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I guess that's fair, if not what you said before, although in turn I'm not sure it is irrelevant, unless you really only care about the gay sex. You don't stop being bisexual just if you go a week without sucking a variety of genitals, any more than hets stop being het when they're not in the middle of reproducing, and there's a variety of norms that end up different in bisexual (even socially-bi) places.
And that's assuming that things keep the way they are; there's reason to suspect at least some amount of falling-into-het-relationships as downstream of simple selection effects, which could be less prominent if at least some portion of the newly-bi people are more 'haven't' than 'wouldn't' or 'couldn't'. I've written a bit in the past about spaces that turned high-prevalence bisexual and then had a lot of gay sex precipitate out.
There are a lot of people who have different norms of behavior when solely around people who aren't capable of seeing them as sexually attractive, even if there's no actual interest or chance of interest. Worse, they will become retroactively uncomfortable and consider it a betrayal of trust if they are 'tricked' into doing something outside of the bounds of these norms.
The classical variant of this for a lot of gay and bi guys is public- or semi-public showers, such as in gyms or dorm rooms. Where and when I grew up, it was considered immature or gay to be uncomfortable stripping for these environments. But at least some people also considered Incorrect to strip in front of a gay or bi guy.
((The broader LGBT movement calls this generally homophobic, and sometimes it is, but it's often from people who'd have the exact same objections in front of a heterosexual or bisexual woman other than their wives.))
One solution was for those gay or bi guys to be in the closet: keep your eyes up, think cold day thoughts, get in and out, done; what people don't know can't hurt their feelings. Does not always work out in practice. Another option is to disclose, either explicitly or through very well-known signals. People who aren't comfortable with it can change their behaviors (or make clear that you'll wait until they're out to go in); people who don't care don't even have to notice.
Public- and semi-public showers aren't the most common environment, but they're also not the only such example. It's not uncommon for businesses to put two same-sex coworkers into a single hotel room for conventions or travel (and especially older folks have often uncomfortable behaviors when doing that). I've had friends or coworkers invite me to certain types of 'themed restaurant' once and then when the only pleats I was looking at in the Tilted Kilt were on the host rather than the waitresses, and sometimes that doesn't matter to them a ton, and sometimes it does.
((I have strong reasons to believe there are equivalents for lesbian and bisexual women, but I've only heard them second-hand.))
These issues arise even and sometimes especially with people the gay or bisexual guy isn't actually going to be attracted to, just because the theoretical possibility is enough to matter, whether for "Caeser's wife must be above suspicion" reasons or just because they don't believe it. I've had people who I found absolutely repulsive, either on a physical or personality or both level, that insisted on changing room arrangements after I had to disclose for unrelated matters.
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