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Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
The point of the article is that feminism has muddied the waters by trying to deny that what is actually innate is somehow the way things should be. Why? Because feminists don't want men and women to be different on any front - physical, emotional, or economical. They deny that gender does in fact exist.
Capitalism indeed frees people to pursue their economic interests. Not sure how one equates that with sexual liberation, however.
Don't much care for any so called defined "Roles" these days...I think they are all wacky and the paradigm is upside down.
No one should be subjugated but placing a value on women, a deep appreciation...unless one is an idiot too,...doesn't hold anyone back.
Caution: unconscious antilectual liberals will not agree and may get violent...Laughing
PS...no fan of the Romans nor the Catholics...they screwed everything up.
Appreciation (value) is not the same thing as objectification. Dennis Prager is a paleo-conservative. His Prager University does pretty good at lectures on free enterprise. The social side of life, though, he clearly does not understand. He cannot get past recent historical gender roles.
Do you know what a Morganatic marriage is? Women in Germanic cultures had more rights than Roman women. Roman culture informed and defined Roman Catholicism. That's where Prager is coming from: the road to hell starts between her legs.
Men looking at women, women looking at men and all the myriad combinations that people are attracted to each other in.
As to what you say to someone, you have now met them and, as I said, if you don't move beyond that at that point it becomes a problem.
I think it comes down to what is a "sex object". I would think maybe the author means someone we're sexually attracted to, but #1 of his "eight truths" is it's normal for men to see people their sexually attracted to as sex objects. This implies that it's possible to be sexually attracted to someone without seeing her as a "sex object".
This article would make more sense to me if the author gave an example of sexual attraction with and without objectification.
Recognize that in the century before capitalism, those jobs were held by men. Then ask yourself how you would react to hiring a man based on his looks, or his physical endowments.
"What already existed" was in fact what needed to be changed as people were liberated by capitalism.
Moreover, grammatically, the object is that to which an act is done, and thereby changed.
Furthermore, Dennis Prager's attempts at universals only deal with the immediacy of our culture, the West, and the last 500 years. Equatorial peoples go mostly naked most of the time. How does a leg or an abdomen become a sexual cue? That happens here because of denial. Hide the ankle, and you create foot fetishists. In fact, that is known among people in Tibet, where women often went bare-breasted (in good weather), but everyone always wears shoes. In his biography of Cato the Elder, Plutarch noted that the old Roman republican worked naked in the field alongside his slaves. Again, since the entire body was exposed, how can anyone be suddenly aroused by the sight of a limb... or a penis?
And yet they did experience sexual arousal, as their art works clearly show. It is just that the cues were different. The point is that Dennis Prager exhibits gross ignorance in his generalizations.
Our objectification of each other is a consequence of the anti-life aspects of Christianity, which denies the validity of sexual desire.
The reason that straight guys are uncomfortable around gays is that they do not want another guy to think of them they way that they think of women.
But by your logic, there is nothing wrong with that. It is "natural." Well, I agree that it may be "natural" but so are many behaviors, such as aggression and predation, that we circumscribe in order to have civilization.
On the sixth phrase: now that you know, watch for it in the movies or on TV. A woman starts to exit, and a man takes her arm, preventing her from leaving. Men never (seldom) do that with each other.
I've been waiting for all the objectification to start.
Did I join the wrong forum? Damn!
This is only a problem if you don't move beyond that when you actually meet them.