My Genes Made Me Do It is one of the most comprehensive and easily-read books in the popular market today on science and homosexuality. It is an objective review of more than 10,000 scientific research papers and publications from all sides of the debate.

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First published in the USA in 1999 this book is now freely downloadable from this site. It is under constant review to keep it up-to-date so readers can be asssured of its on-going relevance.

In simple and clear terms, by analysis of the science, it shows homosexuality cannot be biologically innate, or fixed – leaving the only other possibility: a complex individual response to familial, peer, social and cultural environments.

We are awash in sex. We, and our children, can’t escape it. The teen clothier Hollister prominently displays Maxim, a “soft core” pornographic magazine on a shelf next to publications devoted to skiing and skateboarding. Urban Outfitters, another retailer targeting teens, has naked models in its catalog. Victoria’s Secret TV commercials, which run during supposedly family-friendly fare like American Idol, show high-heeled models strutting down runways in suggestive barely-there underwear. The Sports Illustrated swimsuit edition, available annually at your local drugstore chain, has become an American icon. Sexual references and innuendoes abound in television shows and movies. “Women’s” magazine cover headlines regularly promise to reveal secrets to better sex. Hotel chains make huge profits from their in-room X-rated movie offerings. Hugh Hefner — who almost single-handedly brought pornography out of the shadows and into the light of day (making himself a fortune along the way) — is just another celebrity.

We have “mainstreamed pornography,” as author Michael Leahy puts it. Our hypersexualized, pornographic culture has all but obliterated a vision of what healthy sexuality is.

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