🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 16:19:22 UTC No. 16303407
Is there a scientific explanation why furries are so common in STEM?
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 16:28:24 UTC No. 16303411
>>16303407
Autism
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 19:12:15 UTC No. 16303552
>>16303407
STEM is a high stress field filled with socially awkward nerds. Combine their sexual repression and no means of emotional intimacy, you get furries (intimacy with animals). Think about the power dynamic and straightforward sex with animals.
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 19:38:58 UTC No. 16303589
>>16303407
Do you have data showing their prevalence in STEM fields or are you going off of your feelings from being around this site too much?
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 19:50:38 UTC No. 16303601
>>16303589
No, I don't have any hard data, I guess its mostly anecdotal, but where would one even find literature or statistics about this?
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 19:56:45 UTC No. 16303608
You meant STEAM, right?
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 19:59:42 UTC No. 16303613
>>16303407
It's a place where people can get away with being weird without career consequences more easily than in most other fields, so you can actually notice the weird people there before they do not need to hide it.
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 20:02:51 UTC No. 16303616
Done, completed. Leaving the working out for you. It's not so clear...
I'm also taking it as Job Done, but there's some sort of sacrifice involving me walking a distance already covered.
Like I did it all in the beginning and now it just needs my blood.
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 21:22:12 UTC No. 16303719
>>16303552
Is there a correlation between disposable income and behaviors like those found in the furry community, particularly within tech sectors? This phenomenon seems to be emerging even in places like Shanghai, China. Could it be that financial stability allows these individuals to explore niche interests—like furries, for example—as an outlet for their repression?