Even the rabid left wing Guardian newspaper in the UK is retreating
like the outgoing tide from the lie that homosexuals are born that way.
One of the reasons that homosexual activists bludgeon people into
accepting biological determinism with regard to homosexuality is that
they must have it. If homosexuality is not in fact genetically caused,
they have nothing. Their entire argument, their entire movement, is
predicated on the utterly false premise that gayness is the genetic
equivalent of race. The foundation on which they stand is their claim
that just as no one can do a thing about skin colour, so no one can do a
thing about sexual orientation.
Without a genetic causation, sexual preference in behaviour is clearly a
choice, a choice which no one is compelled to make. And that choice can
be evaluated in any number of ways, including whether or not it is good
for human health and whether or not same-sex households are sub-optimal
nurturing environments for vulnerable young children.
If homosexuality is biologically determined, then the rest of us don't
have much choice but to accept it as a sad and unfortunate reality.
But
if homosexual conduct is ultimately a matter of choice, then the
homosexual lobby has nothing, because homosexual conduct is clearly
harmful to human beings in any number of ways, not the least of which is
serving as the leading cause of HIV/AIDS, which can leave young men
disease-ridden and destined for an early grave.
We don't want that future for anyone. We believe that every human being
is made in the image of God, is of infinite worth, and is a free moral
agent capable of making life-affirming decisions and refusing
life-destroying ones. This is true with regard to sexual behaviour, drug
and alcohol use, and interpersonal relationships.
Along comes the Guardian with its piece that blows the entire foundation
of the gay "rights" movement completely out of the tub.
Note just the first three paragraphs and the fifth (emphasis mine
throughout):
A study of gay men in the US has found fresh evidence that male sexual
orientation is influenced by genes. Scientists tested the DNA of 400 gay
men and found that genes on at least two chromosomes affected whether a
man was gay or straight.
A region of the X chromosome called Xq28 had some impact on men's sexual
behaviour - though scientists have no idea which of the many genes in
the region are involved, nor how many lie elsewhere in the genome.
Another stretch of DNA on chromosome 8 also played a role in male sexual
orientation - though again the precise mechanism is unclear...
Michael Bailey, a psychologist at North-western University in Illinois,
set out the findings at a discussion event held in conjunction with the
annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science in Chicago on Thursday. 'The study shows that there are genes
involved in male sexual orientation,' he said.
The Guardian is hoping readers won't notice how deliberately and
intentionally the paper has purposely avoided any word that might even
suggest biological causation. "Influenced by, affected, some impact,
played a role, involved." Not exactly a rousing case for the "born that
way" crowd.
It even gets worse from there:
The gene or genes in the Xq28 region that influence sexual orientation
have a limited and variable impact. Not all of the gay men in Bailey's
study inherited the same Xq28 region. The genes were neither sufficient,
nor necessary, to make any of the men gay.
I'm not sure it gets any clearer and less ambiguous than that: "The
genes were neither sufficient, nor necessary, to make any of the men
gay."
One problem all along for gay activists is that even a cursory survey of
sexual orientation among identical twins makes the "born that way" meme
impossible to accept.
Identical twins have identical DNA, which is why they are called
identical twins. If one has blue eyes, so will the other. If one has
black hair, so will the other. If one is tall, so is the other.
If sexual orientation is genetically determined, then the concordance
rate among identical twins should be 100%. If one twin is gay, so should
be the other. Alas, the concordance rate, according to researchers Peter
Bearman from Columbia and Hannah Bruckner from Yale, is somewhere
between 5% and 7%. Oops.
The Guardian swallows hard, but notes this fact:
The flawed thinking behind a genetic test for sexual orientation is
clear from studies of twins, which show that the identical twin of a gay
man, who carries an exact replica of his brother's DNA, is more likely
to be straight than gay. That means even a perfect genetic test that
picked up every gene linked to sexual orientation would still be less
effective than flipping a coin.
In other words, the genetic evidence for biological causation is so poor
you'd have better luck predicting orientation by throwing darts
blindfolded.
Bailey adds, "We found evidence for two sets [of genes] that affect
whether a man is gay or straight. But it is not completely
determinative; there are certainly other environmental factors
involved."
We have often argued that environment has by far the largest impact on a
young child's sense of sexual identity. The nature of a young boy's
relationship with his father and with this mother can play an outsized
role. Same-sex abuse at an early age can leave a lasting imprint on a
boy's sense of his sexual identity.
One of Bailey's colleagues, Alan Sanders chimes in this way. "When
people say there's a gay gene, it's an oversimplification. There's more
than one gene, and genetics is not the whole story."
Bearman and Bruckner put it this way: "Our results support the
hypothesis that less gendered socialization in early childhood and
preadolescence shapes subsequent same-sex romantic preferences."
Another way to put it is that Rick Perry was exactly right, when he said
this in San Francisco:
Whether or not you feel compelled to follow a particular lifestyle or
not, you have the ability to decide not to do that. I may have the
genetic coding that I'm inclined to be an alcoholic, but I have the
desire not to do that, and I look at the homosexual issue the same way.
It looks like Gov. Perry is the progressive one here, articulating a
view that is much more in line with the latest biological and scientific
thinking than our friends in the gay lobby.
I am not persuaded that genes are even a contributing factor, but even
if they are, the great news is that if individuals are not biologically
predetermined to pursue the homosexual lifestyle, then change is
possible as a matter of scientific fact.
This leads to one simple, salient truth: there is hope for the homosexual.