Archived Meta analysis of 19,430 publications finds no negative impacts of having same sex parents (sciencedirect.com)
submitted ago by CuteIceCube
Posted by: CuteIceCube
Posting time: 5.5 years ago on
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Archived on: 2/12/2017 1:51:00 AM
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39 upvotes, 5 downvotes (89% upvoted it)
Archived Meta analysis of 19,430 publications finds no negative impacts of having same sex parents (sciencedirect.com)
submitted ago by CuteIceCube
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[–] Number1dududuNumber1 3 points 12 points 15 points (+15|-3) ago (edited ago)
It depends on what you define as a negative impact. Having two mothers and being a sissy bitch unable to perform anything remotely manly and to pander to a womans every need is to me a failure of a man.
Edit: added missing word, 'is'
[–] Fact_Checking_Alien 1 point 5 points 6 points (+6|-1) ago
Evidently as it is likely various studies in this meta-analysis checked for economic outcomes or psychological health, such cases are few and far between as two gay men turning their child into an effeminate queen. Your premise is entirely unsupported by the conclusion, because the premise itself needs to be proved. You are "begging the question" as it were.
Which is particularly odd to me for this study, making the claim there are no negative impacts, answers the question you are begging. What sort of negative impact do you expect "being a sissy bitch" to have? It must have no economic or psychological disadvantages, for those are two primary factors in studies of gender and parenting.
Or do you simply assume that, somehow, the most important factors in "impacts" of child rearing were excluded? Or that the mystery effects of "being a sissy bitch" have no economic or psychological impact noted, and therefore must have other unrecorded impacts?
[–] Number1dududuNumber1 1 point 7 points 8 points (+8|-1) ago
So they looked at two things. Did they say compare the likelihood of a man raised by two women being able to knock together a table out of wood vs the ability of a man who had a father figure to do the same? How about the % of those males who are more or less inclined to pursue masculine lines of work. What about the number of thsoe men raised solely by women to perpetuate the SJW thought train.
In 25 years the world will be a shithole. It will be so politically correct that talking in public is going to be dangerous as any bitch and her bloody vagina will be able to scream RAPE or MISOGYNY and the poor sod who dared talk will get slammed.
SJW's, same sex parents and political correctness will destroy this world before any large scale warfare.
[–] Number1dududuNumber1 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago (edited ago)
It's not letting me reply to your comments specifically. What is this shit?
actually, it's just not letting me post my reply. Maybe it's too long, but I tried cutting it into 3 pieces and still no go. Not sure what's going on.
[–] zoechan 0 points 3 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago
How do you know that being a sissy bitch is related to having two mothers? Would the same apply to single mothers?
[–] Number1dududuNumber1 1 point 1 point 2 points (+2|-1) ago
Generally not, since you hopefully have a father that shows you how to do manly shit. A young boy that grows up never having helped build, repair or destroy something is a boy living a missed life. He enters adulthood with no skills to give him an edge over others in almost any field of work he decides to enter. He will be a soft little bitch and get pushed around for life. We are not seeing the consequences of this yet since the whole notion is ridiculously young. In 25 years though you bet there's going to be a whole lot of sissy bitch boys that don't want to work the hard jobs.
[–] that-all-you-got ago
It's not doing wonders to the black community, really. Maybe it shows in hyper masculinity (aggression).
[–] eyeballfrog 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
What about potential negative effects of two fathers?
[–] mytestisatest 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
You'd have to check what that analysis considered negative.
[–] NapoleonComplex 0 points 5 points 5 points (+5|-0) ago
It seems like growing up in a stable loving household is really the key. It doesn't matter if they've got two moms or two dads, as long as there is love in the house kids will grow up just fine.
[–] RobertWalker 0 points 5 points 5 points (+5|-0) ago (edited ago)
I'd argue that a stable loving household is the most important factor, but not the only factor.
In any case, I keep seeing studies that say lesbian relationships have a higher incidence of domestic violence than hetrosexual relationships, as do to some extent gay relationships, which is different than "folk knowledge" expectations, but it turns up in the data again and again.
http://www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/stories/2014/09/domestic-violence-likely-more-frequent-for-same-sex-couples.html
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/if-youre-not-stragiht-youre-at-higher-risk-for-domestic-violence-180949988/?no-ist
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1300/J041v04n01_01
I don't know why, I haven't followed this up a great deal, but it seems very relevant as something to be addressed since children are involved - and of course we want the reasons to be understood because ultimately we all want to be happy regardless of our sexual orientation.
[–] NapoleonComplex 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
Wow, that's really interesting. I would have never guess that there was a domestic abuse issue in the LGBT community. Thanks for the links
[–] Wmb102er 0 points 3 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago
I can't seem to download the actual paper. Can anybody tell me how they define "negative impact"? The abstract doesn't mention anything specific.
[–] Fact_Checking_Alien 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago (edited ago)
Studies of this nature usually take empirical measures. Such as economic status or economic outcomes of the persons in question, if longitudinal. Other studies would consider psychological measures, or social measures. Essentially what I imagine this meta-analysis to include are the factors from all the selected study groups to establish the overall demographics and compare them to heterosexual couples.
As I myself do not have access, I can only explain to you from experience of these studies what they typically will be looking at. Therefore what should be included in this meta-analysis. Primarily, I imagine, they'd have a major emphasis on sociological data.
[–] Bateman616 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
I have nothing against it but I do think you usually look for a role model in a parent of your own gender, so I don't think it's the same, but it's OK, kids turn well with single parents too.