Posted on 05/27/2015 2:18:45 PM PDT by drewh
Washington Post reporter Caitlin Deweys beat is the Internet. But her big piece on the front page of Wednesdays Style section is about something broader: Forsaking monogamy: The evolution of relationships has made affairs less clandestine and less combustive. And of course there are Web sites to help match tryst-seekers.
This being the Post, there is no space for critics of the "evolution" of online adultery Web sites or their users. Dewey promoted the non-monogamous dating site Open Minded, where her married female subject, Jessie, advertised, Im into building deep and loving relationships that add to the joy and aliveness of being human. She talked her husband into ethical non-monogamy.
The Post also used the term monogamish, the cutesy term of radical gay sex columnist Dan Savage to describe the married-but-cheating lifestyle.
The online headline was Are new dating apps killing monogamy? Or has it always been dead? Dewey pushed (B). Or monogamy is an old agricultural tradition thats fading away in the modern age. Adultery is the new mainstream, according to Open Minded founder Brandon Wade:
Open Minded is a new kind of dating site for a newly mainstream lifestyle: one in which couples form very real attachments, just not exclusively with each other. He expects swingers, polysexuals and experimental 20-somethings to use his site. But he guesses that most of his 70,000 users are people like Jessie: Those in committed, conventional relationships, who realize that, statistically speaking, few modern couples stay with a single person their whole lives.
If you look at marriage, it developed as a survival strategy and a means of raising kids, Wade said. But relationships are no longer a necessary component of life. People have careers and other interests they can survive without them.
Thats not wrong, says Helen Fisher, a biological anthropologist and one of the worlds leading relationship researchers. In the caveman days, humans teamed up in non-exclusive pairs to protect their children. Later, as people learned to plant crops and settle in one place, marriage became a way for men to guarantee kids, and for women who couldnt push heavy plows or carry loads of crops to market to eat and keep a roof over their heads....
In fact, given the history and prevalence of non-monogamous relationships throughout cultures, its not scientifically correct to say the human species mates or pairs for life. Dogs mate for life. Beavers mate for life. Humans have one-night stands, paramours and a 50 percent divorce rate.
Fisher dubs it a dual reproductive strategy: Were biologically programmed to form pair-bonds, yes, but some people many people are also programmed to seek out variety.
So, if you stay true to your spouse, youre more like a dog or a beaver than a human. To the Post, this is about empowering the ladies, not the men:
More and more women will make this choice or consider it, Fisher expects; its in keeping with decades of widespread social change and womens empowerment. Just 30 years ago, when Jessie was in her 20s, the average woman married at 23 and had her first child within the year. Her mothers generation didnt even leave the home. The majority simply raised kids, preached chastity and finger-waved their hair.
Thats all sliding away from us, Fisher said. Were shedding all these agricultural traditions.... [and] returning to the way we were millions of years ago.
The Post story doesnt quite explain that the Open Minded site is selling threesomes and other polyamorous hookups from its home page. Wade tells the Web surfer on the home page hes created a safe and stigma-free environment that brings the ease and flexibility of online dating to the currently underserved world of open relationships.
Dewey ends with a little slam on that ancient Christianity thing, and how millennials have no use for it: Thus far, most of its self-declared monogamish users are under 33. In other words, theyre women (and men) who paid off their own student loans, fooled around on Tinder and grew up with a notion of personal independence much different from the one taught in the 1st century A.D.
“Aldous Huxley, please pick up the white courtesy phone.”
I want to cum with as many men as I please
Go ahead and flame me ... I know THIS one
Portland? Do tell, would love to hear it. I know some particularly obnoxious Portlanders. They leave Portland and want so badly to create a little Portland ghetto of Christian-haters.
You, Jessie, are a whore. And your husband is half a fag for allowing you to be one.
Cuckoldery is afoot. Oh yes.
I bet “Jessie” is an Alpha-widow and she’s debasing herself in some infantile attempt at revenge. She clearly hates the Beta bitch she married, so she’s out doing any and everything in sight.
I bet the doof she’s married to is such a cuckold, he’d accept and $upport any bastard offspring that result of this sluttery.
Female Chimpanzees are observed to engage in promiscuous behavior.
One hypothesis is that this behavior decreases the likelihood of infanticide of the female’s offspring by competing males who’ll be less likely to kill an infant when there’s a possibility it’s theirs.
Polygamy is common among human tribal predators. How’s that usually work out?
>>This line of evolution away from a time-honored definition of matrimony has been followed before.
Romans 1:25...
Funny how medical science is increasingly impotent against the due penalty for perversion.
Soon I think!
Well, one day, if Zechariah was talking about what I was thinking he was talking about, whole cities will be incinerated and ashes will be falling out of the sky. Not to mention the ash will be highly radioactive.
Well, I always think of the Golden Rule here, I wouldn’t want my wife being unfaithful to me so I won’t cheat on her.
Second, this is the same old attempts at flattery they’ve been throwing out there. Here’s some you most likely already heard, all courtesy of the same agenda.
1) Teens have no free will to abstain from sex.
2) People are born homosexual
3) Homosexuals can’t control their behavior and consequences, so we must all support trying to find an elusive cure or perfect immunity to the consequences of their decisions from out of control behavior to substance abuse.
How would trust survive in an ‘ethical non-monogamy’ in other matters in life?
If you don’t have trust, can there be a relationship?
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