[QUOTE=JavaMan;2482753]A common misconception: sexual assault is NOT about the Sex. And It's not consensual. The perpetrators of these crimes "get off" on the Violence aspect of it. Of Forcing someone to do something against their will, through coercion, force or threat of bodily harm or death.[/QUOTE]In a past life I worked for a while in sex offender therapy. In my experience, some, but not all sexual assault is about power. Some sex offenders are actually quite pitiful.
[QUOTE=Socker;2482892]This is every feminist favorite motto. They hate sex so it's not about gratification it's about power.
(snip)
When the Fems outlawed P4P in the USA just after they got the vote in 1919 is when the, "it's about power" theme began.
(snip)
Guys need to breathe, eat, drink, sleep, think and fuck. The fems don't think we need the last one, as if they could possibly know what it is to be a man.[/QUOTE]To suggest that all feminists claim that "sexual assault is power" suggests that feminism is monolithic. I'm pretty sure it's not. There are some notable fissures in feminist ideology. True, some are down on heterosexuality, but for many decades there have been numerous others who refer to themselves as "sex positive feminists. " They like sex, but most of them are focused on how to have better sex, experiencing orgasms, teaching their partners what feels good to them, and so on. One woman named Betty Dodson, now in her nineties, has been giving sex workshops for five or six decades. She and her followers consider themselves "sex positive feminists. " She is definitely not alone in this view. Check out Dodson's website:
[URL]https://dodsonandross.com/[/URL]
I'm pretty sure prostitution was not eliminated shortly after women got the right to vote. My father, no longer alive, sometimes explained to me about readily available brothels during the thirties and forties. A quick read through any city or state in the USASexGuide makes it clear that prostitution is alive and well in the states. To the extent that many municipalities crack down on sex workers, I suspect it's driven much more by the religious right than by feminists.
