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'''Polyandry''' means 'multiple men per women', in a sexual context, and is | '''Polyandry''' means 'multiple men per women', in a sexual context, and is historically extremely rare , apart from some societies where there is scarce farmable land, where the brothers marry the same woman together. One example of such a society is Tibet, but such customs are declining, and in any case such relationships were a minority of marriages, with most men preferring and being able to obtain exclusive access to a woman. | ||
Another reason for polyandry is a skewed gender ratio due to widespread female infanticide, with one example of such a society that historically practiced polyandry primarily due to this reason being the Toda of Southern India. | |||
It is also likely that the pre-Islamic Arabs practiced polyandry due to this reason, before the advent of Islam lead to the proscription of both infanticide and polyandry. | |||
'Rotating polyandry', or when women have many male partners over their lifetime through divorce and promiscuity, is ultimately [[polygyny]] on a societal scale if there is a group of [[involuntary celibate]] men in society. [[Chads]] are [[polygyny|polygnous]], not polyandrous. [[Femoid|Femoids]] are naturally drawn to a small % of men and are not sexually generous, encouraging societal wide [[polygyny]], not societal wide [[polyandry]]. | |||
[[Long-term relationship|Long-term]] polyandry (instead of a rotating polyandry) on a societal wide scale would arguably be beneficial to incels, because it would make men more rare in a [[relationship]] context, but it is unknown how to implement it as historical examples in industrialized societies are rare or non-existent. This is most likely because, despite attempts to encourage such behavior, the majority of men have an innate revulsion of open cuckholdry. <ref>https://www.counter-currents.com/2011/06/rotating-polyandry-and-its-enforcers-part-1/</ref>. | |||
==References== | ==References== |
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