ehymw wrote:
AspieUtah wrote:
Rainbow colors do seem to be attached to LGBT+ people, but maybe that isn't such a bad idea. Recent research suggests that, while about 3-5 percent of a population is gay, lesbian or bisexual, about 10 percent of autistic females are gender dysphoric while, similarly, about 10 percent of the female gender-dysphoric population is autistic. In other words, sexuality among female autistics is much more diverse.
As for Autism Speaks, wear red on April 2.
That 3-5% is way to high.
3.4% is the commonly accepted, low end, most conservative figure & does not include anyone who doesn't fit the question criteria, people who don't "identify" as gay, people who are closeted, people who engage in same sex relationships or sexual activities yet consider themselves straight...basically that 3.4 only reflects the most secure, extreme people.
Also, the HHS study that produced the 3.4% low end baseline figure was criticized somewhat sharply for it's methodology that guaranteed undercounting. The figures were gained by locally hired people going door to door in states/areas that often were fairly conservative asking the person who answered the door if they were gay.