Unreported in the article :  There were 2 studies  published in the early / 
mid 1990s,
one a very extensive report by University of Chicago scholars,  each  of 
which
put the tally in the 2 % - 3 % range, with allowance for possibly +1  %.
 
BR  Note
 
====================================================
 
 
 
 
Gallup Poll: Only 3.4 Percent of US Adults Identify as  LGBT



By _Paul  Stanley_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/paul-stanley/) , 
Christian Post Reporter
October 19, 2012|9:47 am
A comprehensive poll released on Thursday by Gallup  based on more than 
120,000 interviews, shows that only 3.4 percent of Americans  say they are 
lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender. These numbers fall far short  of the 
numbers routinely tossed around by pro-homosexual groups who claim that  
approximately 10 percent or more of the population have homosexual  tendencies.
The study is billed as the largest single study of the distribution of LGBT 
 population, with 121,290 interviews conducted between June 1 and Sept. 30 
of  this year. The margin of error was projected at approximately 1 percent, 
which  is low by poll standards. 
The poll asked: Do you personally, identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or  
transgender? 
Of the total responses, 3.4 percent answered "yes," 92.2 percent said "no"  
and 4.4 percent refused to answer. 
_The entire poll can be seen here_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/158066/special-report-adults-identify-lgbt.aspx?utm_source=alert&utm_medium=email&utm_cam
paign=syndication&utm_content=morelink&utm_term=All%20Gallup%20Headlines) . 
 
The exact percentage of LGBT Americans has sparked a great deal of debate  
between pro-family and pro-homosexual activists with the latter routinely 
using  a percentage at 10 percent or even in higher in many instances.  
However, the Gallup results mirror that of similar, albeit, smaller studies 
 as far back as 2002. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' 
National  Survey of Family Growth asked a sexual orientation question of about 
12,000  young adults aged 18 to 44 in 2002 and of more than 20,000 adults in 
its  2006-2010 survey. The 3.4 percent figure is similar to a 3.8 percent 
estimate  made by one of the authors of that study (Gates), averaging a group 
of smaller  U.S. surveys conducted from 2004 to 2008. 
Pro-gay organizations are already starting to dispute the 3.4 percent 
figure  as not being an accurate representation of "gay America." Think 
Progress, 
an  LGBT website had the following commentary on the study. 
"These numbers jibe with the analysis conducted by The Williams Institute's 
 Gary Gates last year, which found about 3.8 percent of Americans identify 
as  LGBT," read the website. "It's important to note that there is a 
difference  between how many people openly identify as LGBT and how many people 
may 
in fact  have ever had same-sex attractions, engaged in same-sex behaviors, 
or have ever  been a part of same-sex relationships." 
"As Gates noted, studies have shown that as much as 11 percent had had such 
 attractions and 8.2 percent had had sexual interactions with the same sex. 
 According to the Gallup results, LGBT respondents are more likely to be 
women,  non-white, young, and have lower levels of education and income." 
Dr. Michael Brown, author of A Queer Thing Happened to America, says  the 
notion that 1 in 10 people are gay is completely unfounded and simply a  
"myth." When asked about his response to the survey, he said the Gallup numbers 
 
appear to be consistent with what most experts find. 
"First, the numbers are no surprise," Brown told The Christian Post. 
Gallup's  sample is so large that it makes inflating the numbers difficult. The 
 
pro-homosexual community tends to use double-digit numbers for their own use, 
 but in reality, most gay activists realize the numbers are smaller but 
just want  everyone to believe they are much larger." 
Brown went on to say that earlier surveys have reported that many Americans 
 believe the number of homosexuals is much higher than is actually is. 
"There are polls among the general population that find many Americans 
think  the LGBT population is as high as 25 percent," said Brown. "Other 
surveys 
of  young Americans think the number is as high as 30 percent but that's 
just not  the case. This survey just shows there is no way the LGBT community 
can defend a  1 in 10 number." 
Interestingly, minorities and non-whites are more likely to identify  
themselves as being LGBT than whites. For example, 4.6 percent of black  
respondents said they were gay, as did 4 percent of Hispanics and 4.3 percent 
of  
Asians. Only 3.2 percent of whites said the same. 
The poll also showed women and those who had a lower education were more  
likely to identify themselves as LGBT. The group that responded at the 
highest  level were 18- to 29-year-old females with 8.3 percent identifying 
themselves as  LGBT. 
As for marital status, only 1.3 percent of legally married people said they 
 were LGBT. However, 12.8 percent who said they were in a "domestic 
partnership,"  said they were such. Another figure that will come as no 
surprise to 
most people  is that more LGBT Americans live in the East and West regions 
of the country.  The region with the fewest number of LGBT residents is the  
South.

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