bcspace wrote:Actually I do. But I've done all the leg work so far. Considering the grandiose claims of erudition going around, the proof must be left to you, the student.
Frankly, I doubt it. If you understood this, you wouldn't have quoted the statistic without offering contextual information to help readers interpret and understand it, as ANY good researcher would do.
Considering the most unscholarly fashion with which you all have treated references so far, it is not unreasonable to make you find some of your own especially since you are so sure that I am wrong. In fact, I think that since most of you are so invested in supporting the homosexual lifestyle choice, you have to cling to straws to save yourselves from any real discussion of the issues.
Jesus Hermione Christ, you just plug steadfastly ahead, totally oblivious and totally clueless.
Ah! Then you must have a reference.....somewhere. lol
Hey numbnuts, a couple of things:
1. I have no interest in supporting the homosexual lifestyle in this thread. I believe the health effects of homosexuality is an empirical question and ought to be addressed via valid scientific methods, not by biased, anecdotal polemics by homphobic fundie proctologists. The issues of whether homosexuality is "moral" and what's it health implications are are two completely separate questions, though I suspect strongly that you, and the fundies, would like to argue something like "fruit of their sins." I have no prior desire to find no health effects of homosexuality. If they exist, we should identify them and address them, but they say NOTHING about the morality of homosexuality.
2. Your research methods suck big time. That is the substance of all my replies. You make no effort to get a non-biased overview of the credible scientific research, yet you claim others do lazy research.
My problem is not with your conclusion, per se, but the evidence you've used to support it AND the rationale behind it (I suspect your belong to the "fruit of their sins" camp, which I find a morally deplorable position.
To help you out, I did an on-line search at a research library to which I have access. I typed in "lesbian health" and here's what I found in terms of the number of articles related to this topic (not all will be directly or indirectly relevant, in fact, most won't), but it requires one to wade through them and see.
4 Alt-Health Watch (EBSCO)
66 Health Source: Nursing/Academic Edition (EBSCO)
545 Web of Science (ISI)
184 Academic Search Premier (EBSCO
Now, here's the very first citation I found, which actually supports your argument; it is a sight bit more credible than your fundie, homophobic proctologist, and it's in a peer-reviewed journal.
1. Women Who Report Having Sex With Women: British National Probability Data on Prevalence, Sexual Behaviors, and Health Outcomes.
Author: Mercer, Catherine H.; Bailey, Julia V.; Johnson, Anne M.; Erens, Bob; Wellings, Kaye; Fenton, Kevin A.; Copas, Andrew J.
Journal: American Journal of Public Health
Pub.: 2007-06
Volume: 97
Issue: 6
Pages: 1126(8)
ISSN: 00900036
Subject: ABORTION; DRINKING of alcoholic beverages; INTERVIEWS; LESBIANS -- Health & hygiene; PUBLIC health -- Research; SEXUALLY transmitted diseases -- Risk factors; WOMEN -- Sexual behavior; SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors; UNSAFE sex; GREAT Britain
Description: Language : English Reading Level (Lexile): 1580 AN : 25302445 Objectives. We estimated the prevalence of same-sex experience among women and compared women reporting sex with women and men and women reporting sex exclusively with women with women reporting sex exclusively with men, in terms of sociodemographics and sexual, reproductive, and general health risk behaviors and outcomes. Methods. We used a British probability survey (n = 6399 women, aged 16 to 44 years) conducted from 1999 to 2001 with face-to-face interviewing and computer-assisted self-interviewing. Results. We found that 4.9% of the women reported same-sex partner(s) ever; 2.8% reported sex with women in the past 5 years (n = 178); 85.0% of these women also reported male partner(s) in this time. Compared with women who reported sex exclusively with men, women who reported sex with women and men reported significantly greater male partner numbers, unsafe sex, smoking, alcohol consumption, and intravenous drug use and had an increased likelihood of induced abortion and sexually transmitted infection diagnoses (age-adjusted odds ratios=3.07 and 4.41, respectively). Conclusions, For women, a history of sex with women may be a marker for increased risk of adverse sexual, reproductive, and general health outcomes compared with women who reported sex exclusively with men. A nonjudgmental review of female patients' sexual history should help practitioners discuss risks that women may face. (Am J Public Health. 2007;97:1126-1133. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2006.086439)
I don't have time to do more.
So, now I've demonstrated that both your claims made about me above are false.
You still do s****y research.
God . . . "who mouths morals to other people and has none himself; who frowns upon crimes, yet commits them all; who created man without invitation, . . . and finally, with altogether divine obtuseness, invites this poor, abused slave to worship him ..."