Society and Politics

Wait a Second, Am I Really Saying the Words "Ronald Reagan's Major Contribution to Sex Education?

Photo by Flickr user
Photo by Flickr user "The Official CTBTO Photostream." Used under a Creative Commons license.

Yes, conservative jerk, twice-divorced, serial-deficit-increaser, twice-fathered-children-out-of-wedlock, and former President, Ronald Reagan made a major contribution to sex education and, for that matter, sex: kids (and grownups!) can have much healthier, more natural sex lives: "Trust but verify."

Sure, he was talking about something else. But nevertheless it's still relevant to sex education.

Here's the scoop.

I grew up thinking you're centered and well-adjusted about sex.  And to an extent of course I was.

But in retrospect?  Wow, did I grow up around some really, really terrible influences!  Lately the realization has made me question so much of what I "know" is true.  It's not that everything I know isn't true, but as I reflect on the sometimes deeply suspect influences I was exposed to growing up I find myself really, really, really wishing I'd had some kind of access to second opinions.  And third.  And most importantly varied!  Because, seriously, in my community you could find plenty of agenda-driven Bible thumping opinions, and equally agenda-driven anything-goes-baby "swingers."  But inbetween?  Next to nothing.  And really?  It all works out a lot better if your framework for sexuality to come waaay from somewhere in between and waaaaaaaay less from trying to reconcile screaming extremes.

Ugg.  Too bad for me (and a shocking percentage of the rest of the population that was born in the 20th Century.)

Anyway.

Watching my children grow up I'm... pretty sure they're not subject to the same shame/blame/denial/jpressure/ust-plain-wrong-information I was.  Largely, I think, because it's possible to get corroboration from more than one authoratative source.  Most of which, in turn are "open source" in the sense that they're public information and therefore subject to public acknowledgement, criticism, clarification, and dissent.

There are obviously more, and yes, obviously not all resources now available are 100% accurate, timely, wise, or helpful...

But the most important item, almost even more important than the actual list above would be

  • Peers who are coming of age with at least some exposure to credible sources like those above, and
  • Adults who have also been exposed to credible sources like those above.

I can't say how incredibly important this is.  Because with credible feedback from reliable sources, or even the possibility of such feedback, it's waaaaay more difficult for even "well meaning" adults and peers to pump the next generation's heads with really, really bad information.

Here's the problem.  Sex to an uninformed pre- or emerging adolescent is already in-credible, as in "unknown and often difficult to believe."  And for that reason it's hard to separate the in-credible things peers and grownups say that are generally true and equally (to them) in-credible sounding things that are just incredibly, and sometimes destructively false.  Even when they have the very best of intentions.

Actually, maybe especially when they have the best of intentions!

Anyway,


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Anti-Feminists Hate Men, Feminists Not So Much - Item #2043883

Another example: Amanda Marcotte weighing in on Suzanne Venker's male-patronizing, anti-feminist screed.

Look, it’s absolutely true that there’s no evidence to show that men as a class hate independent women. Feminists believe in men and men’s potential, and do not accept as a given that men are monsters who will never treat women right. Just yesterday, I was battling with MRAs whose arguments rested on the assumption that all men are paranoid misogynists, a premise I thoroughly reject from both statistical and personal experience. I, like all the feminists above, also reject Venker’s argument that all men are babies who need women to recede from public life and act like unpaid servants in order to feel good about themselves. Seriously, no one hates men more than anti-feminists.

Source: Pandagon

Yup.


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Anti-Feminists Hate Men, Feminists Not So Much - Item #2043882

I believe I've said repeatedly that no "man hating feminist" has ever hated men as bitterly as your average run-of-the-mill antifeminist. Echidne takes note of the latest entry in the parade by the degree-holding media professional Suzanne Venker.

Venkers thesis boils down to feminism pisses men off because modern women's access to education and decent pay deprives men of the ability to pay sub-market wages for sex, housework, and sometimes childcare.

Because, right, somehow when there's equal social, legal, and especially financial status men are unable to compete with women. Or even interact with them. What's up with that?

And that's why now all men never want to marry any women. Which men always did before feminism. So feminism hurts women more than it hurts men.

Echidne pithily asks misandry much?

Men only want sex, so why bother buying the cow when milk is freely available.  Men only get married if they are hooked into it because of sex or if they get free housekeeping services and sex just by paying bed-and-board.  Men can't cope with women who have any skills or talents which are not purely complementary with those men are deemed to possess.  Men can't survive competition from women at work.  Men need a submissive partner.  And so on.

If I were a man I'd be insulted by all that.  But I'm quite adequately insulted by being told that if I only succumbed to my innate femininity (I do own makeup!) there would be a line of suitors at my door.  There's a line, in any case.

Source: Echidne of the Snakes

I love this line of (mainstream!) feminist argument against the antifeminist rear guard. It's the best evidence, by the way, that feminism is winning. And why, incidentally, it was probably always going to. It's not just that most men don't actually have that much trouble with non-dependent partners. It's not just that stories about "man hating feminists" persist mostly a) in the fevered imaginations of trolls like Rush Limbaugh and those who let him think for him, b) in the hormone-fevered, not-yet-gelled identity-formation stew of late-stage adolescence young women and men on college campuses. It's not even that, contrary to the no-sex-class paradigm-indoctrinated understanding of nearly all anti-feminists and small numbers of late-20th-Century-holdout "radfems," most feminists are heterosexual. Instead feminism was probably always going to win because unlike credentialled, professional, well-compensated career anti-feminists like Suzanne fucking Venker and her Aunt Phyillis Fucking Schlaffley, feminists don't actually hate men. Oh, and because once they stop charging at the patriarchal matador's red cape of "feminazis" men notice that maybe 98% of the outcomes feminism seeks are actually pretty decent outcomes for men too.

I mean, c'mon! Venker and her ilk keep insisting men not only want but out and out require that women be some combination of prostitute, domestic livestock, and parole officer! As opposed to a sex partner, a domestic partner, and life partner!

Did I already say what's up with that? I think I did!


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The Bogus Two Rules of Desire and "What Do You Wish You Had Known About Sex When You Were Younger?"

From time to time I'm asked to answer a question for Em & Lo's "Wise Guys" feature as one of their "straight married guys." The other day the question was "What do you wish you had known about sex when you were younger?"

Here's what I said:

Wow. There are probably hundreds of things I wish I’d known about sex when I was younger but the number one-with-a-bullet thing I wish I’d known when I was younger is that, contrary to the Santa Clause maxim, it’s actually as good to receive as it is to give. Really. No kidding! I grew up in the “she comes first” era which, while certainly an improvement of the earlier “she comes?” era, still had a big element of putting women on pedestals and treating them like dainty, passive, recipients rather than participants in sex. I remember being really, literally shocked* out of the mood when one partner pushed my knees apart, popped me into her mouth, then popped back up a moment later with this huge grin and said, “Oh, I just love doing this.”

At the time it simply hadn’t occurred to me that she might enjoy making me moan as much as I enjoyed doing the same for her.

Anyway, that’s the lesson: if you’re used to only giving, or only receiving, you’re missing half the fun.

Source: Em & Lo

There are so many other things I wish I'd known about sex back then. And relationships. And... ok, a bunch of other stuff too but especially sex and relationships. Because in retrospect there's so much to flinch, cringe, and outright make apologize for.  My old blog tagline remains depressingly true: "learning from mistakes so you won't have to."  Sigh.

* I know, I know, use of "literal" in the context of "shocked." Yeah, yeah. I was literally shocked in the sense of "experiencing an acute stress reaction," not "muscular convulsions induced by electrical conduction." And not literal shock as in "life-threatening medical condition that occurs due to inadequate substrate for aerobic cellular respiration" either. But I digress...


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The Bogus Two Rules of Desire and And Who's Biased Against in the Casual Sex "Market"

According to Twitter the comment of the day at TheGoodMenProject was

Keith asks, “Is the casual sex marketplace heavily biased against men?” —#CommentoftheDay
[link to goodmenproject.com]

Well, there is bias but it's bias in the samples, not so much bias in the results.

Consider that the bias isn't against men, it's against whoever does the asking. By definition the odds of me getting a "yes" every time I ask is going to be lower than 100% even if I'm Brad Pitt or Angelina Jolie. For instance some non-zero percentage of potential asks are involved with someone else, recovering from another relationship, you're not his or her type in general, or there's something specific about you that doesn't work for them this time. Heck, they could even have just had an amazing couple of rounds with themselves and just plain not be horny at the moment you're asking no matter how hot they might find you some other time, right?

Consider even further the simple lag time in the ask/answer dynamic: I've obviously made up my mind before I ask -- any dithering, option weighing, courage summoning, and just general all-round emotional investment is water under the bridge. The person I ask, on the other hand, now has to go through everything I've been through (including the considerable emotional investment of answering) with the additional pressure of time: you're sitting in front of them with (almost literally) nothing to do but wait for the answer. Yikes! Not fun for shy people no matter how they want to answer! But I digress...

Point being, if even under the most ideal circumstances (i.e. you're Brad Pitt or Angelina Jolie) you're likely to get a "no" chances are high that almost everybody's going to frequently be told "no" when he or she does the asking. So. Biased against men? I'm going to change my initial answer from a no to a qualified yes: to the extent that men do the asking then yes, the casual sex marketplace is biased against them. But only to the extent they ask.

But remember, asking bias is only one kind of bias. There's another kind that totally blew me away when it finally sank into my thick skull: there's extraordinary but invisible bias against those who are never asked.

The person who brought it home for me? A woman who's screen name was "scarred." She thought the whole idea that "women have the power" was the bitterest lie on the planet. Because the "power" to say yes or no exists only when one's opinion is asked. The power to respond to an initiative depends entirely on whether or not someone takes the initiative.

And to the extent it's women who are asked rather than doing the asking, the "casual sex market" might seem to be overwhelmingly biased against them. Although, really, it's only biased against anyone, man or woman, who might (never) be asked. No matter how much they long for a chance to say "yes."

I'd just add, by the way, that it's not just "homely" people who are never asked (if we could even meaningfully say what "homely" means, given the incredible range of qualities people are attracted to.) For some women the words "she's out of my league" are a blow to the gut, and the words "she probably has a boyfriend who could break me in half" are salt in the wounds. But again, the "bias" comes in the form of men who decide for themselves the answer will be "no," and never ask. Again, creating the hidden bias against those who wait to be asked.

Last "bias." The person who says "no" because they're waiting for that one person who, for whatever of a million reasons, never asks them.

It's super easy to see only one side, but if you do then you might be missing the bigger picture.

Update: Of course I only glancingly mention another pervasive bias in the post above: for what are mostly purely historical reasons among heterosexuals it really is men who are more likely to ask and women who are more likely to be asked. But as it happens I have just enough first, second, and third-hand experience to have noticed the same dynamics apply when the roles are reversed.  Enough to, err, well, confirm my observation that sex and relationship markets are more biased against askers and the never asked regardless of sex or gender.


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Because Only Men Have Careers Only Men Put Their Careers On the Line When They Have Affairs... Oh Wait!

More on the Allen/Broadwell/Kelly/Petraeus (in alphabetical order) kerfuffle from gender-determinism skeptic Echidne says

Take what is currently known (or asserted):  David Petraeus, a married man, had an affair with Paula Broadwell, a married woman.  It is argued that Paula Broadwell, a married woman, sent threatening messages to Jill Kelley, another married woman, to warn her off Petraeus.  Jill Kelley, a married woman,  may have exchanged "inappropriate" e-mails with John Allen, a married man.  None of these people are married to each other.

...

I understand the angle of these stories. It's Petraeus and Allen who are famous and well-known and they are men. But the facts of the case suggest that we should also ask why women cheat, given that all alleged participants in this mess had marital partners. Broadwell, too, seems to have "risked it all" to cheat: her marriage, her career as a biographer and the risk of the kind of public attention she is now receiving. Her position may not look as powerful to us but in terms of her own life the risks she took were huge.

Source: Echidne of the Snakes

Echidne points out what would probably be obvious minus the knee-jerk knee-squeezing twittery: It takes two to tango...

Heck, as she puts it

As I mentioned, I get the angle of these stories. But it takes two to tango, and in heterosexual extramarital affairs both partners can be married. Thus, the questions those headlines ask about men cheating disguise the fact that we should ask similar questions about women cheating.

I mean, seriously!!! So far everyone involved has had some degree of professional credibility and respect on the line. You have to be... well, there aren't a lot of choices here besides being head-up-your-butt invested in misogyny, head-and-shoulders-up-your-butt stupid, or maybe all-but-your-ankles-up-your-butt invested in the cheapest-possible interpretation of "evolutionary psychology" to miss the oh, gee, wow, surprising similarities between the behavior of the various career men and women involved.

Maybe it's because both women and men are, you know, people.

Naah.  The other possible explanations about genes or gender-determinism are so much more complicated they must be true.


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Wait a Second! Paula Broadwell is a 40-year-old West Point Grad, Veteran, and Kennedy School Post-Grad!

This is going to sound a bit flame-y but I'm kind of stuck over an uncharacteristic, probably just off-the-cuff snippet in an overall very good post by E.J. Graff at The American Prospect. The main subject of the post, the knee-squeezing twittery by press and politicians about what appears to be a fairly routine affair between David Petraeus and Paula Broadwell.

I can easily see how that intense connection could become erotic—especially when it’s between a powerful man and an ambitious younger woman who’s trying to borrow some of that power for herself, that traditional method of exchanging power. (It may not be a feminist-approved method, but I’m writing about the real here, not the ideal.)

Source: TAPPED

Yes, Petraeus is 60, but Broadwell is 40.  At age 34, when they would have met, she was already a West Point grad, a military reservist with active duty experience, an accomplished athlete, and a Kennedy School grad student.  Meanwhile Petraeus was still just a colonel.  They had a common academic and professional interest in the then-still-under-appreciated field of counterinsurgency.

None of that overrules the possibility that Broadwell is just some older-than-usual groupie to Petraeus's Charlie Watts (the "superstar" drummer for the Rolling Stones, and yes I had to look up his name because as superstars go drummers aren't really at the top of the list.) But it does make it less attractive to leap to that assumption when other factors might make more sense.

Perhaps by working out of the D.C. based Prospect Graff has more of an inside scoop on their relationship than I do out here on the west coast.  But unless she's willing to spill I'm still more inclined to look at Broadwell and Petraeus as two mature, successful professional heterosexuals with a too-long, too-close history of common interests in situations where they were too often too far from their respective spouses. For too long at a time.

I'm sensitive to this in part because I'm really creeped out by the dominant male belief that women have no intrinsic interest in sex beyond its exchange value (Bogus Rule of Desire #1)  And so I'm creeped out by the implication that Broadwell's interest in Petraeus would have been that of a groupie or "gold digger" hoping to reflect herself in his power. (Because, see Bogus Rule #2, who ever heard of, or could stand the idea of, a man being sexually desirable?!?!?)

It's just weird coming from Graff instead of, say, Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh, or Satoshi Kanazawa.  And her parenthetical "It may not be a feminist-approved method, but I’m writing about the real here, not the ideal?"  Seriously?  That's also something I'd expect to hear on right-wing radio before I read it on TAPPED.  I mean, eww!

Probably a typo.


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Dang It All! Halfway Through No-November. There's Still Time to Not Shave for Cancer Awareness

Photo by Flickr user Tim Ellis. Cached as a bandwidth-conserving courtesy
Photo by Flickr user Tim Ellis. Used under a Creative Commons license.

Well, turns out it's No-Shave November again, and once again I've spaced out nearly half of it.

You know all the controversies about shaving various parts of our anatomies?  Well, this month is a good month to just let go of all that.  Just put away your razors, depilitories, waxes, sugars, and tweezers, antiseptic (and analgesic) after-shaves, the works.

I've got a couple of sales calls this month so it might be a little touchy since contrary to Silicon Valley myths small business owners want their prospective web developers to be neat, tidy, and "pre-pubescent" looking.  Fortunately, at least in November, I've got a good excuse: I can say (honestly) that No-Shave November originated as a way to raise money for prostate cancer awareness.

I say honestly because a) I'm going to mention it to anyone who asks why I'm not shaving, b) because I'm going to donate money myself, and c) because I'm going to invite you to donate as well.

Here's a link to the Prostate Cancer Foundation's donation page.

Prostate Cancer Foundation  Logo. Cached as a bandwidth-conserving courtesy
Logo of the Prostate Cancer Foundation. Click the image to visit their donation page.

If prostate cancer isn't your thing you can still a) decline to shave and b) contribute to other major cancer prevention and treatment foundations

The links below are to the non-profit effectiveness rating group CharityNavigator's top-rated non-profits in their respective sectors


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Note To Angry White Guys: Since Entitlement Can't Buy You Love It Sure Isn't Going to Buy You Electoral Majorities

It has been much noted in electoral politics that demographics in the U.S. are changing. Said notations have come with much rending of garments by "traditional" right-wing extremists. Who for some reason imagine an overwhelmingly majority-white population would give them the conservative/libertarian paradise they believe they'd be able to enjoy.

As South Carolina Republican Lindsay Graham complained to the Washington Post last month

We're not generating enough angry white guys to stay in business for the long term.

Source: The Guardian

The issue, according to a bunch of those same angry white guys, is that all "those people" are reproducing at rates higher than rates higher than angry white guys.

They think that's a problem.

I'm...

Gonna have to agree.

I'd just state the problem a little differently than they would.

Because... well... ok, quick question: who wants to reproduce with an angry white guy?

Or even more pointedly: Who wants to reproduce with an angry white guy willingly?

Not to grind this in too deep but this is yet another area where feminism would actually improve matters for the angry white guys who feel most threatened by it.

Part of why they feel threatened is that if feminism wins then they will no longer be entitled to effectively coerce partners to reproduce with them.  If feminism wins, they fear, then women will be able to support themselves on their own incomes and consequently will not be obliged to couple with them in order to keep rooves over their heads and shoes on their and their children's feet.  If feminism wins, they fear, then women will be able to walk down the street or sleep in their own beds with no further need of angry white guys to protect them from "big, angry non-white men."  If feminism wins, they fear, women (as members of the sexually-indifferent "no-sex" class!) will have no interest sexual or even social intercourse with men.

In other words, they fear, if feminism wins then a) no one will want to reproduce with angry white men, and therefore angry white men are doomed to extinction.

 I dunno.

Seems to me that the issue is that sense of entitlement.  And a big source of the anger is over a sense of loss of that entitlement.

And yet...

I've noticed...

By and large hetero women (the vast, vast majority in other words) seem perfectly interested in forming relationships with non-angry, non-entitled men. Short-term relationships.  Long-term relationships.  One-night-stand relationships.  Even long-term let's have a family relationships!  No coercion, leverage, wheedling, required.  And defniitely no anger required.

Just something to think about.


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After John Koster's "On The Rape Thing" Remarks I'm Contributing to His Opponent - "You Know What I Mean," John?

It's bad enough when assholes in predictable, far-away-from-me places like Indiana, Missouri, and lifelong-government-beneficiary-and-Ayn-Rand-fan, but I always expect better from even the most conservative reaches of Washington State.  Silly me.  Evan McMorris-Santoro has the scoop.

John Koster, Republican nominee in Washington’s First Congressional District, was captured on tape over the weekend explaining why he is opposed to abortion in the case of incest and rape. Incest he said, was “so rare.” Then he turned to rape.

“On the rape thing, it’s like, how does putting more violence onto a woman’s body and taking the life of an innocent child that’s the consequence of this crime, how does that make it better?” Koster said. “You know what I mean?”

Source: TalkingPointsMemo

Koster's opponent, Democratic candidate Suzan DelBene, wasn't my first choice for the nearby Congressional District 1.  I supported and would have preferred Darcy Burner. 

But!

So a little while ago I donated to the DelBene's campaign.  If you feel the same way  you can donate to DelBene too.

To be fair, in the unlikely event it had been DelBene who'd said something so egregiously, viciously thuggish I'd have sent money to Koster.  But of course she didn't say anything nearly so ugly.  Instead he inexcusably did. 


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