Author and activist Ryan Sorba recently released an undercover video showing “gays” freely contradicting prevailing dogma on the subject of homosexuality
claims
Benny Huang.
“Do you believe being gay is strictly
genetic?” Sorba asked. The responses he received certainly didn’t carry
the Dan Savage seal of approval.
… When asked if “being gay” was strictly genetic, [one man] said it was not. “The thing is, I was never gay.
Now
I am, and I’m proud. I am who I am now.” When Sorba asked another man,
“So you believe you became gay from the culture?” he responded, “Yeah,
but I’m proud of it.” An older man declared categorically that “None of
us were born gay.”
… The idea that people choose
homosexuality, or that it might be the result of negative environmental
factors such as sexual trauma, is often portrayed as the ramblings of
clueless straight people who are almost uniformly religious and
uncomfortable with modern science; people like Michele Bachman and Ben
Carson, for example. How odd it is then to hear homosexuals talking very
much like Ben Carson, or at least admitting that he’s right.
This just in: sex is a volitional behavior. How anyone can be shocked this revelation is beyond me.
… Why is the genetic basis of homosexuality so important? Plenty of
homosexuals will admit that the “born that way” message carries certain
political benefits that are just too important to forgo. Dr. Lillian
Faderman, a professor of lesbian literature, let slip an inconvenient
truth in the pages of The Advocate, a homosexual newspaper. “The concept
of gay and lesbian identity may be nothing but a social construct,” she
wrote, “but it has been crucial, enabling us to become a political
movement and demand the rights that are due to us as a minority. What
becomes of our political movement if we openly acknowledge that
sexuality is flexible and fluid, that gay and lesbian does not signify
‘a people’ but rather a ‘sometime behavior’?”