We can approach the question of whether intolerant areas actually have fewer gay men another way, too, by estimating the percent of searches for pornography that are looking for depictions of gay men. Because high school students are less mobile than adults, this suggests that a gay exodus from these areas is not a large factor. The percent of male high school students who identify themselves as gay on Facebook is also much lower in less tolerant areas. I estimate that the openly gay population would be about 0.1 percentage points higher in the least tolerant states if everyone stayed in place. (This information is available only for a subset of Facebook users.) Some gay men do move out of less tolerant states, but this effect is small. I searched gay and straight men by state of birth and state of current residence. Have many of them moved to more tolerant areas? Some have, but Facebook data show that mobility can explain only a small fraction of the difference in the totally out population. On Facebook, for example, about 1 percent of men in Mississippi who list a gender preference say that they are interested in men in California, more than 3 percent do.Īre there really so many fewer gay men living in less tolerant states? There is no evidence that gay men would be less likely to be born in these states.
While these data sources all measure different degrees of openness, one result is strikingly similar: All three suggest that the openly gay population is dramatically higher in more tolerant states, defined using an estimate by Nate Silver of support for same-sex marriage. There are three sources that can give us estimates of the openly gay population broken down by state: the census, which asks about same-sex households Gallup, which has fairly large-sample surveys for every state and Facebook, which asks members what gender they are interested in. The evidence also suggests that a large number of gay men are married to women. More than one quarter of gay men hide their sexuality from anonymous surveys. Gay men are half as likely as straight men to acknowledge their sexuality on social networks. While none of these data sources are ideal, they combine to tell a consistent story.Īt least 5 percent of American men, I estimate, are predominantly attracted to men, and millions of gay men still live, to some degree, in the closet. The data used in this analysis is available in highly aggregated form only and can be downloaded from publicly accessible sites. Using surveys, social networks, pornographic searches and dating sites, I recently studied evidence on the number of gay men. Historical estimates range from about 2 percent to 10 percent.īut somewhere in the exabytes of data that human beings create every day are answers to even the most challenging questions.
WHAT percent of American men are gay? This question is notoriously difficult to answer.