I apologize for my synical phrasing. I didn't actually mean to accuse you of suggesting that homosexuals were inferior. I simply meant that was where logic and reasoning lead me.
Oh please. We know what you wrote. No, you're not using logic and reasoning. You have at best a vague familiarity with evolution and you're a rabid slave of your ideology who just couldn't wait to push out what you thought was an obvious contradiction.
An individual does not necessarily have to engage in reproduction himself to benefit the species. In fact, in many cases, if each individual is set on reproduction this leads to chaos, since, for example, breeding females are sometimes very rare and there are too many males fighting for them. By refraining from trying to mate, an individual can help the species survive by avoiding expensive fights. The example I gave of the lions falls under this strategy.
Also, by refraining from trying to mate an individual can use his resources on other aspects of keeping the species going. As a modern example, note that, because most homosexuals do not have children to take care of, we tend to have more expendable income than most heterosexuals who have children. I have personally used some of this income to take care of the children of other married couples.
There's no reason to suspect this wouldn't have been the case in the past. In ages past, I wouldn't have been taking care of kids, so I would have had more time to hunt, fish, tend to the garden, etc. I would be more free, as I probably wouldn't be tied down in a dyadic pair. I also have more freedom with my friends' wives - just a couple of nights ago, a female friend spent the night because her husband was on a business trip and she hates staying in the house alone. We even slept in the same room. And you know what? She probably was safer.
But let's take your insistence that if a person doesn't personally pass his genes along, evolution says they're inferior. To the contrary, if you'd done
any research on modern evolutionary theory, you'd know that an individual, even if he does not breed, may in fact be passing along his own genes. How's that? I share around 50% of my DNA with my brothers and sisters. By using all my gay powers, I can help
them with
their children and so my genes do get passed along. And yes, this has happened in my own life. I have taken care of the children of relatives, who were not able to take care of them themselves. In the old days, when populations were smaller and nearly everybody in an area would have been related, this would have been more common.
As an aside (that I think is pretty cute), most male cuttlefish, when they're trying to breed, puff themselves up and put on displays of color for the females. A small percentage of male cuttlefish, though, shrink themselves down and make themselves look like females. They sneak up to the actual females, avoiding all the fighting males, and deposit their sperm. They're not gay, obviously, but transvestites.
Perhaps we've got you all fooled and are impregnating women behind your backs... but yes, it helps our species in general that there are men to whom your wives can talk when their husbands are being stupid.