Millennials having less sex than any generation before

northwye

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The heterosexual relationship is the foundation of the family. Severely weaken the heterosexual relationship and the family is severely weakened.

Here is a survey in 2010 of "38,812 students for whom we could obtain e-mail addresses through a request to the University of Wisconsin-Madison Bursar’s Office. This encompassed more than 92 percent of UW students based on the wisc.edu admissions web page quick facts. "

https://badgerherald.com/artsetc/2010/11/18/the-sex-lives-of-uw/

89.2 percent of respondents said they are white.

The second question was: “Some medications, especially common antidepressants like Prozac and Zoloft, are associated with sexual side effects that can include complete inhibition of sexual desire. Are you currently taking any such medications”? To this, 7.0 percent answered in the affirmative, 0.8 percent said they sometimes take such medication.

I would think that the percentage of university students using antidepressants is higher than 7 or 8 percent. The use of antidepressants, other psychiatric prescription drugs like tranquilizers, and many other kinds of prescription drugs by the Millennials is likely one of the reasons why they have less sex and sess heterosexual sex as a generation.

"About 81.6 percent of males said they are completely straight with no exceptions, compared to 68.1 percent of females. Surprisingly, males were more than seven times as likely as females to say they are completely gay, with 3.1 percent versus 0.4 percent. Females were more than twice as likely as males to be at least somewhat bisexual, with 30.9 percent of females and 14.4 percent of males ranking somewhere between totally straight and totally gay. For sexual attraction, 17.5 percent of males said they were at least sometimes attracted to males, and 31.4 percent of females said they were at least sometimes attracted to females."

That there are more lesbians than homosexuals at the University of Wisconsin is not surprising at all. The university culture of political correctness promotes lesbianism more than homosexuality.

That 81 percent of the male students and 68 percent of the female students claimed to be completely straight, or heterosexual, does not necessarily mean that the culture of political correctness in the major universities has not been discouraging heterosexuality while promoting lesbianism and homosexuality. And this promotion is likely a major reason why this generation is having less heterosexual sex. That is, the political correctness culture's encouragement of lesbianism and homosexuality could be discouraging heterosexual sexuality even for those who are not overtly lesbian or homosexual.

"When asked if they are currently involved in a relationship, 50.5 percent of males and 55.7 percent of females said they are."

"Of the respondents, 2.9 percent reported having been infected with chlamydia at some point, 0.8 percent reported gonorrhea, and less than one half percent reported syphilis."

Maybe in 2010 only 3 percent of university students had once or more contacted chlamydia, because fewer students were sexually active than earlier generations of students.. But in the seventies the percent of that generation at the University of Wisconsin who had chlamydia at least once was probably more like twenty or thirty percent. This University was known then as a school with a great deal of social life. By the seventies the birth control pill was used by many university women students, making them more likely to get a sexually transmitted disease. In fact, the birth control pill, at that time, was a big reason why so many young single university women were having sex, compared to what was going on back in the fifties.
 
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