This is a survey, their results are anonymous so they have no reason to hide their true preferences. You're right that porn is changing their sexuality, but you're wrong about why. They are being exposed to new ideas and becoming more open to them, allowing them to explore their sexuality more freely.
This is a survey, their results are anonymous so they have no reason to hide their true preferences. You're right that porn is changing their sexuality, but you're wrong about why. They are being exposed to new ideas and becoming more open to them, allowing them to explore their sexuality more freely.
If that were true, young people would be more relationally healthy and happy than previous generations, which stats show is not the case, with a large number of Gen Z not having any sex.
Here's another aspect where it's even more obvious: if porn were just enabling experimentation and personal expression, the fully shaved look would be a one-time experiment in pain and discomfort rather than the norm in correlation with sexual activity. You'd see a diversity of hair styles. If it were just a personal grooming preference, shaving one's labia would either not be the norm (shaving is uncomfortable and painful and really not ideal from a health standpoint) or it wouldn't be correlated with sexual activity (people groom themselves regardless of whether they're going to have sex or not).
The fact Gen Z had fewer relationships is not evidence that they have worse sex, there are many other factors that influence that.
Furthermore, the fact women do some things that are uncomfortable to please men is not evidence for your argument that women don't actually like what they said they do on this survey. If the topic of shaving showed up, women would likely respond that they'd rather not have to.
Quite the opposite actually, I prefer affectionate sex rather than BDSM. And surveys show this is common, men are typically less dominant than women would prefer them to be.
Being dominant or taking the lead isnтАЩt the same as being abusive, which, I would argue, is whatтАЩs being described in this article and in these comments. Men can justify these behaviors all they want, but they are all porn watchers who assume these things are normal. The fact is that human beings donтАЩt want to be abused unless they themselves have been abused or have been exposed to abuse via porn. Healthy, grounded women with a strong sense of self would never accept this kind of behavior.
This is a survey, their results are anonymous so they have no reason to hide their true preferences. You're right that porn is changing their sexuality, but you're wrong about why. They are being exposed to new ideas and becoming more open to them, allowing them to explore their sexuality more freely.
If that were true, young people would be more relationally healthy and happy than previous generations, which stats show is not the case, with a large number of Gen Z not having any sex.
Here's another aspect where it's even more obvious: if porn were just enabling experimentation and personal expression, the fully shaved look would be a one-time experiment in pain and discomfort rather than the norm in correlation with sexual activity. You'd see a diversity of hair styles. If it were just a personal grooming preference, shaving one's labia would either not be the norm (shaving is uncomfortable and painful and really not ideal from a health standpoint) or it wouldn't be correlated with sexual activity (people groom themselves regardless of whether they're going to have sex or not).
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science /article/abs/pii/S1743609519311166
The fact Gen Z had fewer relationships is not evidence that they have worse sex, there are many other factors that influence that.
Furthermore, the fact women do some things that are uncomfortable to please men is not evidence for your argument that women don't actually like what they said they do on this survey. If the topic of shaving showed up, women would likely respond that they'd rather not have to.
You wish that this were true because then it would justify your preferences and behavior, and for men it may be true. For women, it is not.
Quite the opposite actually, I prefer affectionate sex rather than BDSM. And surveys show this is common, men are typically less dominant than women would prefer them to be.
Being dominant or taking the lead isnтАЩt the same as being abusive, which, I would argue, is whatтАЩs being described in this article and in these comments. Men can justify these behaviors all they want, but they are all porn watchers who assume these things are normal. The fact is that human beings donтАЩt want to be abused unless they themselves have been abused or have been exposed to abuse via porn. Healthy, grounded women with a strong sense of self would never accept this kind of behavior.