Brad Hudson wrote:I wouldn't say his links "destroyed" his claims. He's made lots of them in the course of this discussion. His description of the the state of the literature is simply wrong, contradicted by published literature surveys. His argument is also deceptive in one important respect: he equates "biological parents" as used in the literature with "related by blood to both parents." As his own source shows, that's not how the term is used in the literature. He then then argues that the literature shows that same sex parenting is inferior to opposite sex parenting because the studies show that biological opposite sex parenting has been shown to be "best." The problem is, the studies he refers to haven't compared same sex parenting to opposite sex parenting, at least not on an apples to apple basis. It's like surveying all cars except Toyotas and declaring that Chevy makes the "best" cars, and then specifically rejecting the value of Toyotas because "Chevys are the best." You can't compare without actually, you know, comparing.
Ironically, the well poisoning he did with all surveys that contradict his position could very easily apply to the one study that appears to support his claim: Regnerus's. It is "recent," was funded by pro-religious groups, was conducted by a graduate of Trinity University with a religious background, and was released just in advance of a national election where same sex marriage was a prominent issue. What is it with apologists that they project so much? ;-)
the arrogance of your post is exceeded only by its ineptness.
How convenient of you to actually ignore the facts (and points i have already noted) Perhaps if you had actually read the references:
on the notion of married vs. unmarried
"Research suggests that children in cohabiting families are at higher risk of poor outcomes compared to children of married parents partly because cohabiting families have fewer socioeconomic resources and partly because of unstable living situations."http://www.clasp.org/admin/site/publica ... s/0086.pdfhere is your conveniently omitted clarification of what you surely thought was a "score" above
"Since many children raised by gay or lesbian parents have undergone the divorce of their parents, researchers have considered the most appropriate comparison group to be children of heterosexual divorced parents."http://www.clasp.org/admin/site/publica ... s/0086.pdfwhich is further clarified as
"Research shows that, on average, children of divorced parents are disadvantaged compared to children of married-parent families in the area of educational achievement. Children of divorce are more than twice as likely to have serious social, emotional, or psychological problems as children of intact families—25 percent versus 10 percent."http://www.clasp.org/admin/site/publica ... s/0086.pdfand then finally (for the win)....the most revealing conclusion....that is inclusive of all sexuality and circumstances....
"Research indicates that, on average, children who grow up in families with both their biological parents in a low-conflict marriage are better off in a number of ways than children who grow up in single-, step- or cohabiting-parent households."http://www.clasp.org/admin/site/publica ... s/0086.pdfI thought you would have appreciated the warning form the Regnerus article, but since you have a catfish style of information gathering, let me toss in the current.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 9X1200061061% of children of lesbian mothers reported themselves to be "entirely heterosexual"
90% of children of Intact Biological Family reported themselves to be "entirely heterosexual"
71% of children of gay fathers reported themselves to be "entirely heterosexual.
This data strongly supports the conclusion that nurture has a large effect on sexual preference and discredits the claim that people are born gay.
Let us see a graphic from the Regnerus study

yep - more support for my previous statements ( i believe i mentioned lesbian parents before, and how gay men were low on the scale....jus saying)
and so on.....your cherry picking has merely left with you the pits
i also note how quickly you ignore the more direct arguments i made previously in favor of your clumsy dissection of the references provided (ie. your endorsement of child experimentation no matter the cost). Instead you rely on discounting any study that contradicts your fantasy by claiming "as a self-anointed expert i must exclaim, it is certainly flawed". Your criticisms are shallow and easily refuted, as has been shown by example here.