Sorry for double posting but I just noticed this post. Alexander the Great was not homosexual, despite everyone saying he was a massive faggot; at best, you could say he was bisexual - and he even got offended when someone offered him underage male prostitutes to fuck. This type of attitude may be venerated among 'alpha male' communities and they'll point to Roman Towel Boys, but the Romans themselves were actually rather conservative. They understood such unrestricted male sexuality posed a problem and told their men to keep it together. The Athenians were the major faggots, but even then you had treatises from Socrates talking about how evil pederasty was and Aristotle compared gay sex to 'eating dirt'. Aristotle, mind you, was also a classic misogynist, but it does reveal that even Greek thinkers were well aware of what homosexuality could entail if left unrestricted. In 'Against Timarchus', Aeschines talks about how Timarchus, a former gay prostitute (I am muddying the details, please forgive me) should not be allowed because he committed deeds that 'made him lower than beasts'. The entire treatise is basically him calling this guy a raging faggot who has no place in Athenian courts, which says a lot. Sparta was one of the few city states that did not approve of pederasty or homosexuality, but were fine if you did it in private (don't ask, don't tell, you know the rules).
Leather Apron Club and Metatron have discussed Roman sexuality and laws surrounding it, and most of them are around same sex male activity.
That amount of testosterone that causes other 'alpha' men to fuck others is a well known thing for men with too much testosterone. More testosterone, more aromatase, more estrogen, more 'I wanna fuck this guy', etc. There are some users here that said that tren does the same.