A 2012 ‘New Family Structures study’ published by Mark Regnerus of
the University of Texas claimed to look at the lives of children of gay
parents, and alleged that same-sex parents have a negative impact on
their children’s outcomes.
However, the study has repeatedly come under fire for a series of statistical and academic flaws, with an auditor decrying the findings as “bullshit”.
Now, researchers looking through the study data and attempting to
remove flaws have found it actually indicates that gay parenting is not
at all harmful, when some clearly fake data is removed.
According to Right Wing Watch,
researchers Brian Powell of Indiana University and Simon Cheng of the
University of Connecticut found that one participant claimed to have
been arrested at age 1.
Another supposed 25-year-old participant claimed to be 7’8″ tall
(2.33m), weigh 88 pounds (39kg), and have eight children by eight
marriages.
Someone of that height and weight would be diagnosed as having giantism – and would also have a BMI of 7, which is fatal.
When the fake data was removed, even with other flaws still present
the study showed that gay parenting has no negative effect whatsoever.
They found: “[When] equally plausible and, in our view, preferred
methodological decisions are used, a different conclusion emerges: adult
children who lived with same-sex parents show comparable outcome
profiles to those from other family types, including intact biological
families.
Regnerus has previously used the study to claim in court cases that
same-sex marriage should be banned – but Powell says his findings are no
longer valid.
He said: “There are major analytic errors in the study.”
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