I've always had a problem with people associating a few crazies, like the Westboro Baptist Church, or a large group of far more conservative and fundamental than the majority sect, like the American Catholic Church (FYI, from the view point of a Catholic, most non-American Catholics view the American Catholic Church as something akin to the Taliban. Also, given how militant they are becoming and how a Schism seems more and more likely, it may soon be that the American Catholic Church splits from mainstream Catholicism) with how EVERYONE in that religion views something. Most Catholics I know are fine with someone being gay or bisexual. Ironically, same goes for Muslims. Its just the loudest people everyone hears.
But even you have mentioned
the difficulty of being bi and growing up in a Catholic school with devout family members.
I'm not disputing that there may be more tolerant and accepting religious sects out there, I'm just pointing out that according to perhaps the most legitimate polling organization in the United States, fewer people who identify as religious also identify as LGBT. I tend to doubt that being religious makes you less likely to have attractions to the same gender or feel that your gender identity is wrong, just less likely to acknowledge it, perhaps even to themselves, but especially to others conducting a poll.
Also, Wintermoot, some of the stuff you're saying might be coming across a little wonky because I'm seeing some implication that Homosexuality is a choice.
Well, I often come off as wonky in general.
I think that the labels of gay, straight, and bi are too simplistic...undoubtedly there are groups of people that are almost exclusively attracted to the same gender as well as groups that are almost exclusively attracted to the opposite gender, but I do think that there is a third group that's capable of being attracted to both, and I think it's a much larger group than most people would think. I recall reading another survey awhile back that concluded that while the number of people who indicated they were had only had sexual experiences with the same gender had remained steady, the number that had had experiences with both sexes had skyrocketed.
Interestingly enough, according to a
YouGov UK survey, 89% of Britons surveyed indicated that they were straight when asked if they were straight, gay, or bisexual, but when it was broken down on the Kinsey scale only 72% responded that they were level 0, or completely heterosexual. And out of those that indicated they were a level 1, 23% had actually had a sexual experience with someone of the same gender. As indicated on the other poll, this trend was even stronger with younger generations that had grown up with less stigma attached to sexual preference.
So I don't exactly think that it's a choice, but I do think it's
possible for a significant portion of people to have sexual and emotional feelings for people of both genders under the right circumstances with the right people...aside from surveys and polls, I speak from my own experience there.