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Given that anal sex:
- Is not universal to homosexuals. Not all gay males do it (Stephen Fry is disconcertingly blunt about the fact that he never has) and it seems evident to me that few lesbian couples will!
- Is not unique to homosexuals. For something that is allegedly “not intended by nature” (a condemnation that seems not to have put you off the internet) heterosexuals seem very keen on it. Indeed, it seems clear to me that numerically heterosexual cases of anal sex likely far outstrip homosexual ones!
- Does not require same sex marriage. If anything encouraging homosexuals to settle down into staid stable relationships would only reduce the level of ongoing sodomy!
- Is surely already legal anywhere that is even considering legalising gay marriage!
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As a married female with two sons, now grown young men, I find it hard to believe the claim that many women would be very keen on the practice of sodomy, specifically receptive anal sex. The kind of sex as intended by nature, a phrase that does not require scare quotes really (except from the perspective of a homosexual, perhaps), that between a man and a woman, more than suffices, I would think. Native intelligence tells anyone the anal tract is for expelling waste; to use it as a receptive organ during sex in lieu of the female sexual organ or as fore or after play is unthinkable, at least to me. Unhealthy!
At any rate, I wondered about the veracity of claims by homosexual activists and gay “marriage” advocates along the lines of what you listed above. I will only address the first two in this post. One regular poster in this forum emphatically and I thought too defensively stated that anal sex is not the
sine qua non of homosexual relationships, that not all sexually active gays engage in it. Another claimed that only a third of active homosexuals practice it, although I recall a while back reading a study that 2/3 do, not 1/3. Okay, these two posters may be right. Still, it is undeniable and not good news that men who have sex with men (MSM), mostly consisting of active homosexuals and bisexuals, remain the most affected by HIV, as reported by the CDC. The disease is transmitted via the riskiest sexual practice among MSM, homosexuals and bisexuals mostly, which would be unprotected anal sex.
I came across an interesting report from the International Conference on Microbicides held in Pittsburgh on May 25, 2010:
The risk of acquiring HIV through unprotected anal sex is at least 20 times greater than with unprotected vaginal sex and increases if other infections are already present in the rectal lining. Could the use of lubricants – at least certain kinds – be another risk factor among men and women who engage in receptive anal intercourse? Two studies presented at the International Microbicides Conference in Pittsburgh, suggest the answer is yes.
In one study involving nearly 900 men and women in Baltimore and Los Angeles, the researchers found that those who used lubricants were three times more likely to have rectal sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Another study that subjected popular over-the-counter and mail-order lubricants to rigorous laboratory tests discovered that many of the products were toxic to cells and rectal tissue. If in humans, these products have the same effect, the cells might be rendered more vulnerable targets for HIV infection than they already are.
In the United States alone, receptive anal intercourse is practiced in up to 90 percent of gay and other men who have sex with men, according to International Rectal Microbicides Advocates. Moreover, the practice is not limited to men. U.S. estimates and surveys in the United Kingdom indicate between 10 to 35 percent of heterosexual women have engaged in anal sex at least once. Globally, estimates suggest 5 to 10 percent of sexually active women are having anal sex. While condoms are generally effective for protecting against HIV and other STIs, most acts of anal sex go unprotected.
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You can read the rest from
this link, if the topic interests you. I stopped at the third paragraph, which essentially states that the practice of anal sex among men is more significant than what seems to be suggested or represented in this forum by the described posters, and that said sexual practice among women is not as significant.
It is a notable difference that 10 - 35% of sexually active American and British women engage in anal sex whereas globally, only 5 - 10 % of sexually active women, do.
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