EAllusion wrote:These two statements aren't alike
1) The effectiveness of reparative therapy for motivated individuals is well established.
2) There is no rigorous support of the effectiveness of sexual reorientation interventions in the literature. Some self-report surveys indicate that it may rarely happen, though that is possibly a consequence of reduction in sexual drive or false reporting rather than alteration of sexual orientation. A small number of bisexuals may learn to focus more on one sex even if their orientation does not change. Potential harm of such intervention is a real risk and inadequately controlled for.
The eggs you're walking on here have begun to show signs of wear, E. Conversion is possible for motivated, and in particular, religiously motivated individuals. That's what the evidence now shows. If it was only 3%, 5% or 10%, the claim that "the effectiveness of reparative therapy for motivated individuals is well established" would be defensible. If anything near 23% is possible, then the claim is equally well established, but simply at a higher ratio to the entire population seeking therapeutic intervention in this area.
You're going to continue fighting this, no matter what the empirical evidence suggests, regardless, because you have an intrinsic hostility to the very idea that homosexuality may just actually be an accretion and modification that is, in point of fact, a deviation (perversion) of normative psychosexual development and that there are complex, multivariate processes of development at work, biological, psychological, and social/environmental, in its generation, and that this is unique and ideosyncratic to each individual.
Hence, a
reorientation of such a psychosexual state is possible (given that it is
not innate in the way heterosexual orientation is the standard, default psychosexual developmental path) is for those who do not accept their SSA and who are motivated to enter therapy seeking a perceptual restructuring of sexual ideation and feelings.
Is the percentage relatively small? Of course, and no one has ever claimed otherwise. The biological essentialist argument is central, however, for both the social Left and the extreme libertarian Right (which is, on social/cultural issues, a closing circle with the cultural Left, although it maintains its own philosophical position for somewhat different reasons).