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To: conserv13

Did you EVER read the "Playboy Philosophy"? I DID - a lot, when I was young, callow and collegate.

Hugh presented women as purely sex objects, sex as an acceptable form of indoor sport between people with no commitment between the partners, and he did this quite slickly.

Women who were just entering the workplace at the time Playboy and his twisted philosphy became popular among many young males with overactive glands, found themselves the targets of guys who just wanted bed-partners instead of life partners.

The popularization of the reaction by many women to this led to the growth of radical anti-male feminism in America.

Its no accident that some of the most virulent feminazis were once Playboy "bunnies".

Hugh's latest "experiments" were with homosexuality.

If you have seen pcitures of Hugh lately, he looks a lot older than his age - if possible.

But then what do you expect from a low-life dissolute hedonist?


139 posted on 04/11/2006 10:03:48 AM PDT by ZULU (Non nobis, non nobis, Domine, sed nomini tuo da gloriam. God, guts, and guns made America great.)
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To: ZULU

"Its no accident that some of the most virulent feminazis were once Playboy "bunnies". "

Gloria Steinem comes to mind; who are the others?


147 posted on 04/11/2006 10:10:15 AM PDT by linda_22003
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To: ZULU
Its no accident that some of the most virulent feminazis were once Playboy "bunnies".

Perhaps in your fevered imagination, but not in reality. Gloria Steinem is the only "feminazi" I know of who was a Playboy bunny, and not only did she do it for an investigative writing assignment, she also took your side in the debate about Hefner.

From an article on Steinem:
In order to do research for the article, Steinem applied for a job as a Playboy bunny and was hired. She held the position for three weeks in order to do research. The articles that she wrote as a result of her experience exposed the poor working conditions and meager wages of the women who worked long hours in the lavish clubs where rich men spent their leisure time. Years later, in 1970, she published a lengthy interview with Hugh Hefner, founder and editor of Playboy magazine. In that dialogue Steinem debated Hefner on issues such as women's rights, the "sexual revolution," consumerism, and the "Playboy philosophy."
157 posted on 04/11/2006 10:27:53 AM PDT by drjimmy
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