Yes, that's the thesis of The Mass Psychology of Fascism. Interesting note. — Olivier5
↪Amity Yes. This view is in contrast with Freud's, who frequently spoke of how repressed sexual energy can be turned into socially acceptable creativity and hard work through 'sublimation'. Reich says: "it can also be turned into hatred". He posited that as an explanation for the rise of fascism in the 1920s. I read the book a long time ago and was left unconvinced that Reich 'nailed' it. — Olivier5
The theme is rather current. We have turned sexuality into a means of oppression and the vice of this oppression gives rise to violence. Even J.J. Martin argue that Game of Thrones was built around this theme. — Tobias
Another 'theory' is that of Houlebeck in his Elementary Particles: sexual liberation during the 60's and 70's led to high sexual competition between males, and between females, with the most attractive people screwing all their content and less attractive folks living in eternel sexual misery. Freedom leads to inequality between the haves and the haves not, now applied to sex as well. — Olivier5
I would look to a sociological explanation. Sexuality, like many other walks of life have become gamified, framed as competition and considered markers of success. The current anxiety around sexuality is not very different from the anxiety around having the best education, the highest grades, the best most earning job etc. The law of competition is a man made law, not a given — Tobias
It would only work when there is some objective criterion for attraction and only on the assumption everyone wants the same thing screw around as much as possible. — Tobias
Isn't this precisely the problem? They totally internalize the gaming pressure AND the rules saying which kinda girl/boy is popular and hence likeable by all, and which type of girls/boys is NOT popular hence NOT likeable by all. There's such a thing as a 'canon of beauty', everywhere, but they sacralized it. They carve it into the bloody stone that their brain is made of. — Olivier5
I would not blame their brains. I would point to the societal forces feeding them this kind of morality. It is the story of our age. — Tobias
Finding a convincing explanation for the historical rise of fascism is an important task, still unfinished I think. — Olivier5
Another 'theory' is that of Michel Houellebecq in his Elementary Particles: sexual liberation during the 60's and 70's led to high sexual competition between males, and between females, with the most attractive people screwing all their content and less attractive folks living in eternel sexual misery. Freedom leads to inequality between the haves and the haves not, now applied to sex as well.
The tittle of Houellebecq's first book is also about that: Extension of the Competitive Domain ie an extension of competition from the sphere of production and consumption (under capitalism) into the sphere of reproduction. Like an extension of capitalism to sex. — Olivier5
Except that sex gets stale, money does not.Sex is like money: some people have a lot of it, most people have some but nothing to brag about, and some don't have any. — _db
Finding a convincing explanation for the historical rise of fascism is an important task, still unfinished I think.
— Olivier5
:fire: that is something I have been fascinated by in recent years. I have researched it a lot and have come to the same conclusion. There are some good theories, but recent events have put some of them into question. — _db
A dictatorship is a government system that concentrates all power in a single person or group , who exercises absolute control by force or fraud, without respecting democratic constitutional principles and repressing individual freedoms .
The main types of dictatorships are:
1/4 Authoritarian:
Authoritarian leaders often come to power through democratic elections and, during their tenure, use force or fraud to perpetuate themselves in power, restrict civil liberties, and view any confrontation as an act of conspiracy...
Some examples of dictatorships throughout world history are:
The totalitarian dictatorship of Adolf Hitler in Germany , from 1933 to 1945.
The dictatorship of Francisco Franco in Spain , from 1939 to 1975.
The fascist dictatorship of Benito Mussolini in Italy , from 1943 to 1945.
The totalitarian dictatorship in the People’s Republic of China , from 1949 to the present.
The totalitarian dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet in Chile , from 1973 to 1990.
The military dictatorship in Argentina , from 1976 to 1983. — Types and Characteristics of Dictatorship with Examples
It's about maintenance of perpetual power by a certain kind of regressive, repressive male, no? — Amity
In a matriarchal society would women end up being the nasty ones on account of having power or would the world be kinder on account of women being in charge? — Cuthbert
Is there a female leader you admire? And why? — Amity
:up: Elementary Particles was quite good. Sex is like money: some people have a lot of it, most people have some but nothing to brag about, and some don't have any.
But that's about where the similarities end, since nobody deserves sex like how they deserve money (or the means to afford life requirements) — _db
It's about maintenance of perpetual power by a certain kind of regressive, repressive male, no?
I know that's a simplification but a useful start to another necessary discussion, perhaps... — Amity
Yes. I wonder which way round the explanation goes. I mean, do men get the opportunity to be nasty because they have power or do they maintain power on account of being already nasty? Well, both, probably. In a matriarchal society would women end up being the nasty ones on account of having power or would the world be kinder on account of women being in charge? — Cuthbert
Secondly, if it is cultural: where does machismo come from? It is a cultural trait perpetuated in a patriarchal society, but as the advantage men have over women due to superior physical strength (in terms of 'bursts' of strength, not tenacity or fitness in general as women love long than men and if the sport emphasizes durability fmelae bodies tend to outplay men's at some point) dwindles, so too should the advantage in terms of societal power. It would make the authoritarian male a species on the verge of extinction. — Tobias
We’re scared. We don’t want to mention it, because it’s kind of a bummer, chat-wise and we’d really like to talk about stuff that makes us happy, like look at our daughters – and we can’t help but think, “Which one of us? And When?” We walk down the street at night with out keys clutched between our fingers, as a weapon. — Caitlin Moran, What Men Need To Know About Women, 2016
I used to think exactly that but I have gradually become less convinced that extinction or even dwindling are anywhere near. — Cuthbert
That was 2016 - then Me Too, then Sarah Everard. The expression of fear is getting more confident but I don't see the fear getting any less, because of the 'subterranean norms' and everyday sexism. — Cuthbert
I just googled around a bit and found this plethora of videos telling us guys how to set up the ideal dating site profile that will get us the match we want. — Tobias
I am so very sorry for what you have endured as the result of another's personal choice.
I mean nothing more and nothing less than to let you know that my heart aches for you. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
There are some good theories, but recent events have put some of them into question. — _db
It seemed more like self-preservation at the time. Nothing brave at all there. — Olivier5
... it is meant to scar others permanently. And it does. The suicide of a loved one is not something one can forget. — Olivier5
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