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Transvestia
female or a male dropped down to 37 and 35% respectively. This jibes with 93% considering themselves transvestites, 20% bisexual and only 19% wanting sex surgery. 90% consider themselves heterosexual against 2% homosexual. All of the homosexual type questions these relating to any kind of erotic relationship with a male, all had less than 25% yes answers. This is in interesting contrast to Kinsey's findings that 37% of all males had had a homosexual contact at least once in their life. But it matches very well with the results obtained in my questionnaire several years ago which showed only 25% of the respondents admitting to having had any homosexual experiences. This cross agreement tends to strongly verify the contention that TVs generally have less homosexual experience than the general population - a thing that most non-TVs just can't believe. Finally, and unrelated to anything but just interesting is the fact that 40% said that they felt less sexually inhibited when dressed as a woman . . . this may be the only really effective aphrodisiac known (erotic stimulant).
There will be those who will say, "What does all this prove?" just as there were those who complained that other tests "didn't have any questions about TV." We are simply searching in various ways to see if we can find some way in which TVs are appreciably and consistently different from non-TVs. This test just eliminates another area of possible difference since, except for differences due to average age and the cultural differences under which the two groups grew up, there is really not a significant difference in the types of erotic activity experienced by the two groups. Others have checked and eliminated the possibility of differences from chromosome count, sex chromatin (Barr bodies), sex hormone level and excretion and now we've eliminated erotic experience. So where do we look next? Maybe TVs do not differ in any experimentally measurable way after all.
65
"When I dress
like a woman
I drive
like a woman"