Mogging: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Mogging.gif|frame|right|The moggee in this example is performing [[mate guarding]] against Connor Murphy.]]
[[File:Mogging.gif|frame|right|The moggee in this example is performing [[mate guarding]] against Connor Murphy.]]
'''Mogging''' (a verbification and apheresis of the acronym ''AMOG'' for ''alpha male of the group'') is the act of [[dominance hierarchy|dominating]] another person. A person who mogs others is called a mogger. A person who gets mogged is a moggee or mog-victim.  
'''Mogging''' (a verbification and apheresis of the acronym '''AMOG''' for ''alpha male of the group'') is the act of [[dominance hierarchy|dominating]] another person. A person who mogs others is called a mogger. A person who gets mogged is a moggee or mog-victim.  


The term originated in the [[PUA]] community, who commonly advocated mogging other men as an effective tactic to attract women. It is typically used to describe a man (though the term is often incorrectly used in a gender-neutral fashion) who is more [[SMV|sexually attractive]] overall than another person. Especially when this higher sexual attractiveness threatens the mog victim's chance of becoming a [[reproductive success]] or related [[confidence|self-confidence]]. This kind of dominance display is common among animal species with [[dominance hierarchies]], especially in animals with high [[sexual dimorphism]] and high sex differences in [[Bateman's principle|parental investment]].
The term originated in the [[PUA]] community, who commonly advocated mogging other men as an effective tactic to attract women. It is typically used to describe a man (though the term is often incorrectly used in a gender-neutral fashion) who is more [[SMV|sexually attractive]] overall than another person. Especially when this higher sexual attractiveness threatens the mog victim's chance of becoming a [[reproductive success]] or related [[confidence|self-confidence]]. This kind of dominance display is common among animal species with [[dominance hierarchies]], especially in animals with high [[sexual dimorphism]] and high sex differences in [[Bateman's principle|parental investment]].
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