It's not obvious to me which word it is that you think you've invented, but I'm almost certain that you're incorrect about the rest.Wow, somehow I knew this was going to turn into a huge debate. I blame the one who insisted that homosexuals do not have a demeanor. They do. If you meet seven guys in a bar, you can always spot the ones who are homosexual. Why? Because of the way they act. Now I am in no way saying that they act "wrong" or "bad" or in some kind of "queer fashion" (no pun intended) But they act different. You can just tell. Now the ones you can't tell are the ones whom are bi, or in denial. You can't tell them apart because they act similar to both hetero and homo sexualities. I think I just invented a word...
"Mastfest" just doesn't look like it's as much fun to say as "sausagefest."
It sounds much more proper and classy.
Dear me, besides the questionable clientele and decor, this sports bar in quite the mastfeast indeed.
As opposed to...
There's way too much cock in this dump.
Wow, somehow I knew this was going to turn into a huge debate. I blame the one who insisted that homosexuals do not have a demeanor. They do. If you meet seven guys in a bar, you can always spot the ones who are homosexual. Why? Because of the way they act. Now I am in no way saying that they act "wrong" or "bad" or in some kind of "queer fashion" (no pun intended) But they act different. You can just tell. Now the ones you can't tell are the ones whom are bi, or in denial. You can't tell them apart because they act similar to both hetero and homo sexualities.
Nothing I said in my last post could possibly be contested. Chemical interactions are ruled by the physical laws, period.
Hate to say this Dennis, but: "Duh!" The ideas involved are sufficiently complex that anything less than a few hundred pages is oversimplified. This is a bbs after all, where "tl;dr" is a pretty much a law of the land.Dennis said:That very much oversimplifies the situation.
Which is why I never so much as hinted otherwise.There's no real reason to expect the psychological reactions of every human being to chemicals like pheromones to be identical even if basic physiology is the same.
Hate to say this Dennis, but: "Duh!" The ideas involved are sufficiently complex that anything less than a few hundred pages is oversimplified. This is a bbs after all, where "tl;dr" is a pretty much a law of the land.Dennis said:That very much oversimplifies the situation.
Which is why I never so much as hinted otherwise.There's no real reason to expect the psychological reactions of every human being to chemicals like pheromones to be identical even if basic physiology is the same.
Sorry MLB, but I'm pretty sure that there's no evidence whatsoever to support the notion that gays respond any differently to female pheromones than straight men do.
No it wouldn't. It would imply that homosexuality doesn't change the laws of biochemistry. Nothing else.
I'm sorry, but this sounds like BS. If the biochemistry of homosexuals wouldn't react differently then there wouldn't be any homosexuals.
If the biochemistry of homosexuals did react differently then it would mean that they aren't following the same physical laws as the rest of reality.
The way chemicals in the body react to one another is not altered by the mind of the of the person that the chemicals are reacting within. A+B=C. Always. Chemistry is pretty much an exact science, and when two chemicals are introduced into the same flask, they will react in a specific way, (regardless of how the flask might happen to feel about it).
No. Absolutely not. Which of your bodily orifices did you extract that from? It's not anything I believe, nor implied by anything I wrote. It seems obvious that orientation is predominantly biological, most likely genetic, in nature, and most certainly NOT a choice.Is that your wordy way of saying: "homosexuality is a choice"?
I love The Onion.
Neither does trolling.Queering don't make the world go round.
No. Absolutely not. Which of your bodily orifices did you extract that from? It's not anything I believe, nor implied by anything I wrote. It seems obvious that orientation is predominantly biological, most likely genetic, in nature, and most certainly NOT a choice.Is that your wordy way of saying: "homosexuality is a choice"?
Hate to say this Dennis, but: "Duh!" The ideas involved are sufficiently complex that anything less than a few hundred pages is oversimplified.Dennis said:That very much oversimplifies the situation.
Which is why I never so much as hinted otherwise.There's no real reason to expect the psychological reactions of every human being to chemicals like pheromones to be identical even if basic physiology is the same.
When exposed to an outside chemical agent, the chemical reactions within the body would be the same...
Wow, somehow I knew this was going to turn into a huge debate. I blame the one who insisted that homosexuals do not have a demeanor. They do. If you meet seven guys in a bar, you can always spot the ones who are homosexual. Why? Because of the way they act. Now I am in no way saying that they act "wrong" or "bad" or in some kind of "queer fashion" (no pun intended) But they act different. You can just tell. Now the ones you can't tell are the ones whom are bi, or in denial.
Didn't we just see a link to a research study that suggests that they DON'T react the same way?No. Absolutely not. Which of your bodily orifices did you extract that from? It's not anything I believe, nor implied by anything I wrote. It seems obvious that orientation is predominantly biological, most likely genetic, in nature, and most certainly NOT a choice.Is that your wordy way of saying: "homosexuality is a choice"?
Good.
Then why do you think homosexual men react the same way to women as heterosexual men do, on the biochemical level?
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