The theory of evolution aims to explain biodiversity through natural processes. The overall process leads to the “survival of the fit enough”, meaning, the species that can live long enough to reproduce and keep passing its genes to future generations is fit enough for survival. This doesn’t mean that the biggest, tallest, fastest or strongest species are the most prone to survive. The most important trait is to reproduce quickly enough before dying so it survives.
As such, the most important evolutionary trait is the ability to reproduce. Being the fittest living organism without the ability to reproduce is not fit enough for survival, because without reproduction, the organism will eventually die without passing its genes to future generations.
But, how come we still have homosexuality as a surviving trait after all those alleged millions of years of evolution? Shouldn’t this be the most excluded trait during the evolutionary process?
That’s true! Since, homosexuality doesn’t lead to reproduction, it could have never survived if evolution is true. Whether homosexuality is a genetic or psychological trait, it should have been excluded early on during the evolutionary process. The existence of homosexuality today is clear evidence that evolution is not the only process, if at all an explanation, for the biodiversity that we observe today.
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