Posted on 12/30/2006 7:27:56 PM PST by shrinkermd
Its hard to write this without sounding like a prig. But its just as hard to erase the images that planted the idea for this essay, so here goes. The scene is a middle school auditorium, where girls in teams of three or four are bopping to pop songs at a student talent show. Not bopping, actually, but doing elaborately choreographed re-creations of music videos, in tiny skirts or tight shorts, with bare bellies, rouged cheeks and glittery eyes.
They writhe and strut, shake their bottoms, splay their legs, thrust their chests out and in and out again. Some straddle empty chairs, like lap dancers without laps. They dont smile much. Their faces are locked from grim exertion, from all that leaping up and lying down without poles to hold onto. Dont stop dont stop, sings Janet Jackson, all whispery. Jerk it like youre making it choke. ...Ohh. Im so stimulated. Feel so X-rated. The girls spend a lot of time lying on the floor. They are in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades.
As each routine ends, parents and siblings cheer, whistle and applaud. I just sit there, not fully comprehending. Its my first suburban Long Island middle school talent show. Im with my daughter, who is 10 and hadnt warned me. Im not sure what I had expected, but it wasnt this. It was something different. Something younger. Something that didnt make the girls look so ... one-dimensional.
It would be easy to chalk it up to adolescent rebellion, an ancient and necessary phenomenon, except these girls were barely adolescents and they had nothing to rebel against. This was an official function at a public school, a milieu that in another time or universe might have seen children singing folk ballads, say, or reciting the Gettysburg Address.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Stop complaining about your kids exposure to this filth and pull them out of public schools. HOME-SCHOOL YOUR KIDS! My wife and I did just that 3 years ago (at no small expense) and we have never regretted that decision!
Once we raise a large percentage of the next generation without this crap, we'll have to deal with the government who requires us to fund this destructive juggernaut.
Rape is about power and subjugation, not sex.
Even the NYTimes gets it right on this one!
"Rape is about power and subjugation, not sex"
I know that is the PC femenist mantra, but I don't believe it's necessarily true. It's like saying that robbing banks is not about wanting money, it's about the challenge (or some such thing). I have no doubt that rape is often, if not ususally, about sex.
I didn't say that rapists didn't enjoy the sex, I'm just saying sex is not the primary motivation in many cases.
Do you think rapists are looking for hot sex from 70-80yo women, for example ? Or might there be another reason ?
http://www.boston.com/news/local/connecticut/articles/2006/12/18/mayor_investigation_into_rape_of_elderly_woman_is_top_priority/
You said — “Rape is about power and subjugation, not sex.”
I would say that this is what is going on, then, in that age group 13-18 years old, when they engage in those s&f parties. That part that you describe as being involved in rape — is also involved in these parties — except by consensus, as a group, and they see this as okay and normal behavior (within their group, no matter what others “outside” say about it).
The boys come expecting to use their “power” (whatever they possess in that particular situation, and it can take on many different forms) and then “subjugate”, while the girls come expecting to be overcome and be subjugated — and both come away, wearing it as a badge of honor.
Both (the boys and girls) are extracting an emotional benefit from it (at least from the way their are interpreting it, within their circle and understanding, and how they’re being “programmed” today).
The only difference here is that both parties are agreeing — the power and subjugation is the same, however.
Interesting in how this is playing out, in this manner, with that younger age group (in terms of power and subjugation and with one another).
Regards,
Star Traveler
I guess I’m officially a member of the prig club. If I’m ever lucky enought to have kids, I’ll just lock them up in a closet in one of those old-time “knuckle-dragging, homophobic” churches until they turn 18.
I am SICK of people worrying about other people thinking they are prigs and wish more would start worrying about doing what is RIGHT. Ok...back to read the article.
I just heard that a few weeks ago for the first time, sitting in a bar while my friends were out on the dance floor. Grapic descriptions of sex, the female saying if you want it tighter you can stick it in my *** (I'm paraphrasing).
I was sitting by myself but I hadn't been that profoundly embarrassed in a long, long time.
That being said, things, have alway been goofy and good people have always prevailed.
I'd say, don't confuse right from wrong, just because "they" are always trying to move the goal post.
“Boys dont seem to have such constricted horizons. They wouldnt stand for it”
Nope; when boys are all pumped up, they’ll settle for a knothole in a fence...
Are you confusing the Brady’s with the Cleaver’s?
> I know it has be come really PC to condemn any suggestion
> that a woman’s dress or behavior contributed to a rape.
> But I have no doubt it does. If you set your wallet down
> on the hood of your car before you walk into the mall to
> shop, don’t be surprised if someone steals it while
> you’re gone.
Thinking of women as objects to be taken contributes far more to rape than any number of poorly dressed skanks.
And don’t forget Darrin II; he had an interview with George Putnam just a few weeks before he died with aids; the magic had gone out of his life, but he said he had no regrets.
Cheers!
Nappy haired old folks bowing their heads in shame.
Kind of like the difference between global warming and global climate change.
I just heard that a few weeks ago for the first time, sitting in a bar while my friends
I assume since you were in a bar you were over 18 years of age. Not at a elementary or middle school performing for cheering parents.
Are the lyrics of “strokin” very different from what the kids are dancing to?
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