Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Matt Comer's avatar

Correlation isn't causation, and all that jazz, and I'm not sure how you'd go about testing this: I am not surprised that the share of people self-identifying as trans (especially on a survey; "Where is this information going and who is tracking it?") is in decline given the increasing levels of fear I hear in the trans community as a result of our current political environment.

Expand full comment
Kirk's avatar

Of course it's impossible to talk about the "why" of any quantitative research without solid, well-conducted qualitative follow-up. But we get to possibilities by first looking at trends.

I'm very interested in this conversation because I was a proponent of inclusion of gay humans in Christian communities in the 1980s (when it could end your own inclusion to be so). Back then there was a study that created relatively safe ways for people to report on sexuality in far-ranging parts of the world, with important results: roughly 9% of every population self-reported some form of "sexual minority" status.

I suspect that today the study would be limited in that we had no terms for aros or polys back then, and language helps people determine their identities.

That leads me to wonder about the spike in U.S. folks identifying as transgender - are they in more clearly-defined groups today then people were aware of back in 2020? Ryan seems to find this with "non-binary" and "other" categories, to an extent. Also, we know that for a large percentage of people, healthy sexual development can include times of uncertainty and questioning of their own sexuality (why anti-gay groups are always destructive, not to mention some who seem to base their identities on gay advocacy). Did awareness and support for transgender persons lead those who felt unsettled in their sexuality to claim transgender identity?

Good research isn't judged by the solidity of its conclusions, but by the complexity of the questions it raises. Thank you for this, Ryan.

Expand full comment
14 more comments...

No posts

Ready for more?