Okay, this deserves a response because it brings new information about the previous post and because it's clearly not written by an idiot. To summarize my position, my post had nothing to do with the fact that you don't like casual sex. In fact, the words "I think sex should be special. Not save-yourself-for-marriage special, but more of a decision than, "Hey, you're pretty, let's do it."" are words I could have written if I'd been asked what I personally felt about sex. My biggest problem was that what you had written was pretty much submerged in sexist subtext. Whether or not you intended it to be may be another question, but there's no denying that such was the effect of your words.Johnny Impact said:Snip
Calling a girl "easy" or "promiscuous" is, as you've pointed out, not any different than calling her a "slut". It's still shaming a girl for her sexuality. I don't think calling anyone a "chaste nun" is a compliment (not anymore than an insult), so I don't know how you got that idea from my post. I'm not trying to say the girl was chaste, or even that what she was doing was responsible if it's exactly as you describe it; here I'm mainly denouncing the use of such words.
I should also like to note that my comment about the hug you mentioned was in reaction your attributing you reaction solely on her sexual habits. Refusing to hug a girl (or a guy for that matter) because you consider them lazy, irresponsible, impolite, and all around a terrible person doesn't make you an ass, it makes you honest.
About the whole alpha male thing: I may have expressed myself poorly if you think I'm calling you an "aggressive, territorial, testosterone-guzzling dingbat ". That is an extremely stereotypical representation of the idea of "alpha male", but while it's still very present in the common mindset (generally in a less caricatured form), it's not the only way people like to use to evaluate their "worth as a man." The manliness-related ideal of "scoring with girls" doesn't just apply to casual sex and/or having sex with as many girls as possible. It also applies to claiming a woman's sexuality that no other man has managed to claim; in this mentality choosing/making love to a girl who's "been had" by (many) other men before you somehow lowers your own worth. And again, this kind of rhetoric removes the woman and her experiences from the equation and makes it about the men (I think the phrase "dick waving competition" is at its most accurate here).
Now, considering the things you've said in your own post, I'm not going to go and accuse you of thinking along the very lines I just described, because it sounds like this isn't the issue for you. But fact remains that using such rhetoric (from using the word slut to the phrase "gets around" and everything in between and beyond) expresses sexist ideas even if they're not intended. Slut, even if its usage changes over the years and people start calling men that too, will never be a gender-neutral term. It always carries that woman-shaming connotation with it. And its use always continues to propagate (and validate) the discriminatory ideas behind it, regardless of intent (which, incidentally, is the reason why everyone needs to stop using the word "gay" as an insult).
But again, the issue here doesn't seem to be purely (or at all) gender-centered. Rather, it's about making judgements on people's own conceptions of their bodies.
See, I was interested to notice that we have a very similar attitude to sex. Where we differ in our attitudes is that I strongly believe that you're wrong in assuming that all people who have casual sex will also view sex with a close partner within a strong intimate relationship as "casual". Insisting otherwise is defining other people's experiences for them, something which relates to the sexism topic discussed above (but isn't limited to sexism, or any discrimination for that matter).
To basically re-iterate the point I made in my previous post: Of course, you're perfectly allowed to think what you want of sexuality, of what people should and shouldn't do with it. You're also allowed to decide you don't want to have a partner who as participated in casual sex, no matter how "wrong" that criteria may appear to others. No one can take that away from you, and no one should call you prude, prig, goody-two-shoes, or puritan. But people will have differing conceptions of sexuality and of what it means to respect your own body. To judge them and shame them, to insult them for that, to assume things about them because of it, is being an ass. You're not bothered by people being an ass to you? Good! All the better for you. Why be an ass yourself?