Ah yes, we know that "no true Christian" would discriminate against women. The history of Christianity is filled with examples of sexuality equality.
Yeah, humans sin, so are you perfect? Or what do you use as a yardstick?
Ah ... the feminist in you is really starting to shine through now.
Next thing you know, you'll be posting references to an article in the UTNE READER which claims how the invention of internet porn has finally returned us to where we all belonged to begin with .... looking at naked women.
The argument went like this: the most evil thing invented was words. Words carry the virus of religion, especially the deadly Patriarchal religions; Islam is bad, but the worst by far of course is Christianity.
Words are only processed on the left side of the brain. (The left side of the brain of course in men is 20 percent larger than the right side of their brain, due to the unrelenting bath of testosterone which starts at about the 12th week of pregnancy. No one knows why testosterone selectively affects only the left side of the brain.)
Translating pictures/images occurs on the right side of the brain. Thus, the more right brained activity going on, the less left brained activity you have to contend with, and the more feminized the individual is.
God and all things religious only exist because of the written word. Once words are translated into anything, women tend to suffer, or so the UTNE READER article argued. Thus, once the internet was invented, naked women suddenly returned to the 'view', the one they had from the distant evolutionary past ... the proper view indeed.
Each computer thus is really just a cave window for cave men ... and the woman who wrote this article was delighted that the final stake through the heart of patriarchalism, via porn on the net, was going to be driven home. Partriarchalism wasn't going to be destroyed ... no, internet porn was going to precipitate a society wide atrophy the disease ...
It was a compelling logical piece ... in the UTNE READER. I'm sure you have heard of it? See, that was a question too ... did you notice?