16 thoughts on “Obama’s New Biography”

      1. Being gay is a choice if you’re bisexual.

        Is that the way it works? I’ve always thought that bisexuals have two separate itches, each of which can be scratched only one way. You’re saying that they have one itch that can be scratched in either of two ways.

        1. I’m a simple guy. I always assumed that someone who is bisexual can have sex with either a man or a woman (ignoring all of the complications about “gender”).

          I have no such options. I don’t have a sexual “preference”; I have a sexual requirement. There are no circumstances, short of physical brutal rape, in which I will engage in consensual sexual behavior with a guy. I take no “pride” in this, it is simply a statement of fact. It’s how I was wired since birth. Others are apparently wired differently, and have other options.

  1. I never knew it was something you could just “consider”. The official narrative as I understand it is that one is born that way or not. Not that I care one way or another. What consenting adults do on the privacy of their own homes is none of my business. I’m just a bit confused as to what the approved way of thinking on the issue is supposed to be.

  2. Loads of boys are worried about their sexuality roughly around puberty. I was. Then I grew up a little more and turned out to be fully heterosexual.
    Praise be that I didn’t have parents who jumped on my adolescent confusion and pushed me in a direction that would have warped the rest of my life.

    1. I have no idea how many boys are worried about their sexuality. I only know that I never was (though I suspect my late father was worried about mine, because I didn’t have girlfriends). I think this is the definition of “born heterosexual.” I suspect a lot of people are somewhere in between, which (as I’ve often said) is probably where a lot of the rancor in the debate comes from.

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