People in the US identifying as LGBT
People in the US identifying as LGBT
People in the US identifying as LGBT
Damn, only like 50 people in the US are LGBT?
Y-axis could definitely use some labels...
Yes, I agree... Will do that next time.
I'd like to know what "identify as LGBT" means as even with significantly greater social acceptance, those numbers seem high. I wonder if something along the lines of, "I'm an ally so I identify" is included in that.
Note: It's no skin off my teeth if the true number were ninety nine percent. I'm not attempting to argue against. Just want to know the definition of the term they're using here.
Gen Z likely has a much more loose definition of sexuality and gender identity than the older generations have. The more loose the definition, the more people that can identify as part of the group.
Understanding gender and sexuality as fluid and as part of a spectrum is a difficult thing to learn when you've been taught the exact opposite your whole life. And Gen Z isn't old enough to be stuck in those definitions. Love it or hate it (and I do hate social media for many reasons), social media has been the catalyst for so much LGBT+ acceptance.
What's important: There is the letter B in LGBT. Half of the the LGBTs identify as bisexual. A lot more people now fell free to say that they are bi. More than before.
This is a news article about the latest survey: https://www.nbcnews.com/nbc-out/out-news/nearly-30-gen-z-adults-identify-lgbtq-national-survey-finds-rcna135510
One of the recent advantages with the newer generations cane with the internet which provided a place to create common nomenclature and symbols.
Take a kid who notices their own likes and sense of self doesn't make sense to their peers and vice versa. In my generation we just felt like an outlier, a deviant from the norm. With the internet LGBT+ community they can find these desires and behavior patterns are not unique, are not unhealthy or harmful, and there are others with like experiences.
There's also the matter that these groups are commonly marginalized much the way women and nonwhites are. Our community is united by the need to be regarded as equals by the state and by our neighbors, even when we are out (id est, who we are is known by our peers).
Shout out to the silent generation making some moves during COVID!
The conservative ones died while the LGBT and other progressives lived.
Can't fathom why
I appreciate that the octogenarians are getting gayer too
It was the worst of times, it was the biest of times.
Our power is growing
Why did silent go down then up?
Down because of people.. you know.. dying
Up because of people coming out really late in life
Would be my guess
Maybe because of the GOP getting more aggressive in their anti-LBGTQ rhetoric and the rise of Trump?
The last 2 "blocks" are from 2 different survey institutes. This has probably caused the "jump".
Did the silent gen go back into the closet for a little while?
The numbers were slightly, but continuously decreasing in Gallup surveys, but a lot higher in the 2023 survey of a different institute.
I wonder where the next new bar will start.
I think it's important to remember that people aren't becoming more LGBTQ+, it's that previous generations were so oppressed that coming out was impossible.
It's common to see these kinds of graphs used in some twisted ways. People are being allowed to be themselves. We have a historical president for graphs like this with left handedness. Once we stopped murdering, beating or ostracizing people for being left-handed, we saw "huge spikes" of people being left-handed.
Be yourself. Be loved. You aren't alone.
The oppression in previous generations definitely is a big factor.
The second big thing is that the majority of LGBTQ+ people is bisexual. And there were a lot of bisexual people who would, in previous social climate, identify as heterosexual due to living in a heterosexual relationship.
When you dig into the data of several other surveys, it becomes even more apparent that the seemingly rising number of LGBT+ is due to the removal of stigma: Earlier surveys had shown that the group that saw the biggest growth among all are bisexual/pansexual people while the other groups saw much less growth.
From an article in Psychology Today from 2022:
An article in the Washington Post from 2021 makes the apparent "rise" of bisexuality/pansexuality even more obvious:
So people are much more open to talk about their sexual desires for people of the same sex once the stigma is removed, but - unfortunately for young men - that is less often the case for them, so they won't admit these feelings.
PS: Add that to the fact that women are much more likely to hold progressive politics than men.
I think the pandemic had a big impact as well. Social distancing meant that people were isolated from the forces that usually made them perform cisheteronormativity, and a lot of people realized "oh hey I'm queer actually".
I know quite a few "COVID queers", including myself.
That tracks. I thought I was going to break the mold and escape COVID without realising I was trans! Figured it out like a year in lol