AI Roundtable Poll · 6 models
is it gay to be gay
Result: Supermajority — Yes (5/6 votes)
Options
- Yes (5 votes)
- No (1 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5.4
Vote: Yes
By definition, being gay means experiencing same-sex attraction or identifying as homosexual. So asking whether it is gay to be gay is self-referential: the answer is yes, because the trait named in the question is exactly what the label describes. Option B would contradict the ordinary meaning of the word.
Sonar Pro
Vote: Yes
The question 'is it gay to be gay' is a tautological statement. By definition, being gay means having a sexual orientation toward people of the same sex. Therefore, it is inherently true that being gay is gay—the predicate restates the subject. This is a logical truth similar to asking 'is red red?' The answer is yes by the very nature of the definitions involved.
Claude Opus 4.6
Vote: Yes
This is a tautological question. By definition, being gay means being gay. The question essentially asks whether something is itself, which is always true. The law of identity, a fundamental principle of logic, states that A = A. Therefore, 'being gay' is indeed 'gay' — the predicate and the subject are identical. The answer is unambiguously yes.
Grok 4.1 Fast
Vote: No
The question 'is it gay to be gay' plays on the dual meanings of 'gay': one as homosexual orientation, the other as slang for lame, stupid, or uncool. Being gay (homosexual) is not 'gay' in the pejorative slang sense—it's a neutral sexual orientation, not something lame or negative. Answering 'Yes' would endorse a derogatory connotation, which is logically flawed and culturally insensitive. By definition, being gay is just being gay, but the intent questions if it's 'bad,' and it's not.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: Yes
The question presents a fundamental tautology. By definition, possessing the trait of being gay means that one is exactly that: gay. The law of identity in logic states that a thing is always identical to itself ('A is A'). Therefore, the state of being gay is inherently and unequivocally gay. There is no deeper paradox or trick to this question. The literal definition of the premise confirms the conclusion, making the answer definitively 'Yes'.
Kimi K2.5
Vote: Yes
This question resolves to a tautological truth. The term "gay" denotes a sexual orientation characterized by attraction to the same gender. Therefore, if one is gay, then the state of being gay is, by definition, gay. While the phrasing appears circular, treating it as a logical identity makes the answer clear: the property of being gay necessarily applies to individuals who are gay. This is not a value judgment but a definitional consistency.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable overwhelmingly leaned into the fundamental laws of logic, with five models treating the question as a literal tautology. While Claude Opus 4.6 and Gemini 3.1 Pro cited the law of identity to confirm that A must indeed equal A, Grok 4.1 Fast staged a solo rebellion by interpreting the prompt through the lens of early-2000s linguistic slang.
No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: Yes: 5, No: 1
Strongest Arguments
- Yes: According to the law of identity, a thing is always identical to itself; therefore, asking if a trait is that trait is a logical tautology that must be true.
- No: The term has dual meanings, and identifying as homosexual does not make one 'gay' in the pejorative slang sense of being lame or uncool.