Phoenix Criminal Lawyer

posted by Kyle on Jul 9

On a forum that is frequented by a number of AUA students, there was a thread recently started that led to a lot of people expressing a dislike of homosexuals.  I think that this world view is inherently irrational.   Every piece of evidence we have suggests the homosexuality is a biological phenomena, akin to being right or left handed.  How can one pass any sort of moral judgment upon someone whose biological nature leads them to seek their happiness in another direction?  Even if someone has a religious problem with homosexuality, it is likely the case that their religion teaches them something akin to “Hate the Sin, Love the Sinner”, which would seem to me to indicate that they would not have a problem with homosexuals as such.

In any case, homophobia is utter nonsense, and quite often, I think, the result of some sort of psychological neurosis.  In my experience, most of the people I have met who don’t like homosexuals are those who are undereducated.  In college, there were a number of openly gay students, and no one treated them any differently because of it.  They were just as popular, just as accepted, and just as well-liked as anyone else.  I attributed this to the fact that students had been enlightened by their education and understood the irrationality behind homophobia.

In response to those AUA students who expressed their distaste for homosexuals, I offered the following thoughts on the forum:

 For those of you who are expressing your distaste for homosexuals, I would like to call your attention to a study performed by researchers at the University of Georgia, and published in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology (which is owned by the APA).

The study compared the sexual arousal of self-reported heterosexual men. The study used the Index of Homophobia to determine whether to assign the men to either the control group (non-homophobic) or the test group (homophobic).

Here is what the study says about the classification:

The score obtained is a measure of “dread” an individual experiences when placed in close quarters with a homosexual; a low score equals low dread, and a high score equals high dread….Because most of the items contain the terms comfortable or uncomfortable, dread can be assumed to mean anticipatory anxiety about interacting with a homosexual person. For example, one item states “I would feel nervous being in a group of homosexuals.” Positive and negative statements are used to control for response set biases. The
authors reported .90 reliability coetficient on a sample of 300 respondents. O’Donahu¢ and Caselles ( 1993, p. 187 ) commented that the authors of the IHP used a “more empirical and psychometrically sophisticated approach than previous researchers who have produced instruments to measure homophobia.”

Here is a synopsis of their results:

In the homophobic group, 20% showed no significant tumescence, 26% showed moderate tumescence, and 54% showed definite tumescence to the homosexual video; the corresponding percentages in the nonhomophobic group were 66%, 10%, and 24%, respectively.

You can read the entire study here: http://www.oogachaga.com/downloads/h…al_arousal.pdf

Quite frankly, homophobia is irrational, and it disappoints me that students at AUA would express these opinions. (I’m not saying that anyone should prevent you from doing so, I’m just saying that I’m disappointed in you for holding such an irrational world view). In any case, I think the joke, “You’re so homophobic you can’t touch yourself” may have a lot of truth to it.

Hopefully this will provoke a little bit of discussion and thought on the topic.  If you are a doctor, you’re going to have patients of all types, and it would behoove you to get over your homophobia before you have to examine a gay man’s inguinal hernia.

3 Comments to “Homophobia Among Future Doctors? I Thought They Were Educated! (you know…at least a little…)”

  1. Jesda Says:

    I don’t like gays, but I love musicals!

    Seriously, I’m surprised to hear of homophobia among aspiring medical professionals.

  2. JIm Says:

    Personally I object to the title of homophobia. A phobia is a fear, and I doubt that a lot of people who dislike gays also fear them. Unfortunately the Greek word for dislike is much harder to pronounce, so I guess we are stuck with your nomenclature. I doubt that you can rate intelligence for either side of the debate, even though I suspect that most doctors do consider themselves more intelligent than the general population. that may be so, but it does not stop them from having some significant blind spots. The reason is that while they spent ten plus years learning how to be good physicians others were just busy living and providing for a family. So, they may have learned a few things along the way that do not occur to doctors. As far as existing research, I think we can find just as much extant research which demonstrates that homosexuality is learned bahavior, albiet often learned at an early age. But the fact that it is learned behavior is one of the biggest reasons for laws agains child abuse (or did you ever think about that?). Maybe right and left handed is a close analogy, however. People who have lost their dominant hand have learned to use the other. People who have lived in a homosexual relationship have voluntarily changed, married and raised a family. So these things are possible.

  3. Kyle Says:

    Obviously I cannot make a universal claim about any given individual’s intelligence. I suspect, and this is simply speculation based upon the people I know, that if you were to take the IQs of people who disapprove of homosexuality and the IQs of those who approve of it, you would find the latter to be far higher than the former. Of course, this does not speak to the validity of their opinions, so it is more or less irrelevant to any genuine discussion of the issue.

    I am not certain, however, that working and raising a family gives someone any particularly deep insight into human psychology, biology and genetics. I am also quite certain that it has nothing to do with their epistemology. I would suspect that those who hold anti-homosexual sentiments also have serious epistemological issues.

    You are correct; there are some cases where homosexual people change their behaviors and live as heterosexuals. There are also cases where heterosexual individuals change their behavior and live as homosexuals. So what? That has nothing to do with anything. One can always find exceptions to the rule, and we all know that people’s behavior is determined by a whole lot more than their own desires.

    I would be very interested in seeing these studies. My suspicion is that their methods are flawed, their conclusions are baseless or something else. When it comes down to it, though: who cares? If it makes someone happy, good for them! It doesn’t matter whether they can learn to live in a different way to please others; let them live as they please!!!!

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