wizards8507
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Feminist Hero Bakes Sourdough Bread Using Her Own Vaginal Yeast
I wonder what kind of hairnet is required for that sort of thing.....
I cannot believe that I clicked that link. That's filthy.
See now this is a bannable post.Feminist Hero Bakes Sourdough Bread Using Her Own Vaginal Yeast
I wonder what kind of hairnet is required for that sort of thing.....
I cannot believe that I clicked that link. That's filthy.
Would you like to begin?
I think it's spot-on. For all of the hyperbole thrown around about millennials, I don't think it can be disputed that adulthood, and manhood in particular, has been bastardized. In 1960, 77% of women and 65% of men achieved the five milestones of adulthood--completing school, leaving home, becoming financially independent, marrying, and having a child--by age 30. In 2010, that percentage fell to 13% of women and 10% of men. Boys don't become men anymore, they become "guys" until their mid-30s and then men somewhere down the line if they get to it.Would you like to begin?
I think it's spot-on. For all of the hyperbole thrown around about millennials, I don't think it can be disputed that adulthood, and manhood in particular, has been bastardized. In 1960, 77% of women and 65% of men achieved the five milestones of adulthood--completing school, leaving home, becoming financially independent, marrying, and having a child--by age 30. In 2010, that percentage fell to 13% of women and 10% of men. Boys don't become men anymore, they become "guys" until their mid-30s and then men somewhere down the line if they get to it.
Amen to all of this.You know what happened after 1960? The pill.
Ethological studies of men are rather conflicted on how much we're biologically hardwired to pair-bond (what has evolved into the institution of marriage) versus try to "spread our seed" as much as possible. Pre-1960 most men ended up marrying early because that's how you got to have sex, and society also stigmatized anything other than that type of hetro-normative nuclear family behavior.
Every year since the "sexual revolution" societal norms have moved further and further away from that. I think it has almost nothing at all to do with "fear," as author postulates at one point. And much more to do with narcissism, which he also discusses in a roundabout way.
Millennials are the first generation to grow up with internet porn, and there have been lots of studies that show how that is really fucking up our brains. Then they watch all kinds of approved shows... whether it's Entourage or Friends or Seinfeld or Sex in the City or PICK ANY FUCKING SITCOM ON TV FOR LITERALLY THE PAST 2+ DECADES... that all broadcast the idea that living as a "dude" and chasing "strange" is what men should aspire to.
Naturally, that's what people do. And I don't think there is necessarily anything "worse" with the way Millennials are behaving relative to people multiple generations ago. Are we going to sit here and say getting married at 18-22 and having 5+ kids is "better" than getting married between 28-35 and maybe having 1-2 children? Because I won't make that argument.
Also, I like my room and I like my toys. So the author can suck it.
Is your position that there is no benefit to society from nuclear family behavior? If so, I hope Whiskey jumps in articulates why you're wrong much more eloquently than I can.You know what happened after 1960? The pill.
Ethological studies of men are rather conflicted on how much we're biologically hardwired to pair-bond (what has evolved into the institution of marriage) versus try to "spread our seed" as much as possible. Pre-1960 most men ended up marrying early because that's how you got to have sex, and society also stigmatized anything other than that type of hetro-normative nuclear family behavior.
Every year since the "sexual revolution" societal norms have moved further and further away from that. I think it has almost nothing at all to do with "fear," as author postulates at one point. And much more to do with narcissism, which he also discusses in a roundabout way.
Millennials are the first generation to grow up with internet porn, and there have been lots of studies that show how that is really fucking up our brains. Then they watch all kinds of approved shows... whether it's Entourage or Friends or Seinfeld or Sex in the City or PICK ANY FUCKING SITCOM ON TV FOR LITERALLY THE PAST 2+ DECADES... that all broadcast the idea that living as a "dude" and chasing "strange" is what men should aspire to.
Naturally, that's what people do. And I don't think there is necessarily anything "worse" with the way Millennials are behaving relative to people multiple generations ago. Are we going to sit here and say getting married at 18-22 and having 5+ kids is "better" than getting married between 28-35 and maybe having 1-2 children? Because I won't make that argument.
I agree the he goes a little overboard and throws the baby out with the bathwater. I collect toys, read comic books, and play a little bit of video games. I also got married at 21, bought a house at 22, and had a baby at 25, so it's not like those things are mutually exclusive of one another.Also, I like my room and I like my toys. So the author can suck it.
Is your position that there is no benefit to society from nuclear family behavior? If so, I hope Whiskey jumps in articulates why you're wrong much more eloquently than I can.
I agree the he goes a little overboard and throws the baby out with the bathwater. I collect toys, read comic books, and play a little bit of video games. I also got married at 21, bought a house at 22, and had a baby at 25, so it's not like those things are mutually exclusive of one another.
Is your position that there is no benefit to society from nuclear family behavior? If so, I hope Whiskey jumps in articulates why you're wrong much more eloquently than I can.
I agree the he goes a little overboard and throws the baby out with the bathwater. I collect toys, read comic books, and play a little bit of video games. I also got married at 21, bought a house at 22, and had a baby at 25, so it's not like those things are mutually exclusive of one another.
I think it's spot-on. For all of the hyperbole thrown around about millennials, I don't think it can be disputed that adulthood, and manhood in particular, has been bastardized. In 1960, 77% of women and 65% of men achieved the five milestones of adulthood--completing school, leaving home, becoming financially independent, marrying, and having a child--by age 30. In 2010, that percentage fell to 13% of women and 10% of men. Boys don't become men anymore, they become "guys" until their mid-30s and then men somewhere down the line if they get to it.
You know what happened after 1960? The pill.
Men get slammed by family courts and women file close to 70% of all divorces. That's a tough pill to swallow for a man who has something to lose.
I agree the he goes a little overboard and throws the baby out with the bathwater. I collect toys, read comic books, and play a little bit of video games. I also got married at 21, bought a house at 22, and had a baby at 25, so it's not like those things are mutually exclusive of one another.
Are men everywhere alike in their concern (and desire) for being manly?
Is the concept of manliness meaningless and entirely culturally relative?
For the last several weeks we have been exploring the answers to these questions by discussing the findings contained in Dr. David D. Gilmore’s Manhood in the Making.
Twenty years ago, Gilmore set out to conduct an exhaustive cross-cultural analysis of how masculinity is perceived and lived around the world.
What he discovered was that far from being exceptional and widely divergent, conceptions of what constitutes a “real man” have been common and consistent through time and around the world. A distinct code of manhood has not only been part of nearly every society on earth — whether agricultural or urban, premodern or advanced, patriarchal or relatively egalitarian — these codes invariably contain the same three imperatives; a male who aspires to be a man must protect, procreate, and provide.
As the subject is a fascinating and vital one, we have given each of these “3 P’s of Manhood” a thorough treatment. It was definitely a lot to take in; it’s really turned into a kind of Manhood 101 course! So today, for those who didn’t make it through the beastly posts, and for those who did but could use a quick re-orientation, today we’re providing a crib sheet that distills what we have covered thus far down to the basic fundamentals.
Here's what I tell my boys: the difference between a boy and a man is power/ agency. Once a boy attains enough education and self-control that he can free himself from prejudice and passion, then it's fair to call him a man. A good man then takes that power/ agency and puts it at the service of some larger communal benefit. For some that entails the priesthood or military service. For most others, it involves a wife and children.
Some might call that slavery, and I think it would have exactly the opposite effect. Any restoration of the protective function of masculinity would be more than offset by the dehumanizing effect of involuntary servitude. I know you're not a big believer of ownership of self, but agency is necessary to develop any kind of personal telos. Even if you throw all of that out, painting compulsory military service as any kind of positive thing puts an awful lot of faith in governments to conduct just and legitimate wars.A widespread rejection of contraception, periodic universal military service mandates, and a return to more local and sustainable modes of living would probably do the trick, but the odds of that happening absent a global catastrophe seem incredibly slim.
That's not what anyone said. I don't recall anyone suggesting that contraceptives be outlawed. I think alcohol is a net detriment to society, but that doesn't mean I support prohibition.But yes, let's blame contraception for the ills of society. Heaven forbid women get to have some say in their own reproductive health, amiright?
That's not what anyone said. I don't recall anyone suggesting that contraceptives be outlawed. I think alcohol is a net detriment to society, but that doesn't mean I support prohibition.
That's very perceptive. Lots of people much smarter than I have argued persuasively that widespread acceptance of contraception is the moment Western society started falling to pieces. It logically entails abortion and euthanasia, it causes demographic collapse, and it encourages selfish anti-social behavior on a historically unprecedented level. Contraception is literally societal suicide.
I would argue that life wasn't "so great" in the 1960's. Sure, men and women were married and having kids, but were marriages happy? Were children happy? I can only speak anecdotally, but children grew up "behaving" for fear of physical retribution if they didn't behave (and, for that matter, so did housewives for the same reason). It was socially acceptable for men to hit women or verbally abuse them at the least, and socially acceptable to do the same to their children.
So was it all to do with contraception being invented in 1960 that "society started going downhill" as some are arguing? If percentages of people married then vs now is your only measuring post for societal health, then maybe, but my argument would be that time has glossed over some of the darker realities of life for anyone who wasn't a white, middle class male in the "good old days" everyone likes to reference. But yes, let's blame contraception for the ills of society. Heaven forbid women get to have some say in their own reproductive health, amiright?
It is striking, though, what the widespread use of the pill did not lead to. It did not lead to fewer abortions, nor to fewer unplanned pregnancies, nor to a lower out-of-wedlock birth rate. Instead, and counterintuitively, widespread use of the pill was accompanied by massive increases in all of these phenomena. Now why might that be? Is it because women don't have sufficient control over their "reproductive health"?
Hahahahaha - okay dude. You try taking a pill at the same exact minute every day to keep your sperm from swimming and see how well it goes from that end. It was a step in the right direction, not a permanent fix (pun somewhat intended)