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originally posted by: Agartha
originally posted by: BELIEVERpriest
a reply to: RealTruthSeeker
According to the theory of evolution that the public school taught me, anything that stands in the way of reproduction is considered disease. So in light of evolution, what does that say about homosexuality?
It says absolutely nothing as homosexual people are not infertile and many if not most of them reproduce.
No, you need to support why a common ancestor has the possibility of what is now.
originally posted by: Teikiatsu
No one said they are. What source do you have for your 'many if not most' claim? My google-fu is not producing any results.
Of course a side question would be "Why do they want to reproduce?" But that is a topic for another thread.
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: TinfoilTP
No, you need to support why a common ancestor has the possibility of what is now.
Pretty basic really.
Mutation is change. One change results in a branch. Each branch has it's own changes. And so on.
That's why different species of fish have different chromosome counts. That's why different species of primates have different chromosome counts.
Nice theory but nobody ever witnessed a new species come from a mutation.
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: TinfoilTP
Nice theory but nobody ever witnessed a new species come from a mutation.
From a single mutation, not often. From accumulated mutations, yes.
As I'm sure you have been shown before and chose to ignore.
We haven't even witnessed them from multiple mutations, only inferred.
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: bottleslingguy
Genome reduction occurs in pretty much all species.
scholar.google.com...
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: Teikiatsu
We haven't even witnessed them from multiple mutations, only inferred.
False.
Observed speciation as a result of a single mutation:
www.jstor.org...
Observed speciation as a result of accumulated mutation.
www.jstor.org...
originally posted by: Agartha
originally posted by: Teikiatsu
No one said they are. What source do you have for your 'many if not most' claim? My google-fu is not producing any results.
Of course a side question would be "Why do they want to reproduce?" But that is a topic for another thread.
No, I know the other poster never said they are infertile, but re-read his question again and see what it implies. Homosexuality doesn't go against reproduction, hence my answer.
You want a source to verify that many if not most homosexual people have children? You just have to look around you or read newspapers and magazines, even famous people like Elton John and Ricky Martin have fathered their own children. How many homosexuals married and have children before finally coming out? I don't think there is a census for your question, but there is a census in the US regarding couples raising families: 42% of heterosexual couples raise children. 25% of gay couples (either gender) raise children (abcnews.go.com...).
And your last question is off topic, yes, but ask yourself: why do heterosexual people want to reproduce? That will also be the answer for homosexuals.... they are not aliens, they are humans just like you and me, we are all the same.