How Gay Is America? - YouTube

Channel: NowThis World

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There’s no question that public attitudes towards the LGBT community have shifted dramatically
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in a relatively short amount of time.
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Just last year, the number of married same-sex couples in the US has tripled.
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To see how this shift has changed LGBT demographics, we asked Dr. Gary Gates of the Williams Institute
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to tell us more.
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What percentage of the U.S. population today would identify as LGBT based on your data?
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So the best estimates that we have for the percentage of the population in the US that
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identify as LGBT are around 4%.
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Various surveys range from roughly of 3 to 5% in most surveys.
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Well if you look at identity as your measurement, um, it’s around, most surveys are around
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four percent.
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Um, three to five percent, you do get occasionally some surveys that are higher than that.
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One interesting thing about those surveys is among younger people, it’s always substantially
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higher.
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So for instance in...in the Gallup survey, if you’re under age 30, it’s well over
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six percent identifying as LGBT, but if you’re over 30, it’s under four percent.
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So I suspect that in the fairly near future, uh, those numbers are going to continue to
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go up.
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But if you use these other measures like sexual behavior or...sexual..uh...or your attractions
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to..to either...um, people of similar gender to you or different gender to you, um you
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get much higher numbers.
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Um if you ask people if they’ve ever had same sex sexual encounter, you usually get
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numbers in the eight to nine percent range.
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And if you ask if they have any kind of attractions that are beyond...um...different sex attractions,
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so any sort of same sex attractions, you often get numbers, uh well over 10 percent.
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Wow.
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I mean that’s a huge difference in just how you ask the question.
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and do you think those numbers are gonna change over time?
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They have already.
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Um in survey... we don’t have a lot of older surveys that asks these kinds of questions.
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But certainly if we look at some surveys in the early 90s, um, sexual orientation identity,
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so identifying at that point was usually just lesbian, gay or bisexual, it was only in about
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the two percent range.
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So it’s more than doubled in the last ten years.
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So are there any uh...racial socioeconomic religious correlation to be found in the identity
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data?
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Well yes I think one of the interesting things there’s a stereotype for instance that around
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racial, race and ethnicity that uh racial and ethnic minorities would be kind of less
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likely to identify as LGBT because uh of more socially conservative environments in some
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cases, um more broad social stigma so perhaps uh an unwillingness to kind of add to my stigmatization
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by identifying as LGBT.
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But in fact um the recent Gallup data which is the largest sample of of LGBT people we
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have as far as I know in the world from a population based sampling um most racial and
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ethnic minorities have higher proportion identifying as LGBT right now.
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And it turns out that the reason for that is is that younger people are much more likely
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to self identify as LGBT than older people and racial and ethnic minorities in this country
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are younger than white people.
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And that skew in the age it actually explains quite a bit of the difference in the identity
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patterns and so.
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But overall it’s no longer accurate in the United States to say there are big differences
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in identity by race and ethnicity um.
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we see prevalence to be very similar uh across racial ethnic categories.
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Do those same kind of attitudes play out over the same sex marriage argument as well or
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the same sex marriage discussion rather?
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Well certainly yes, well they attract again communities that are more supportive of lcof
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marriage equality tend to have higher percentages of LGBT pop you know people identifying as
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LGBT.
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So if you look at states, you know if you look at uh percent LGBT among states um the
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northeast and the West tend to have higher proportions and i think that, it’s not surprising
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that those places are also then places that have more supportive laws like marriage equality.
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Um and I think those two things go hand in hand.you in order to pass supportive laws
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uh around LGBT, you have to have a fairly visible already a fairly visible active LGBT
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community uh to promote the law.
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Right.
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And you mentioned states in the west, in the north...in the northwest, what..(pause) what
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states have the largest collections of people who identify as LGBT, and why would..why...why
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would that be?
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Well and again there few questions largest number or largest percentage
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Right- And largest number are basically just states
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with a lot of people Right-
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So you know California, Texas, New York.
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those states tend to have the largest number and the same thing when we look at cities.
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but if we look at percentages again places with the highest percentages tend to be the
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states you would expect so uh new england states, and the west coast, California, Oregon,
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Washington um. in general those are the places that have the highest proportions of LGBT
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people and if you look at at for instance Gallup recently did some analysis of metropolitan
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areas and that not surprising San Francisco was ranked highly.
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But I think one of the interesting things to note from that was that Salt Lake City
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Yea- Made the top ten of metro areas and and and
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that goes back to a comment I made earlier about this relationship between laws and supportive
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laws and LGBT visibility.
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It I suspected that LGBT visibility was changing even in conservative places like Utah and
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certainly in Salt Lake City and and you see that they are the first state in,
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I think it’s seven years to pass a broad based anti-discrimination law that included
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sexual orientation and gender identity and i think those two statistics aren’t are
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highly related.
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um I think that the reason that happened was that visibility in places like Salt Lake City
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got large enough that they could really make the case for those laws and as I said it showed
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up in the Gallup figures.
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Do you think that’s — uh kind of a chicken and egg situation where, is it the population
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is there and therefore it Right
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fosters the law, or is it that the law can then foster
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It’s Silence.
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or an opening for that law fosters an increase in population
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It’s absolutely both that um Some underlying social acceptance that allows LGBT people
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to be more visible certainly helps in the beginnings of getting better laws um.
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But once laws are passed and certainly um we have evidence at the Williams institute
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we’ve done some studies showing that after marriage equality is passed in a state, even
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if it’s done through uh a judicial uh you know a court ruling that support for marriage
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for same sex couples goes up in the state and that probably that increases the visibility
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of same sex couples in the state um and you know probably LGBT people generally as well.
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so the two factors to go hand in hand and you’re exactly right its definitely a chicken
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and egg situation.
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With most of the country having already legalized same-sex marriage, the upcoming Supreme Court
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ruling seems like a foregone conclusion.
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But how that will change the face of the LGBT population, and how global perceptions will
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shift even further, is yet to be seen.
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A huge thanks to Gary Gates at UCLA’S Williams Institute for joining us on TestTube News
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today.
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If you’d like to learn about more awesome research coming out of UCLA, check out this
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video about how our DNA may have a big effect on our relationships.
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Thanks for watching!
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Don’t forget to subscribe.