@Michi: My feeling is that this may be more than that. I think there's less pressure for people to pick a side (especially the straight side) now, and that allows people to be less rigid in coming to what they identify as.
I also believe that few people are completely straight or gay and things have historically skewed toward one end or the other because of that stigma and pressure. Just to emphasize I don't believe that everyone is bi/pan, just more than you would think based on current numbers. Because heterosexuality was such an important norm until recently in society, I think it not only kept people who had discovered they were anything but from coming out, but also discouraged people from exploring their sexuality at all. I know people who believed they were straight, but had just the right experience with just the right person, and it started them down their path of exploration. It would be hard for those sorts of experiences to happen until recently, so I'm thinking over time more people will identify as some kind of bi or bansexuality, even if it's not the 50/50 thing that its often portrayed as.
But ultimately, we'll just have to wait and see. If in future polls we see the rate of people who identify as bi in Gen Z start to decline we'll know that things aren't so different after all. For now we're just left with interesting possibilities.
Oh I don't disagree, believe me. I'm one of those folks who believes that everyone is more than likely Pansexual (and we've definitely had the talks where I've said I believe it's more percentages than a spectrum...a talk I remember Nyght getting especially annoyed by since he was absolutely sure he was 100% gay and wouldn't hear otherwise)...but we're just so pushed to love a specific person that even if we're not
outright pressured to labeling ourselves as specifically attracted to one type, it's definitely ingrained into us. We're told what's attractive, what's not attractive, what we like, what we don't like, those on top of what genders are more desirable for our biological gender, and an assortment of other factors rather than just letting folks decide for themselves what they like and what they're attracted to.
I'm just going off of more of what I've seen overall. It's very easy to put a label on that you're not sure about as a means to explore your sexuality, rather than just explore it without worrying what other folks think. Just as it's easy for, say, a celebrity to never say what they are sexually but for others to put the label on for them because of their own fantasies with that celebrity or because they just happened to have a relationship or two with the opposite gender (which automatically means they're straight 100% even if they've never confirmed it themselves /s).
Where was I? Right. Labels are easy. People should just feel like they can explore without having to say they're X while exploring. And I'm more inclined to believe that nobody is really truly X or Y or Z or the batman symbol, we're just brought up and taught to feel that way. In reality, we're probably more all encompassing, but we're just made to believe that we should only go one direction.
Kind of like the topic of Monogamy and the idea of settling down with just one person for your entire life, but that's a conversation for elsewhere.