A
ATraveller
Guest
It’s not a random hypothesis, it was mentioned a few years back by some sociologists. I wouldn’t know if it’s unsubstantiated but I suspect they would have to ground that on some previous relevant research. I don’t spout things for the ‘fun of it’ on serious topics. My point in the initial reply was if any negative effects can be found, in legal matters, yes, we’re starting to see a number of them because some legislators don’t want to protect religious people not comfortable with contributing to gay weddings. But if we’re looking for negative social effects, there’s practically nothing found except an untested hypothesis.So you contributed an unsubstantiated random hypothesis just for the fun of it?
Of course they’re wrong.A person who is a victim of homophobia and ostracism may or may not then act promiscuously. But homophobia and ostracism are wrong regardless.
I asked because it’s hard to see how those two factors are the main direct causes of promiscuity. It could be possible but I like to know the processes behind things. Rather than A causes B, I like to know how A causes B.