I don't see anywhere in the paper where they compare sexual fluidity of women to men...
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yeah. I think this steps up a strawman, no one I recall saying all or even most. it just meant less longitudinal stability in sexual orientation for women, which we usually see http://sci-hub.cc/10.1080/00224499.2016.1139665 … + recent increase in LGBT people in US driven by bisexual womenpic.twitter.com/NRov7x6zLf
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Female genital arousal might be a bad proxy. Isn't there a study floating out there about scents and arousal, with things like cucumbers and cotton candy topping the list?
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Meh. They seem to be arguing sexual arousal != sexual attraction and therefore doesn't indicate sexual fluidity. Seems like semantics to me. Plus, no mention of the studies showing lower same-sex revulsion/repulsion in women compared to men.
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your nuts someone trying to tell me how all women feel must be smoking some of them funny cigaretes or drugs
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The UK ONS data reports that 15% of women self report themselves bisexual versus 7% of men. (Lesbians 0.75%, Homosexual males 1.5%).
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