Women As Sex Vendors (book): Difference between revisions

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Contrary to some evolutionary psychologists who see natural sexual impulses as driving women to want resource security from men, the book argues that it is mainly the economic system that drives women to want economic security from men.  The book suggests that sexual desire plays little to no role in women demanding resources for sex (which is well... false), and that a post-capitalist society would positively transform relationships by ending the role of material ownership in sexual relations.  The book sees social status (meritocracy through socialism) as a better sorter of mating success than non-meritocratic ownership of material goods. The book however, does not go into how men bartering with social status in a socialist meritocracy is not a barter, nor how a meritocratic market socialism would end bartering for sex based on material resources.
Contrary to some evolutionary psychologists who see natural sexual impulses as driving women to want resource security from men, the book argues that it is mainly the economic system that drives women to want economic security from men.  The book suggests that sexual desire plays little to no role in women demanding resources for sex (which is well... false), and that a post-capitalist society would positively transform relationships by ending the role of material ownership in sexual relations.  The book sees social status (meritocracy through socialism) as a better sorter of mating success than non-meritocratic ownership of material goods. The book however, does not go into how men bartering with social status in a socialist meritocracy is not a barter, nor how a meritocratic market socialism would end bartering for sex based on material resources.


The book argues that capitalism pushes women to exercise a naturally privileged economic position to avoid homelessness, avoid hard labor, and to create more labor power through her offspring.  The book explicitly anticipated the enormous money transfer from men to women - not just because of feminism - but because of the female monopoly on sexual access, which they collectively utilize to extract resources from men.
The book argues that capitalism pushes women to exercise a naturally privileged economic position to avoid homelessness, avoid hard labor, and to create more labor power through her offspring.  The book explicitly and successfully anticipated the enormous money transfer from men to women - not just because of feminism - but because of the female monopoly on sexual access, which they collectively utilize to extract resources from men.
It could be argued that the modern incel epidemic is exacerbating this tendency, with the hordes of thirsty men willing to purchase even female refuse and bodily fluids seen as a particularly depraved example of this female privilege.  
It could be argued that the modern incel epidemic is exacerbating this tendency, with the hordes of thirsty men willing to purchase even female refuse and bodily fluids seen as a particularly depraved example of this female privilege.  


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