The percentage of young men who 'become gay' has skyrocketed in recent years according to psychologists and some feel that there is peer pressure for kids to identify as gay or transgender in many areas. They note that the percentages of those identifying as gay or transgender varies drastically based upon where the kids live. This would militate against the hypothesis that 'gayness' is genetic and that they are 'born that way'. Of course studies of identical twins, with the same DNA has proven that it isn't really genetic.
Those living homosexual lifestyles and transgender lifestyles have dramatically shorter lifespans and in general unhappier lives, based upon the percentages who are suffering depression and other mental illnesses. The narrative being pushed in much of the media and all too many schools seems to have a significant impact on the number of kids who adopt those physically and mentally deleterious lifestyles. Unfortunately, the propaganda has many victims. Billy Bean is likely one of those tragic victims.
Billy Bean was a 2 time All American baseball player in college, and played 6 seasons in Major League Baseball.
https://www.columbiamissourian.com/sports/pro_sports/billy-bean-second-openly-gay-ex-mlb-player-who-later-worked-in-commissioners-office-dies/article_8ce46036-3247-5ba8-bd4a-edb8ca2434d3.html
"Bean wrote a book titled “Going the Other Way” and was also a keynote speaker at many events. He publicly came out as gay in 1999, the second former major leaguer to do so after Glenn Burke.
Bean joined the commissioner's office in 2014, when he was hired by former Commissioner Bud Selig to be MLB's first Ambassador for Inclusion. He spent more than 10 years working for MLB, eventually being promoted to senior vice president."
"MLB released a statement confirming his death. Bean died at home on Tuesday after a yearlong fight with acute myeloid leukemia."
https://tinyurl.com/n2xr6nvs
"Studies suggest a 2.5-fold increase in leukemia, including AML, among HIV-infected individuals compared to the general population (Patel et al., 2008; Aboulafia et al., 2002)."
"HIV-infected patients with AML often exhibit poor tolerance to consolidation therapy, leading to shorter disease-free survival (Evans et al., 2009)."