Gallstones wrote:As I said...
Seth wrote:Gallstones wrote:Are you seriously saying that disease prevention need not be a concern for men?
It is worth it to you to risk herpes and HIV and hepatitis and gonorrhea.....?
Do you feel that the man has any ethical obligation to avoid transmitting disease to his partners?
Whether a man wishes to risk STD's is up to him. He's a free individual, and if he chooses such risks, I'm fine with that. As for an "ethical obligation," in the philosophical context I'm using, an STD is no different than a pregnancy.
Indeed he does have the freedom to choose what he will risk. Refusing a condom is evidence of profound ignorance. That may not be a deal breaker for some. He may have other attributes that make desirability dominate over good sense. Such carelessness, IMO, makes him a skank and definitively out of the running. No deal.
Well, I would certainly hope so. That's just good judgment on the part of anyone. But there's no accounting for taste in matters sexual, which is why we have STD's in the first place.
Seth wrote:The woman has absolute control of her reproductive organs, so she is absolutely responsible for what goes into and out of them.
Your error is in using an absolutist term like "absolute". No she does not have absolute control or governance. We hope she does, in practice essentially most will as far as the circumstances of their life go; but although the odds are in an individual woman's favor, odds are not guarantees. She can have her sovereignty forcibly removed, against her will and without her consent.
Ah, well, we're not talking about rape here, so let me dispose of the rape issue immediately. Any man that attempts to insert himself without invitation and permission should be killed, as quickly as possible in every instance, by anyone who happens to be aware of the goings on.
So, please don't use the rape situation as an excuse to argue that women do not have sovereign control over their bodies. We are talking about LEGAL sovereignty, not physical self-defense against attack. Every person is at risk for sexual attack, including men, women and children, so everyone is equal in that regard, although certainly the statistical prevalence of female rape is higher.
Seth wrote:Let me see if I have this, the woman gets to "condition entry"---and requires a condom. A reasonable expectation, and wise as well. You would refuse?
Not me. But it's a negotiation, don't you see?

This is what I see, a mood killer. That is what I see.
Well, that's generally what contract negotiations are, they tend to put a damper on the original enthusiasm over the potential benefits of the deal by pointing out the various negative issues which might arise that need to be dealt with. It's called "using good judgment."
But, nobody is REQUIRING the woman to engage in complex negotiations, she's perfectly entitled to bend over and spread 'em and say "Mount up, cowboy" without a second thought. However, if she chooses that course of action, she has not recourse or cause for complaint for what might happen as a result, now does she?
Seth wrote:The woman wants something, and the man wants something.
At that point in time, I think they both pretty much want the same something.
Not necessarily. And therein lies the problem. The man may want an orgasm, but the woman may want a child, or vice versa. Or they both may want an orgasm, but the unintended consequence is a child. That's why knowing what the agreement is up front is important.
Seth wrote:Since the woman can refuse entry if the man refuses to comply with the conditions precedent to the act, if she does not object or set conditions, she accepts the risks and the consequences thereof.
I'm having a really hard time finding a way to see any arousal potential in this negotiation scenario. Perhaps one just has to be there?
Who said anything about arousal? I'm talking about consequences. Women can do what they like. They can fall on their backs and spread their legs to anyone passing by without so much as a "by-your-leave" or they can have their legal firm standing by to offer a 50 page contract before they open the Altar of Venus. It's entirely up to them. All I'm saying is that THEY are completely, totally, and utterly responsible for the consequences of their actions, whatever those consequences might be. Just like jumping off a cliff without a parachute, women no longer get to say "Hey, bad idea, I want a do-over." They are free to say yes or no or place conditions on coitus, and as a result they have to live, or die, by their choices, just like everybody else does in every other situation we face as individuals.
You pays your nickle, you takes your chances. It's just that simple.
Seriously; doesn't (and hasn't) the negotiation really occur during the early stages of dating or acquaintanceship? That's when the talking should be going on right? Hammer all this out at that point--you'd know where the fuck you/it was going and can pull out before the increased awkwardness of "no fucking way how do I get out of this" is reached. Assuming we are talking about the dating situation and not the one night stand, that is.
Of course it does, and should. That's responsible and prudent sexual practice. My point is that MY burden and obligation as regards such considerations are somewhat different than YOUR considerations in that regard. I don't get pregnant, so that's not one of my concerns. I can get an STD, so prudence dictates that I take precautions or place trust in my partner's representations regarding her health. But since I don't have a womb, pregnancy is nor, or at least should not be in a just world, of any concern to me.
You do have a womb, and therefore you have an added consideration that I do not. That's a function of biology that is your problem, not mine, and since you have every legal right to deny entry or place conditions on entry, what happens is nobody's business but your own, unless you have a contractual agreement to the contrary that's valid and enforceable prior to the delivery. Something as simple as "Baby, if you knock me up, we're in it together till the kid turns 18, right?" with an affirmative answer in reply does the job.
But participating in the sex act with no express contractual obligations stated leaves both parties free of obligations after the fact, in a just society.
Seth wrote:Do you want the conditions before you take your pants off, or is it not an inconvenience to have to put them back on again after you get the disagreeable conditions? And what kind of women are you going to "date" who you don't expect would make a condom conditional? IMO I'd think they'd be the ones you should be most inclined to use one with.
It's not about me, it's about sexual politics and contract negotiations. Women today want to have their cake and eat it too. They want the man to be responsible for everything, from birth control to condoms to child support, and yet they also want to keep all control of everything, including the products of conception and the health implications and burden the man with them without his consent.
Whoa! They! There is no
They.

They, as in "those women who enjoy the freedoms of sexual liberation but who also want to enjoy the benefits of paternalism as well."
Seth wrote:That's neither fair nor equitable.
Thinking. Something about this isn't going down easy, like a case of cognitive indigestion.
Pointing out to women that they can't morally or ethically act like they are delicate princesses entitled to deference and protection by their knights in shining armor who must pay obeisance and grovel at their feet and pander to their every whim and caprice and be strong, independent liberated women who get to do whatever they want with their sovereign wombs at the same time tends to discomfit many women. Either women are truly liberated and sovereign individuals who are both in control of and responsible for their reproductive and sexual practices, or they are dependent upon paternalistic protections and advantages like mandatory child support, alimony and suchlike and are no longer completely in control of their own lives. Naturally, many women want the best of both worlds. They want to be paternalistically protected should their sexual activities go wrong and they become saddled with a child, whether it means the right to have an abortion without the consent of the father or whether they may keep the child an impose a burden of care on the father without his consent. They want to have relief from the burden of their own sexual behavior in every circumstance, and they want to deny their own ultimate responsibility for what goes into and comes out of their wombs and have at least part of that burden shifted to others.
My claim is that morality and ethics demands that they stand up and be sovereign women and accept all responsibility for their own bodies, which they have worked long and hard to achieve in law.
Seth wrote:Either women are in sovereign control of their wombs, in which case men need not take precautions regarding sexual congress because they are entering by invitation and as a guest it's not their responsibility to clean up after the party, or women surrender a degree of sovereignty in order to participate in a contract-based sex act which may burden them with duties and obligations, in which case the man is obliged to perform his side of the contract as specified, and the woman hers.
It's one or the other, I'm afraid...or should be.
Promise me this world where one has to negotiate--defend oneself from--interpersonal relationships will never exist.
You seem to be issuing women an ultimatum.
Isn't it enough that people be informed, that each know what they will and will not accept, what they do and do not want, communicate that with persons in a need--or having the right--to know?
This negotiation idea is exsanguinating all the best of what can be had from a quality sexual relationship.
This is a philosophical exegesis intended to point out the moral and ethical conflicts in our society today regarding sexual politics. Nothing prevents women from creating healthy sexual relationships, I merely maintain that when things go wrong for them, because of their own poor judgment or misbehavior, they should not be permitted to shift the blame or the burden to others. They should stand up on their hind legs and accept that they made a mistake and they should live with the consequences of that mistake without blaming others or expecting others, or society, to relieve them of the burden of their error.
Nobody offers men that sort of relief, and society has always, throughout history, levied a disproportionate burden upon men when it comes the products of careless sexual behavior by insisting that they then have a duty to protect and provide for both the woman and the child. This burden was a just one when men also had the right to force a woman to become pregnant in marriage. That situation no longer obtains, however, and so the burden should fade away. With true female legal sovereignty, all of the responsibilities associated with her body should accrue only to her.
Nothing in this concept precludes or prevents women and men from forming intimate relationships in which each agrees to take on obligations and burdens, it merely says that absent an agreement, the woman may not impose burdens using the law without the consent of the man. This is only fair and just, since she now has complete control over her body.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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