Not sure if every single one out there is a nutcase but mental issues seem to go hand in hand with homosexuality.
My experience has revealed that fact too.
Year ago, I was an associate of several homosexual men through work, and I became familiar with them and their homosexual friends and associates (the networks are VERY large and homogeneous in their proclivities.) I even attended a few dinner parties and events heavily attended by these men. Almost without exception, they readily admitted to being on one or more psychotropic drugs for depression, bi-polar anger issues, or anxiety. They all had deep-seated anger issues, frequently most sharply directed toward their parents and other immediate family members.
They all had long-standing relationships with a psychotherapist, who seemed to only confirm them in their static state of mental illness. My guess is the therapists were all homosexual as well.
One reason they live shorter lives is that domestic violence is much, MUCH higher in lesbian live-in relationships than normal ones. You don’t want to get hit with a chain billfold.
It's hilarious how the higher shorter life rates for "bisexual" women is depicted. Can they tie themselves into a more convoluted logical pretzel?
Researchers expressed concern at the gap between bisexual women and their peers, noting that because bisexuality is "more concealable than lesbian orientation because many bisexual women have male partners, stressors related to disclosure or staying closeted may be more salient for bisexual women, who are less likely than lesbian women to disclose their identities to their social networks."
Tell me, how does a "bisexual" woman who chooses a male partner express her "bisexuality?" Must she express it? Is it a point of "stress" that she feels she can't?
Where lesbianism is most accepted, these pathologies are worse, so it’s not because of the stigma.
Great point. I've noticed that the "gayborhoods," at least in the large cities I'm familiar with, are ALWAYS located near the medical districts in those cities. There's a reason for that.