populations, one of which   
   >>>>>> breeds better than the other, the worse will eventually die out. I   
   >>>>>> think we can agree that homosexuals have a poorer breeding record than   
   >>>>>> heteros. This observation alone should be enough to convince that   
   >>>>>> homosexuality isn't an inherited trait.   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>>I disagree. As long as there's discrimination there's a reason to hide   
   >>>>>one's orientation. Look at all the "conservative republicans" who have   
   >>>>>been outed, yet have families. Ditti those in the military. And those   
   >>>>>are just two examples.   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>>In a vacuum your argument might even work. It doesn't in real life   
   >>>>>though.   
   >>>>   
   >>>>I have no idea how your response addresses my post. I am talking about   
   >>>>genetics; no more and no less. Whether - and even how - anybody is   
   >>>>"outed" has absolutely no bearing on the matter.   
   >>>   
   >>>Sure it does, because humans can counter or, at least, mask what would   
   >>>otherwise be instinctive behavior and I presume he's proposing that   
   >>>cultural taboo would be one incentive to do so.   
   >>>   
   >>>Your 'genetic' presumptions, especially in the context of behavior,   
   >>>are too simplistic. For example, the gene could also require an   
   >>>environmental trigger to be expressive.   
   >>>   
   >>   
   >>What you say refers to particular individual circumstances.   
   >   
   >No, that 'individual circumstance' is only an example.   
   >   
   >> Genetics   
   >>doesn't work that way. It operates at the level of the huge. You can   
   >>manipulate all you like at the local level, and in the short term, but   
   >>in the end evolution will win.   
   >   
   >As I said before, your view of genetics is too simplistic.   
   >   
   >   
   >>Anyway, the effect would have occurred long before societies started   
   >>developing opinions about homosexuality. No, it is clear that there is   
   >>no gene for homosexuality.   
   >   
   >Then they really are masters of propaganda and linguists   
   >extraordinaire as they've apparently been duping laboratory rats and   
   >mice into defying their genes for decades, at the very least.   
   >   
   Nope, we are still apparently engaged in two unrelated conversations   
   here. I propose we stop before the confusion is total.   
      
   d   
      
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