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Millennials Are the Gayest Generation

Included in a new report from the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) on the sexual attitudes of millennials is the finding that “seven percent of millennials identify either as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender.” The report is based on a survey of more than 2,000 U.S. adults between the ages of 18 and 35.

The last major meta-analysis of the size of the LGBT population in the United States, produced by the Williams Institute in 2011, estimated that 3.5 percent of adults identify as lesbian, gay, or bisexual, and 0.3 percent identify as transgender.

The contrast between the two studies is as stark as an Instagram filter: Millennials are nearly twice as likely to identify as LGBT as other American adults.

But where did this statistical doubling come from? Is the gay population poised to get larger over time, or are LGBT millennials simply more forthcoming about their gender and sexual identities than members of previous generations?

Demographers have struggled for decades to produce an accurate picture of the size of the LGBT population in the United States. In two studies from 1948 and 1953, sexologist Alfred Kinsey estimated that 10 percent of men and 2 to 6 percent of women were “more or less exclusively homosexual.”

Early gay activists quickly dropped the female side of that equation and claimed that one out of every 10 people strayed from the straight and narrow. As Gary J. Gates of the Williams Institute notes in a Washington Post op-ed, the 1-in-10 statistic—which continues to circulate colloquially to this day—was more strategic than it was factual.

“One in 10 was big enough to ‘matter,’” he writes. “But the percentage was not so large as to overly threaten a society still extremely uncomfortable with the idea of gay people.”

This political maneuvering may have been rhetorically effective, but it did obscure the true size of the LGBT population. The picture has remained unclear ever since.

As the Pew Research Center notes, conventional surveys may underestimate the size of the LGBT population due to unreliable self-reporting. A team of researchers from Ohio State University and Boston University found that survey respondents were far more likely to report a non-heterosexual identity when assured of absolute anonymity than they were when interviewed using a standard public opinion method in which respondents can still be connected to their answers.

But even providing for absolute anonymity may not be enough to demystify the size of the LGBT population. It’s nearly impossible to replicate the conditions of the closet in a scientific survey.

The result of the reluctance to self-report has been a muddled mess of varying estimates and statistics. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in 2014 measured lesbian, gay, and bisexual people at 2.3 percent of the adult population, while the 2010 National Survey of Health and Behavior found that 7 percent of women and 8 percent of men identify as gay, lesbian, or bisexual.

Americans are clueless about the size of the LGBT population—a 2011 Gallup poll found that more than half of them believe that gay and lesbian people constitute 20 percent or more of the population—but can we blame them for not knowing the truth when the truth isn’t out there?

As the Kinsey Institute’s own bibliography of prevalence studies reveals, the confusion has only been compounded by the sheer breadth of survey methodologies: Some researchers ask about sexual attraction, some about sexual behavior, and others about sexual orientation.

In the 1970s and ’80s, it made more sense to ask about behavior than identity. In the Bowers v. Hardwick era, respondents might have admitted to having once had a homosexual experience while being more reluctant to come out as gay or lesbian.

The fact that a full 7 percent of millennials identify as LGBT is an encouraging sign that reluctance to self-report may be fading as social acceptance of LGBT people increases. Being labeled as “gay” was once a big deal. These days, it’s just one of 12 sexual orientations on OKCupid.

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by Anonymousreply 17August 19, 2020 10:05 PM

(CONT)

If anything, the new data suggests that more older Americans may be lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender than previous estimates have led us to believe. Putting paranoid and moralistic rumblings about the corruption of American youth to the side, it seems unlikely that the overall proportion of LGBT people has shifted much over the last few generations.

According to a recent study in the Journal of Sex Research that analyzed data from 1991 to 2010, the prevalence of reported same-sex sexual behavior has fluctuated substantially over time, but “the percentage of people reporting a pattern of predominantly same-gender sexual behavior has neither increased nor decreased over time.”

LGBT identity is not some viral trend that’s here today, gone tomorrow. It’s much more likely that the figure for all American adults is closer to the 7 percent figure for millennials than it is that millennials have somehow contracted the gay gene from Tumblr.

That hypothesis is supported by the PRRI report’s finding that 82 percent of millennials say “their understanding of their own sexual orientation has not changed since they were young adolescents.”

In other words, the spike in LGBT identification among millennial adults probably can’t be chalked up to tired talking points about attention-seeking and narcissism. Much like their forebears, LGBT millennials understand their own identities from a young age but, unlike their forebears, they have more latitude to express them publicly.

And if 7 percent of millennial adults self-identify as LGBT under current conditions, there’s no way of knowing how high the statistical ceiling will eventually reach. According to Pew, less than 20 percent of LGBT adults report that there is “a lot” of social acceptance for LGBT people in the United States. Self-reporting could hypothetically increase even further in a future where being LGBT is not a big deal or, as a millennial might say: LGBTQIA? NBD.

So that 1-in-10 statistic, once thought to be drastically overinflated, may be closer to the truth than we knew.

by Anonymousreply 1June 29, 2015 7:46 PM

bump

by Anonymousreply 2June 29, 2015 8:36 PM

Please. When I was that age, we were 10%.

by Anonymousreply 3June 29, 2015 8:45 PM

Not a lot of millennial are into experimenting or are gay. There are a good number of millennials who are not pro-gay and quiet conservative.

by Anonymousreply 4June 29, 2015 9:11 PM

it is a choice!

by Anonymousreply 5June 29, 2015 9:27 PM

We will never know the exact percentage of the population that is gay. There are too many variables involved.

by Anonymousreply 6June 29, 2015 9:41 PM

Thanks a lot, bully us a bit more like we haven't problems enough already!

by Anonymousreply 7June 29, 2015 9:56 PM

r6, you can never know exactly what's on people's minds, but there are pretty good ways of knowing how many people are seeking out same-sex contact (personal ads, online dating sites, etc.)

by Anonymousreply 8June 29, 2015 11:38 PM

But r8 what is the percentage of people using those sites? The percentage is probably less than half of people who are actually attracted to the same sex.

by Anonymousreply 9June 29, 2015 11:41 PM

"But R8 what is the percentage of people using those sites?"

You can look at the ratio of straight people to gay/bi identified people using them

by Anonymousreply 10June 29, 2015 11:45 PM

R10 I think such a method would still select for outness, to some extent.

by Anonymousreply 11June 30, 2015 12:10 AM

Also, people who place personal adverts are probably not representative of the broader population in their psychological traits. Aside from selecting for outness, personal ads probably select also for extroversion, novelty-seeking, etc.

by Anonymousreply 12June 30, 2015 12:13 AM

Plenty of closeted people use personal ads, online dating, etc. You could argue that they are probably more comfortable meeting guys/girls this way than they would be walking into a gay bar or gay-specific establishment

by Anonymousreply 13June 30, 2015 12:14 AM

R13 That still doesn't mean such a survey wouldn't select for certain qualities - outness, age, and certain psychological traits - that would render it unrepresentative of the broader population, and therefore an easy target for questioning and skepticism. There's only way to avoid bias, to stick with traditional surveys that consciously vie for national representativity, but providing more anonymity to respondents than past surveys did in order to facilitate self-reporting stigmatized identities and behaviors. Face-to-face surveys, such the CDC's, produce the lowest proportions of self-reported LGBT identity because of that - because of the high level of contact between interviewer and interviewee, which is known in sex research to repress socially undesirable responding. Online surveys tend to yield higher percentages of people self-identifying as gay - probably because they're the opposite to face-to-face surveys when it comes to the level of anonymity and interviewer contact. So maybe that's where the next generation of sexual orientation surveys should start from; some researchers are already turning to the internet to investigate other aspects to sexuality for just that reason.

by Anonymousreply 14June 30, 2015 1:00 AM

OP, your topic is wrong, or at the very least misleading.

[quote]“seven percent of millennials identify either as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender.”

What happens when young people are 10% queer and 10% trans but 0% gay and lesbian? We may be there sooner than you think. Hollywood and the media have been quickly phasing out the gay and lesbian identities.

by Anonymousreply 15August 19, 2020 9:53 PM

r15, the number of people who identify as gay exceeds the number of people who identify as trans. Not even 1% of people identify as trans.

I'm laughing my ass off at freepers who are claiming "Hollywood" wants to eliminate gays when it's the GOP who wanted to ban gay marriage and gays in the military

by Anonymousreply 16August 19, 2020 9:57 PM

This thread was originally posted in 2015. There’s no way they could’ve predicted the present day back then. 2015 was pre-Trump, keep in mind. So much has changed since then.

by Anonymousreply 17August 19, 2020 10:05 PM
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