I don’t believe you believe you weren’t being disingenuous.
As for studies, you’re not going to link any for me in other words?
Well, then…I don’t believe that you don’t believe that I don’t believe…
Really. Is that your response?
Let me suggest two things for you.
One, read your own words.
Two, read the thread above and see if you can find the studies I already “linked.”
But to assuage your burgeoning curiosity about how social scientists “cook the books,” here is a recent article published on a [shudder!] Catholic website:
crisismagazine.com/2014/the-latest-sham-science-on-gay-parenting
To your point, from the article:
"Let’s for a moment put aside the notion of straight people having kids “by accident”—I will come back to it—and focus instead on Kristof’s casual assertion that evidence has been “found” linking gay parenting to “better outcomes on average” than straight parenting. What is the basis for the claim made by this sentence which appeared on page A27 of the New York Times on January 23, 2014? The web version of Kristof’s story links to the Australian “study,” which turns out to be a one-page “interim report” of research being conducted by Simon Robert Crouch. Crouch is a “public health doctor” and lead investigator of the Australian Study of Child Health in Same-Sex Families (ACHESS) at the University of Melbourne.
Some casual Googling reveals that Crouch is also “a gay dad with twins” who writes and blogs frequently about gay parenting from an advocate’s point of view. (“The heteronormative world begins its gender distinctions before birth. ‘Is it a boy or a girl?’ is the first question most women are asked when they announce that they are pregnant.”) Further snooping turned up what, to this non-social scientist at least, looked a lot like an effort by the researcher to game the results of the research:
There has been some research looking at the health and wellbeing of children with same-sex parents, mainly from Europe and North America…. Critics of the research to date highlight small sample sizes and a focus on lesbian parents. Researchers at the University of Melbourne are trying to fill these gaps however through a new project—the Australian Study of Child Health in Same-Sex Families (ACHESS). (Emphasis added.)
The purpose of the study is to answer critics of previous studies? Does anyone really believe that Simon Robert Crouch is going to find anything in his research to suggest that gay parents are not at least the equal of—and, as it happens, better “on average”—than straight parents?"
I’m all for letting the facts come out in an honest and straightforward way.
That is what the scientific method is designed to accomplish.
But when “scientists” game the system and the useful idiots in the press assist them in the scam, I have to call foul.