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Author Topic: LGBT  (Read 15753 times)

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Offline HagenK

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #135 on: September 08, 2015, 02:12:20 PM »
i dont get why so many furries are gay

Offline anoni

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #136 on: September 08, 2015, 02:18:12 PM »
i dont get why so many furries are gay

You'd be surprised how little furries are. Most surveys show that there are still MORE straight furries than gay furries, however there are more Bisexual furries than both straight or gay. LGBT furries do outnumber non-LGBT furries, but only ~20% of the fandom identifies identify as gay, with 35-40% identifying as bi/pan or some variation there-of.
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Offline HagenK

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #137 on: September 08, 2015, 02:25:08 PM »
that's still way higher than normal

Offline anoni

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #138 on: September 08, 2015, 02:33:31 PM »
It is. TBH one of the reasons I became a furry was due to insecurities about my sexuality. I'm not even kidding, I was constantly looking for a community that'd accept me, I wanted a community that I could be open about, but at the same time didn't have my sexuality as something that defined me.

  I originally joined LGBT forums but it seemed really bad, it was like "You're gay and that's the most important aspect of you and that's how we'll define you", I'm not much of a person who follows the stereotypical gay lifestyle, and a lot of people on that forum were, so I couldn't relate to them at all and it made me feel uncomfortable to be alienated.

  The furry community seemed to not care about your sexuality, you could be gay, straight, bi, trans, pan, demi, whatever, nobody cared, it didn't mean anything and it was exactly what I was looking for in a community of acceptance. Where you can be open with, but not defined by, your sexuality.

  Maybe that's what attracts a lot of other gay people to the fandom? Who knows!
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Offline HagenK

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #139 on: September 08, 2015, 03:24:54 PM »
Interesting idea, anoni, however it's hard to believe that lgbt could be a selling point of furry community. I mean what's so gay about people in animal costumes? It's more asexual or zoo for me. Furries are friendly and welcome everyone? Maybe. But if sexuality is not so important then why cant other communities accept you? They dont need to know every tiny detail about your personal life. Also the whole male to female ratio anomaly is another mistery too.

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #140 on: September 08, 2015, 03:29:53 PM »
Interesting idea, anoni, however it's hard to believe that lgbt could be a selling point of furry community. I mean what's so gay about people in animal costumes? It's more asexual or zoo for me. Furries are friendly and welcome everyone? Maybe. But if sexuality is not so important then why cant other communities accept you? They dont need to know every tiny detail about your personal life. Also the whole male to female ratio anomaly is another mistery too.
It's just how it is. It became that on it's own.

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #141 on: September 08, 2015, 04:11:08 PM »
i dont get why so many furries are gay

Why is the sky blue?
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Offline Grovygrunge

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #142 on: September 08, 2015, 04:22:43 PM »
Why is the sky blue?
The sunlit sky is blue because air scatters short-wavelength light more than longer wavelengths. Since blue light is at the short wavelength end of the visible spectrum, it is more strongly scattered in the atmosphere than long wavelength red light. The result is that the human eye perceives blue when looking toward parts of the sky other than the sun.


XD Welcome
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Offline George

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #143 on: September 08, 2015, 10:37:51 PM »

  The furry community seemed to not care about your sexuality, you could be gay, straight, bi, trans, pan, demi, whatever, nobody cared, it didn't mean anything and it was exactly what I was looking for in a community of acceptance. Where you can be open with, but not defined by, your sexuality.

  Maybe that's what attracts a lot of other gay people to the fandom? Who knows!
 :o

That's brilliant!

Offline anoni

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #144 on: September 09, 2015, 03:27:26 PM »
Why is the sky blue?
The sunlit sky is blue because air scatters short-wavelength light more than longer wavelengths. Since blue light is at the short wavelength end of the visible spectrum, it is more strongly scattered in the atmosphere than long wavelength red light. The result is that the human eye perceives blue when looking toward parts of the sky other than the sun.


 XD Welcome

If shorter wavelengths are scattered more than longer wavelengths, why isn't the sky violet? :P

Interesting idea, anoni, however it's hard to believe that lgbt could be a selling point of furry community. I mean what's so gay about people in animal costumes? It's more asexual or zoo for me. Furries are friendly and welcome everyone? Maybe. But if sexuality is not so important then why cant other communities accept you? They dont need to know every tiny detail about your personal life. Also the whole male to female ratio anomaly is another mistery too.

Sexuality isn't ignored in the furry community but it isn't condemned or focused on. For example, if I have a boyfriend, there's gonna be a lot of conversations that involve my boyfriend, topics just go up like that. I want to be able to say "hey yeah my boyfriend did that too" rather than "hey yeah my... errr... friend... did that too". But if I said that in other communities, they might be like "Oh your gay? That's so weird, you don't seem the type!" etc, etc, etc. So it offers a very nice view of sexuality and openness.
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Offline HagenK

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #145 on: September 09, 2015, 05:13:16 PM »
Sky isnt violet because human's eyes are less sensitive to violet light than blue and it so happens that sun's emission peaks at around 500nm (blue-green light)

Can't argue with your logic, anoni

Offline Grovygrunge

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #146 on: September 09, 2015, 05:36:39 PM »
If shorter wavelengths are scattered more than longer wavelengths, why isn't the sky violet? :P
I copied it from a Wikipedia article man, come on. I'm not that smart.
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Offline ZaraRa

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #147 on: September 09, 2015, 06:31:47 PM »
im transgender, asexual and god knows what else tbh  :)

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Re: LGBT
« Reply #148 on: September 10, 2015, 10:34:51 PM »
The sky is blue — physicists tell us — because blue light in the sun's rays bends more than red light.  But this extra bending, or scattering, applies just as much to violet light, so it is reasonable to ask why the sky isn't purple.

The answer, explained fully for the first time in a new scientific paper, is in the eye of the beholder.

"The traditional way that people teach this subject is that sunlight is scattered — more so for shorter wavelengths than for longer ones," says Glenn Smith, an engineering professor at Georgia Tech.  "The other half of the explanation is usually left out: how your eye perceives this spectrum."


While writing a physics textbook some years ago, Smith noticed that physiology usually gets short shrift, even though the spectrum of skylight — when analyzed — is about equal parts violet and blue.   

Smith has written an article for the July issue of the American Journal of Physics that puts the physics of light together with the physiology of human vision.

"This is nothing that people who work with eyes haven't known for a long time," Smith told LiveScience.  "I just had not seen it all in one place before."

The physics behind seeing blue skies
The physical explanation for the blueness of the sky is attributed to the work of Lord Rayleigh in the 19th century.

As a common prism reveals, sunlight is made of all the colors of the rainbow.  When light from the sun enters Earth's atmosphere, it is scattered, or deflected, by molecules in the atmosphere — primarily nitrogen and oxygen.

Shorter wavelengths (blue and violet) are scattered more than longer wavelengths (red and yellow).  So as we look in a direction of the sky away from the sun, we see those wavelengths that are bent the most.

The light of day is actually a complex spectrum of many different wavelengths, but it is dominated by light with wavelengths between 400 nanometers (violet) and 450 nanometers (blue). A nanometer is 1 billionth of a meter.

How the eye sees color
The human eye is sensitive to light between roughly 380 and 740 nanometers.  On a typical retina, there are 10 million rods for sensing low light levels and 5 million cones for detecting color.

Each cone contains pigments that restrict the range of wavelengths that the cone responds to.  There are three varieties of cones for long, medium and short wavelengths.

"You need all three of them to see color correctly," Smith explained.

The peak response for the long cones is at 570 nanometers (yellow), medium at 543 nanometers (green), and short at 442 nanometers (between violet and blue).  But the three cones are sensitive over broad, overlapping wavelength ranges, which means two different spectra can cause the same response in a set of various cones.

A good example of this is yellow.  There is a certain narrow range of wavelengths that we might call "pure" yellow (or another for "pure" blue, and so on).  However, the same set of cones that reacts to a light of pure yellow also responds to the superposition of pure red and pure green light.

The sky's light plays tricks
Two spectra that have the same cone response are called metamers.  Smith stressed that this only concerns the neural signal coming out of the eye — long before any processing by the brain.

"In previous research, people excised cones from the eyes of dead people and measured the response to different spectra," he said.

The same "trick" that makes red and green turn into yellow is happening in the sky.  But in this case, the sky's combination of violet and blue elicits the same cone response as pure blue plus white light, which is an equal mixture of all the colors. 

"Your eye can't tell the difference between that complex spectrum and one that is a mixture of pure blue and white," Smith said.

In other animals, the sky color is undoubtedly different.  Outside of humans and some other primates, most animals have only two types of cones instead of three (dichromatic vs. trichromatic).

Honeybees and some birds see at ultraviolet wavelengths that are invisible to humans.

Your welcome, anoni XP
« Last Edit: September 10, 2015, 10:37:21 PM by Wolxikin »
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Re: LGBT
« Reply #149 on: September 10, 2015, 10:48:58 PM »
can we not talk about physics in the lgbt thread, also i just did my physics test yesterday it went horrible, extension maths was bloody easier than that load of crap, for the love of god make it end.....



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