Here's a link to the direct Gallup poll data.
Generation Z (born 1997-2002) 15.9%
Millennials (born 1981-1996) 9.1%
Generation X (born 1965-1980) 3.8%
Baby boomers (born 1946-1964) 2.0%
Traditionalists (born before 1946) 1.3%
16% for Gen Z seems massive. That's more than all other age groups combined.
I'd always wondered why so many cases here at SSN were men hiding their sexuality, factoring that lesbian late bloomers were less likely. In the data, lesbians are actually 50% to 75% less common than gay men. Statistically, it aligns to the case volume we see here.
Another recent Gallup poll has a fascinating look at the relationship status of those who identify as LBGT.
U.S. Adults' and LGBT Adults' Marital Status
Married to opposite-sex spouse – 11.4% identify as LBGT
Married to same-sex spouse – 9.6% identify as LBGT
Living with opposite-sex domestic partner – 9.2% identify as LBGT
Living with same-sex domestic partner – 7.1% identify as LBGT
11.4% of all marriages between a man and a woman have one partner who identifies as gay/lesbian/bi/trans. While Gallup led with 'One in 10 LGBT Americans Married to Same-Sex Spouse', the real story here is that there are way more LBGT folks in opposite-sex marriages than in same-sex.
Factoring out bisexuality and trans identifying people, 0.3% of spouses who identify as gay or lesbian only are married to someone of the opposite sex. If you extrapolate that to all of America, that is 900,000 people living this way. To put this into context, less than 2,000,000 cases of cancer will occur in the next year in the US, with 600,000 dying. That means being married to a gay/lesbian spouse is 150% more likely than dying from cancer. While many could be open MOMs, that seems unlikely to cover all.
Non-married opposite sex domestic partners is much higher at 1.6%, for 4,800,000 people. All of these stats ignore the other elephant in the room: a large chunk aren't answering, which likely increases the odds of them being in this audience. Maybe they are questioning or unsure.
"Currently, 86.7% of Americans say they are heterosexual or straight, and 7.6% do not answer the question about their sexual orientation."
And this assumes people are answering truthfully, as someone might not consider an affair with a same-sex partner as changing their sexual status.
One final thought: divorce rates have been going down the past decade, reducing by a quarter, while marriage rates have also been decreasing. So we now have a 100% increase of LBGT identifying individuals, with a 25% drop in divorce. The data above starts to make sense. Most spouses know they are LBGT and are staying in a pre-existing relationship.
It's staggering how common being in a heterosexual relationship with a LBGT spouse is.
Last edited by Upside (February 25, 2021 2:56 pm)