Tuesday, February 10, 2015

To Know Polyamory Is to Love Polyamory

This is why visibility is important. Stephanie Pappas reports at livescience.com that the more people are familiar with polyamory, the less stigma remains. 
Chances are, the more you know about the relationship style called polyamory, the more accepting you are of such setups, according to new research. The findings echo what psychologists know about how people respond to gays, lesbians and other sexual minorities: The greater the familiarity, the less severe the stigma.
Also...
Likewise, the study found that "the more aware people were of polyamory, the more positive their attitudes were," Giuliano told Live Science.
That is why it is good to see polyamory depicted on television, in movies, etc.
It's unclear how many people identify themselves as polyamorous, but a 2013 study in the journal Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy estimated that between 4 percent and 5 percent of people in the United States are involved in some sort of consensually nonmonogamous relationship.
Polyamorous people are everywhere. Everyone reading this knows someone who is polyamorous, even if you're not aware of it.

We're not going to go back to people having to have separate beds on television, and we're not going to go back excluding any positive or neutral portrayal of any relationship that isn't heterosexual and monogamous. We're going to keep moving forward, because we're all going to be better off if people are truly free to have the relationships they need and want, the relationships in which they can best function. Having full marriage equality is part of that. There is no good reason to deny people their fundamental relationship rights.

Why Polyamory Will Gain Acceptance Faster

1 comment:

  1. Sure. Just ask people who left sex cults or polygamous marriages.

    ReplyDelete

To prevent spam, comments will have to be approved, so your comment may not appear for several hours. Feedback is welcome, including disagreement. I only delete/reject/mark as spam: spam, vulgar or hateful attacks, repeated spouting of bigotry from the same person that does not add to the discussion, and the like. I will not reject comments based on disagreement, but if you don't think consenting adults should be free to love each other, then I do not consent to have you repeatedly spout hate on my blog without adding anything to the discourse.

If you want to write to me privately, then either contact me on Facebook, email me at fullmarriageequality at protonmail dot com, or tell me in your comment that you do NOT want it published. Otherwise, anything you write here is fair game to be used in a subsequent entry. If you want to be anonymous, that is fine.

IT IS OK TO TALK ABOUT SEX IN YOUR COMMENTS, BUT PLEASE CHOOSE YOUR WORDS CAREFULLY AS I WANT THIS BLOG TO BE AS "SAFE FOR WORK" AS POSSIBLE. If your comment includes graphic descriptions of activity involving minors, it's not going to get published.