I was born gay. You were taught religion and hate.
@LanceUSA70 You were not born gay. If people were born gay, you wouldn’t have identical twins with different sexualities—one straight and one gay. Be gay if you want to, but don’t you dare blame it on God.
@LibsBeCrazy @LanceUSA70 No, that’s not true. There is a chromosome missing and that’s what causes it. It’s not a choice. I don’t agree with it, but it’s not something they choose.
@LibsBeCrazy @LanceUSA70 I know three sets of gay twins. Get out more.
There are tons of differences in so-called Identical twins and so much we don't know but continue to learn about. Same with sexuality and the brain, chromosomes, hormones and more. Angela Malone you are simply another "Christain" bigot.
@LibsBeCrazy @LanceUSA70 God made him, and whatever led up to being gay (which occurs even in other mammals) and he didn’t blame god once, probably happy. God will judge us all at the end if you believe - it’s not for you to judge - you’re supposed to lead by example not by pointing fingers - miss thang
Some researchers point to the hormones we’re exposed to in the womb. One twin is being exposed to different levels of a given hormone or has a different response to that hormone than the other, and this is ultimately what contributes to later differences in sexual orientation. Because identical twins sometimes develop with different placentas, and those placentas might not transfer the same level of hormones to each fetus. A recent study provides supports this. Researchers looked at the ratio of the length of the index (or “pointer”) finger relative to the ring finger in 32 pairs of identical twins who differed in their sexual orientation. They compared the lengths of these two fingers because they are affected by early exposure to testosterone and several studies have shown that the ratio of these two fingers differs according to one’s sexual orientation. There are more but I will leave this.
🤔 Identical Twins Are Not Identical Studies show that the deeper we look into so-called identical twins, the more differences we find. When scientists recently read the DNA of 381 twin pairs, they reported that, on average, so-called identical twin pairs differed by 5.2 mutations. This is tiny on the scale of 3 billion letters but it is an average. Thirty-nine of these pairs actually differed by more than 100 mutations, while 38 pairs did not differ at all at the level of their DNA. mcgill.ca/oss/article/ge…