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That's probably because I am not trying to imply anything. It's just an interesting question.
The obvious thing is the lack of technology in all earlier times. The overwhelming need for physical strength in most workplace endeavours until relatively recently, allied to a lack of contraception made women second class citizens.
Very definitely economically.
And ofc, if you don't get economic opportunity, you remain second class.
Add in religious teaching, dowrys and low amounts of education (because theres no point paying to teaching people who won't use it to earn you money in future) and it's probably pretty obvious why things were like they were and are changing at present in those places where technology has evened out the basic disparity between men and women.
Hard to disagree with this article, really.
Wow, that's as patronising as it gets. I can't believe The Guardian printed this, I fear the Letters page may self-combust..
Taken at face value, it's just another slant on deflecting responsibility from rapists; they're good boys, really, just so easily led by saline implants and a couple of bottles of Becks. I mean.. peer pressure? Ffs, that's insulting to everyone - male or female.
:rolleyes:
Sadly, I think its the case a lot that the media does normalise some very odious behaviour. It's not that it's the media's fault exactly, but the continous media barrage does serve to normalise some very misogynistic behaviour.
It's not deflecting responsibility away from people, more just saying that people get a lot of their ideas about behaviour from places such as the media. Which is fair comment, I think.
If you commodify sex so that it is something you can only have when you buy product A and product B, then you inevitably make the sex act nothing more than a commodity, and you make the person nothing more than a commodity.