The Other McCain

"One should either write ruthlessly what one believes to be the truth, or else shut up." — Arthur Koestler

Let’s Bring Back Guilt and Shame

Posted on | June 26, 2015 | 161 Comments

“I was twelve when I discovered porn.”

So begins “How I Came Out: Part 2 – My Bisexual Awakening” by Kaitlyn, a 22-year-old graduate of Pacific Lutheran University.

Please stop laughing long enough to think about this. Remember when “coming out” meant someone was actually, y’know, gay?

What’s the point of “coming out” as bisexual?

If you are actually with somebody of the same sex — which is to say, you’re in a gay relationship — then this could cause a situation at the family Thanksgiving gathering. But if all you’re doing, in terms of your bisexuality, is occasionally hooking up with partners of either sex, do you need to “come out” about that? Why?

 

Politics, really. Adding another soldier to the LGBT Social Justice Army in their Grand March to abolish normality. So if you ever had an “incident” at Scout camp or engaged in some “Wow, I was so drunk last night” shenanigans at college, it is now Urgently Important that you must tell everybody on the Internet. This is what Tumblr blogs are for.

Thanks for sharing your adolescent porn habits with us, Kaitlyn.

“Dear Penthouse Forum . . .”

Excuse my habitual sarcasm, but it’s hard to avoid suspecting that perversion was more fun when everybody knew it was wrong.

Now that every college has an LGBT club and every major city has a “pride” parade, the abolition of sexual shame has also abolished the frisson of pursuing Forbidden Pleasure. If nothing is taboo anymore — a lesbian comedian is hosting a popular daytime TV show and a former Olympic star makes the cover of Vanity Fair as “transgender” — where can anyone find the thrill of Guilty Secrets? As weirdness becomes more and more normalized in society, it also inevitably becomes more boring.

Young people nowadays can be excused if they find themselves wondering what life was like in the Bad Old Days, when fornication was regarded as a sin and sodomy was an abomination. Kids may be nostalgic for a society that required us to repress our unruly teenage impulses, when guys felt guilty for trying to get to third base with their girlfriends.

Well, we were supposed to feel guilty, anyway.

She’s your adolescent dream,
Schoolboy stuff, a sticky sweet romance.
And she makes you want to scream,
Wishing you could get inside her pants.
So, you fantasize away.
And while you’re squeezing her,
You thought you heard her saying . . .

“Good girls don’t,
Good girls don’t,
Good girls don’t, but I do.”

The distinction between Good Girls and Bad Girls was, of course, both a cruel fiction and a vital bulwark of social morality. Perhaps unspeakable depravity lurked in the subconscious of all those Good Girls whose respectable boyfriends were afraid to try to even get past second base. Certainly I was not the only long-haired rock-and-roll outlaw who suspected that most Good Girls secretly wanted to be Bad Girls. Yet the forces of repression were still strong — I grew up deep in the Bible Belt, where the Sexual Revolution didn’t win a sudden and complete victory — and the innate capacity for wickedness was restrained, so it is likely that most Good Girls believed they actually were good.

So, you call her on the phone
To talk about the teachers that you hate.
And she says she’s all alone,
And her parents won’t be coming home til late.
There’s a ringing in your brain,
Cause you could’ve sworn
You thought you heard her saying . . .

“Good girls don’t,
Good girls don’t,
Good girls don’t, but I do.”

Sneaky teenage guilt is ancient history now. Nothing is repressed in 2015. Perverts are marching down Main Street beneath the Rainbow Flag, declaring their pride in being abnormal, and anyone who fails to applaud the parade is condemned as a hater. As I’ve said, “Until I started studying radical feminism, I never thought of ‘normal’ as an achievement.” Feminist gender theory — the social construction of the gender binary within the heterosexual matrix — tends toward the conclusion that it’s wrong to be normal. These weird ideas, promulgated in university Women’s Studies programs, have been diffused through our culture to such an extent we may imagine young people feeling ashamed to confess that they are heterosexual. In the 21st century, a teenage girl’s peers would treat her as an outcast and a misfit if she were to declare her ambition was to fall in love with a nice guy, marry him, have babies and live in a 3BR/2BA house in the suburbs.

THE SUPREME COURT TODAY ORDERED THAT ALL
STATES MUST ISSUE SAME-SEX MARRIAGE LICENSES

Being normal is old-fashioned and old-fashioned is oppressive. Therefore, the Good Girl is now stigmatized for her virtue, because feminists tell her she should be “empowered” (Yes Means Yes!) to express her sexuality, while no one can condemn the Bad Girl, because that would be “slut-shaming.” Traditional morality having thus been totally inverted — calling to mind Nietzsche’s “transvaluation of all values” — the teenage girl finds herself thrown to the wolves and expected to perform her “empowered” sexuality with that most horrible and hideous beast, the teenage boy.

And it’s a teenage sadness
Everyone has got to taste.
An in-between age madness
That you know you can’t erase . . .

“Good Girls Don’t,” as Doug Feiger sang in 1979, and it’s astonishing how this “in-between age madness” has gotten even more out of control now than it was in the Seventies, when more or less everybody in high school was on drugs. Let it be noted that Fast Times at Ridgemont High was actually based on a true story, a 1981 book by Cameron Crowe:

As a freelance writer for Rolling Stone magazine, Crowe went undercover at Clairemont High School in San Diego, California, and wrote about his experiences.

If that now-classic teen movie exaggerated reality for comic effect, many of us who lived through that era — before the AIDS epidemic, before mandatory “safe sex” lessons in public schools — nonetheless recognize the reality behind the laughs. There were a lot of real-life human tragedies amid all that sex, drugs and rock-and-roll. Hearts were broken and lives were ruined, and the only thing that could possibly make sense of it all was the music on the radio.

You’re alone with her at last,
And you’re waiting til you think the time is right.
Cause you’ve heard she’s pretty fast.
And you’re hoping that she’ll give you some tonight.
So, you start to make your play,
Cause you could’ve sworn you
Thought you heard her saying . . .

“Good girls don’t,
Good girls don’t,
Good girls don’t, but I do.”

It’s a miracle any of us rock-and-roll kids survived that era. You might think we would have learned enough from our experience to prevent a revival of that deviant culture, but it seems that many so-called “grown-ups” learned all the wrong lessons from their decadent youth.

“Well, we managed to make it through all right,” these alleged adults seem to have concluded, “so let’s just let our kids figure it out for themselves.” Then one day you log onto the Internet and find a young Lutheran’s bisexual confession: “I was twelve when I discovered porn.”

Sex, Shame and the Dark Side

Kaitlyn’s kinky confession echoes “Belle Knox,” as the Duke University Women’s Studies major Miriam Weeks called herself in her video porn career. She appeared on The View in March 2014:

The 18-year-old . . . was raised a devout Catholic in a loving home in Spokane, Washington.
Miriam’s Catholic father Kevin and mother Harcharan, reportedly have been ‘floored’ by their daughter’s decision to turn to porn to fund her $60,000-a-year education at the elite school.
Miss Weeks said today that her parents were not aware of her decision to enter the porn industry but are now ‘absolutely supportive’ of her choice.
She added: ‘We tell our children through school and socialization that sexuality is bad’ before adding to the shock of the panelists that she had been watching online porn alone since the age of 12.

“Good Girls Don’t,” but good girls are a scarce commodity in a hypersexualized society where feminists adamantly insist that every girl has a right to be bad (Yes Means Yes!) while at the same time feminists denounce the bad girl’s male partners as sexual oppressors who are products of “rape culture.” Young people are understandably confused by this cacophony of demonic voices telling them they’re damned if they do and damned if they don’t. It seems that many teen girls do, and then wish they hadn’t done it. Pressured into playing the Bad Girl, they find themselves overcome with inexplicable feelings of shame.

“Dubious claims about ‘rape culture’ are an attempt to create an all-purpose scapegoat for the emotional dark side of promiscuity,” Robert Tracinski wrote in February 2015:

College campuses have long since been taken over by a culture in which casual sex with acquaintances is considered normal and where slightly outré sexual experimentation is strongly encouraged, all of it spurred on by alcohol, which figures prominently in most of these cases. But it’s clear that some young women are not psychologically prepared for this. They have casual relationships and hookups, but then feel regret and emotional trauma when the experience ends up being emotionally unsatisfying or disturbing. Then they are encouraged, by the feminists and “rape culture” activists, to reinterpret the experience as all the fault of an evil man who must have coerced them.
It’s a system which systematically preys on and exploits the emotional vulnerability of young women in order to use them as publicity fodder for an ideological agenda.

As bad as this is for college students who are “not psychologically prepared” to deal with the emotional consequences of sexual hedonism, this is happening to even younger girls. Consider this story:

An x-rated video of Vine star Carter Reynolds leaked Sunday that purportedly shows him pressuring his ex-girlfriend for oral sex, raising issues of consent and spurring Internet backlash.
The video is filmed from Reynolds’ point of view, with his pants pulled down and his erect penis exposed. His ex-girlfriend, Instagram celeb Maggie Lindemann, tells him “I don’t think I can” and repeatedly stresses “I am really uncomfortable.” Reynolds tells her to “do it,” and “just pretend (the camera) isn’t there.” Lindemann eventually curls up and stops looking at the camera. It ends with Reynolds saying, “Oh my gosh, Maggie.”
The duo has had a tumultuous relationship, with several breakups, the most recent of which was in May. Lindemann is 16 years old, and Reynolds recently turned 19, leaving issues of consent and statutory rape on the table depending when and where the clip was filmed, as well as child pornography issues depending on how old Reynolds is in the video. . . .
Fans and fellow social media celebs have taken to social media in anger over Reynolds’ actions.

Who are these teenage Internet “celebrities”? How is it that a 19-year-old boy gains a sort of cult fame by uploading iPhone videos, and then finds a girlfriend who is herself a “social media celeb”?

 

This kind of do-it-yourself adolescent notoriety is altogether commonplace in the 21st century, and there is no adult supervision to the process whereby kids become “famous for being famous.” So it was that Carter Reynolds, while still a high school senior in North Carolina, got more than 1,600 retweets by declaring “school can suck it” in January 2014. We fast-forward to June 2015, when Reynolds has exploited his Internet fame to get himself a famous Internet girlfriend, and now she’s the one who is commanded to “suck it.” Meanwhile, who is Maggie Lindemann and why is she so famous? She’s a pretty brunette from Texas, but if she has any actual talent or intellectual ability, you wouldn’t know it from reading her Twitter account, where more than a quarter-million followers await such of her delphic utterances as, “the cutest” (June 15, 351 retweets) and  “I regret you” (June 16, 570 retweets). After the leaked video of Reynolds trying to coerce her into a video performance of oral sex made headlines, Lindemann tweeted:

I’m ok and have positive people with me. Trust that this is being handled and I’ve been told I cant comment on it at this time. Love you.

That message got more than 3,000 retweets and 12,000 likes.

Something has gone terribly wrong in our culture, you see. Fame has been cheapened to nothing, and sex is even cheaper. These shallow pseudo-celebrities are made by the Internet and then broken by the Internet before most people have ever even heard of them.

Kids log onto the Internet to worship at the digital altar of their idols, crude vulgarians who seem to have no qualifications beyond their narcissistic craving for admiration. When it is predictably revealed that Carter Reynolds is a selfish creep — really? who could have imagined this?we are subjected to pious lectures:

“Couples do stuff like that all time.”
That sentence just about sums up Vine star Carter Reynolds’ psuedo-apology on Twitter after footage of Reynolds pressuring his then 17-year-old girlfriend into sex leaked onto the Internet. . . .
Despite the widespread prevalence of intimate partner abuse, it’s one aspect of rape culture we tend to ignore, partially due to the widespread victim blaming that survivors experience.

Oh, give me a break! You’re telling me that no one had the slightest inkling that Carter “School Can Suck It” Reynolds might have profound antisocial tendencies? The parents of Maggie Lindemann had no reason to be concerned when their underage daughter hooked up with Reynolds via the 2014 “Magcon” tour? Why should we heed sermons about “rape culture” by the same “journalists” who otherwise act as publicity agents for the fame-junkie culture that turned a no-talent dimwit like Carter Reynolds into a celebrity? Whatever happened to shame? Whatever happened to making achievement and virtuous character the basis of respect? Stipulating that the rock-and-roll idols of yore were generally a bunch of sex-crazed drug addicts, at least they bothered learning to sing, play instruments and write songs. When did Carter Reynolds ever do anything that would cause anyone to think he was worthy of admiration? And did it not occur to any of his admirers that a famous idiot like Carter Reynolds might not have much respect for the idiots who admired him?

Let’s not be naïve about the habits of such people, OK? Don’t lecture me like I’m a fool in need of your enlightenment. We all know exactly what Carter Reynolds was doing when he tried to talk Maggie Lindemann into doing an amateur porn video. He was attempting to derive the maximum power from his unearned fame, to demonstrate to himself what a big deal he is, and to obtain actual proof of this, which he could then show off to his buddies: “Look, man, here’s Maggie doing it for me.”

How often must this lesson be repeated? Anytime a guy gets a naked picture or sex video of a girl, he’s going to show it to his buddies. Everybody knows this by now and, although many states have passed laws against “revenge porn,” such laws won’t stop a guy from showing his girlfriend’s nude selfies to his buddies. Therefore . . .?

Don’t do it, ladies, and don’t associate with guys who expect you to do it.

Let us not pretend, however, that guys are not also being damaged by the perverse sewer of our hypersexualized culture.

True story: A guy I used to know had a life nearly anyone would envy. Grew up in a fine family with a big suburban home, swimming pool in the backyard, everything. His folks were respectable Christian people, and my friend was intelligent and talented. By the time he was 30, he had established himself in a professional career, married and had a home of his own. My wife and I used to visit my buddy and his wife at their house and marvel at their good fortune. We lost touch with them after a while, but after about 15 years had elapsed, I looked up my old friend and was shocked to learn what had happened. He and his wife had gotten into “swinging,” he got involved in drugs, so his marriage ended in divorce and he lost his house and his job. He became addicted to both crack cocaine and Internet porn, had a complete nervous breakdown and, at the time I looked him up again, my buddy was quite literally living in his mother’s basement, trying to put his life back together.

Blame Satan or Blame the Patriarchy?

Nobody is bulletproof. Nobody is immune. Start ignoring the rules of normal life — those old-fashioned “oppressive” rules — and you never know what kind of evil you’ll find waiting to ruin your life, wreck your mind and destroy your soul.

People who deny the reality of supernatural evil in the world often pretend to believe that there are no consequences to their own selfishness, while simultaneously promoting ideologies that scapegoat other people collectively for everything wrong in the world. Instead of blaming evil on Satan, feminists blame it on the patriarchy, and do not realize how their non-falsifiable belief system turns man-hating into a religion. Why bother seeking any deeper explanation of Carter Reynolds’ thuggish behavior, when you can recite jargon about “intimate partner abuse,” “rape culture” and “victim blaming”? Everybody sings in unison from the Feminist Hymnal, including an 18-year-old Texas girl named Hayley, who recently explained on Twitter:

“I can’t hang with straight men because I’m too clumsy to be around things as fragile as their masculinity.”

See how obvious this is? Your masculinity is fragile, “straight men,” as any teenager in Texas could tell you.

This same young Texan posted her “coming out” notice on Tumblr:

I’m gay. This isn’t a joke. The past year I have really started trying to figure out my sexuality. I was always afraid of my feelings for girls because of seeing how my family and other people started treating and thinking of my lesbian sister. I was bullied and harassed severely in the 6th grade because of rumors of me being a lesbian, and that experience really damaged me and made me want to be the farthest thing from it, thus I repressed the feelings more and more. However, I started dating guys but in every single relationship I was in except for one, I found myself completely repulsed by almost anything sexual in nature . . . Even being romantic felt like I had to force it because I felt like it wasn’t fair for the partners who felt strongly towards me. I was just unaroused and attracted to it at all, and some of those relationships ended for the exact reason that I couldn’t give guys what they wanted . . . and it made me feel guilty and like something was wrong with me, and that’s what people told me, that something must be broken in me. For a while I thought and identified as asexual because of this lack of attraction, but because of the pressure of the environment and society I’m from, I tried to smother every romantic or sexual attraction I actually had, almost totally exclusive with women. And in college I hope to explore my heart’s desires at last. The past few months I have done a lot of introspection and realized it wasn’t sex and romance I was repulsed by — it was that I was put back by it with MEN. I’ve tried to convince myself I’m straight. I’ve tried to keep it all to myself. But I don’t think I will ever be happy until I can be true to myself . . . and the people around me. I know many people will think down on me because of this now. But I cannot keep sacrificing my own wellbeing to try and please others. . . . Thank you for listening, and I hope that you will try to understand.
This is the only social media I’ve come out to and it will probably stay that way for a while. I haven’t specifically come out with any of my friends either, only talked to a few how I was questioning. I’m mortified of coming out to my parents. After YEARS they’ve finally accepted my sister for being an open lesbian, but still see her as lesser as a person . . . I’m their “star child” and they care a lot about reputation. I can’t help but feel that I’ve failed them. It’s just . . . it’s hard.

Teenagers now publish their “coming out” stories on Tumblr even though they’re “mortified” their parents will find out. This suggests that (a) parents generally have no idea what their kids are doing on the Internet, and (b) the kids take this for granted. And we might further speculate that (c) what kids are doing on the Internet has a lot to do with the increasingly weird sex culture.

 

Think about it: Kaitlyn at Pacific Lutheran confesses she started watching Internet porn when she was 12, which was also the same age at which Miriam Weeks/”Belle Knox” started watching Internet porn. Maggie Lindemann hooks up with Internet celebrity Carter Reynolds and he’s trying to make her do a porn video. It’s possible to perceive a clear pattern here and, when I think of my old buddy whose life was wrecked by “swinging,” drugs and porn addiction, perhaps you can see why I’m intrigued by how young Hayley explains her lesbianism.

She “started dating guys,” but found herself “completely repulsed by almost anything sexual in nature” because she “couldn’t give guys what they wanted.” And what did these guys want? She doesn’t say, but might we suspect that what they wanted was for her to enact their porn-inspired fantasies, to be an insatiable love-slave who just can’t get enough?

“Oh, yeah, baby! Do me like that!”

Rather than being grateful, as any man should be, for the pleasure of a woman’s companionship, these guys become obsessed with sex as a performance and are inevitably frustrated that female human beings they meet in real life are nothing like the pornographic fantasy women they’ve been watching in Internet videos since they were 12 years old.

The War Between the Sexes has degenerated into utter savagery, as guys and girls alike are burdened with impossible expectations of themselves and each other. Would you be surprised to learn that Hayley from Texas, the “star child” whose parents “care a lot about reputation,” has a history of eating disorders and self-harm?

I can’t express to you the deep, passionate level of hatred I used to feel about every little piece of myself physically and mentally. You’re talking about a girl who felt so s***ty about herself that she’d obsessively weigh in, starve for days, purposely throw up food, and run 1.8 miles every day to rid herself of imperfection.

She went through “hospitalization following hospitalization,” she explained. “No matter how much weight she lost, she still managed to hate herself even more.” She got better and realized, “You can’t constantly call yourself names and dwell at yourself in the mirror and expect yourself to be happy with yourself.”

Why? What causes this “deep, passionate level” of self-hatred in young women? Feminist scholars, rather predictably, blame the patriarchy, throwing around terms like “objectification” and “trauma” to describe how girls learn to hate their looks so much:

Dr. Erchull and Dr. Liss, along with alumna Stephanie Lichiello, recently had a paper titled Extending the Negative Consequences of Media Internalization and Self-Objectification to Dissociation and Self-Harm published in the October online first edition of the journal Sex Roles. Their findings suggest that self-harm and dissociation, both outcomes associated with the literature on trauma, are related to self-objectification and media internalization. They suggest that objectification could be considered a form of insidious trauma or microaggression.

However, if the overwhelming power of “male supremacy” explains this, why is it that self-hatred is producing so much self-hatred in girls now, at a time when female students comprise 57% of college enrollment and there is more real sexual equality in Western societies than at any previous time in history? And why are some girls driven to these self-destructive behaviors while the vast majority are not? Did I mention Haylee also suffered from trichotillomania? This is a rare “disorder characterized by the compulsive urge to pull out one’s hair,” according to Wikipedia, and “may be triggered by depression or stress.”

Sibling Rivalry and Non-Random Coincidence

While the “star child” Hayley was dealing with these various problems, what was her older lesbian sister doing? You can read a 2012 online petition in which a lesbian in Missouri describes how she made “friends online with” Hayley’s older sister and the two lovebirds then spent two years “talking every single day, texting, chatting, and Skyping for hours on end.” Parental opposition stood in the way of their meeting in person:

In fact, we’ve tried multiple times to visit one another, including my 18th birthday, my high-school graduation and my senior prom. But every time, the only issue we’ve come across is Amy’s father, who has vehemently opposed her traveling up to see me.

The father was the bad guy, you see, for not letting his daughter (17 at the time) run off to Missouri to be with her lesbian beloved, and this was posted in a petition at Change.org! Is anyone surprised that, while the elder sister was engaged in this kind of behavior, Hayley was showing symptoms of extreme stress? Around the same time her older sister made her online lesbian love connection, Haylee says she “was bullied and harassed severely in the 6th grade because of rumors of me being a lesbian.” Yet while she has “done a lot of introspection” about her own sexuality, Haylee doesn’t seem puzzled by the remarkable coincidence that, while less than 3 percent of U.S. women are lesbian or bisexual, both she and her sister identify as lesbian. Haylee was “completely repulsed . . . unaroused and attracted” by males, and this is entirely their fault: “I can’t hang with straight men because I’m too clumsy to be around things as fragile as their masculinity.”

Maybe “straight men” in Hayley’s hometown have some particular problem with “fragile . . . masculinity,” but is it not also possible that there is something particularly “fragile” about Hayley and her sister? Given the pattern we have seen, wouldn’t it make sense to ask if early exposure to pornography might have had something to do with this? Go back to 2009, when Hayley was in sixth grade being “bullied,” while her older sister, 14 or 15 at the time, was evidently trawling the Internet in search of lesbian love. Then remember what Kaitlyn wrote in her bisexual “coming out” notice: “I was twelve when I discovered porn.”

Human behavior follows patterns, and those who subscribe to the “born that way” theory of homosexuality can speculate about genetic factors as explaining why two sisters in a small Texas town would both become lesbians. My own speculative theories, while certainly not denying the possible influence of hereditary traits that manifest themselves as tendencies, would seek the cause in family dynamics and disruptive factors in normal childhood development. The problem with trying to discover the etiology of homosexuality is that social science has declared such inquiries off-limits in recent decades. Everyone now must simply accept homosexuality, and never are we supposed to scrutinize too closely these “coming out” narratives in an attempt to identify non-random factors in the LGBT equation. We must all applaud the pride parade or else be condemned as haters.

“Pride goeth before destruction,” the Bible says, but I wasn’t thinking that way in 1979. No, I was thinking about rock-and-roll.

“It’s a teenage sadness everyone has got to taste . . .”





 

Comments

161 Responses to “Let’s Bring Back Guilt and Shame”

  1. Evi L. Bloggerlady
    June 26th, 2015 @ 10:00 am

    Some have no shame.

  2. If you think the left’s demands will stop with gay marriage, you have another thing coming… | Batshit Crazy News
    June 26th, 2015 @ 10:10 am

    […] Let’s Bring Back Guilt and Shame EBL: More John Roberts Fun To Come Smitty: Friday Fiction (with h/t to Darleen) Wombat: In the […]

  3. marcus tullius cicero
    June 26th, 2015 @ 10:11 am

    ….SCOTUS 5+1…..PARTY LIKE 1999!

  4. Jeanette Victoria
    June 26th, 2015 @ 10:14 am

    Five unelected judges have spat in God’s face and declared war on marriage and family may God have mercy on America

  5. Let’s Bring Back Guilt and Shame | Living in Anglo-America
    June 26th, 2015 @ 10:15 am
  6. Matt_SE
    June 26th, 2015 @ 10:18 am

    “However, if the overwhelming power of “male supremacy” explains this, why is it that self-hatred is producing so much self-hatred in girls now, at a time when female students comprise 57% of college enrollment and there is more real sexual equality in Western societies than at any previous time in history?”

    Remove restraint to see the fundamental character of a group.
    Since men are in competition with other men, this seldom happens as they keep each other honest. But we see the fundamental nature of Middle Eastern men seems to be violent and rapey in the case of ISIS.

    The fundamental nature of Western women seems to be overly dramatic, attention-seeking and self-hating.
    In either case, it’s not usually a good idea to throw self-restraint to the wind.

  7. Matt_SE
    June 26th, 2015 @ 10:18 am

    Civil disobedience.

  8. CrustyB
    June 26th, 2015 @ 10:45 am

    I’ve referred to this video before but I’ve actually found it now.

    Dave Allen called this 40 years ago.

    https://youtu.be/h82D5ZvcALM

  9. HouseofSuffering
    June 26th, 2015 @ 10:46 am

    “Teenagers now publish their “coming out” stories on Tumblr
    even though they’re “mortified” their parents will find out. This
    suggests that (a) parents generally have no idea what their kids are
    doing on the Internet, and (b) the kids take this for granted. And we
    might further speculate that (c) what kids are doing on the Internet has a lot to do with the increasingly weird sex culture.”

    Can confirm on all three points

  10. Matthew T. Mason
    June 26th, 2015 @ 11:00 am

    The age of consent in California, where Carter Reynolds resides, is 18. That makes what he did statutory rape, which makes him a sex offender.

    When is he going to be arrested?

  11. Eastwood Ravine
    June 26th, 2015 @ 11:18 am

    There’s more truth in that video then all the claims homosexuals and their activists have claimed to get to today’s SCOTUS ruling.

    Be very, very afraid. The State knows the best way for everyone to accept homosexuality is to experience

  12. Jim R
    June 26th, 2015 @ 11:58 am

    Girls get such a mixed message. Fairy tales and Disney films tell them that a girl gets Prince Charming without having to do much of anything beyond being pretty, perky and usually in need of rescue. As they get older, however, they’re told that they must look hot and put ou… um… eschew prudish ideas about sexual morality, I meant to say. Hey, EVERYBODY does it!

    No wonder we get disturbed, destructive loons like Emma Sulkowicz. No wonder they cast about for somebody to blame for what must seem to be a gross betrayal: “I did what I was supposed to do! I was supposed to get Prince Charming! WTF???” And people who feel disappointed are ripe for somebody else to tell them who to blame.

    My daughter is two. Anybody know the address of a good convent school?

  13. Jim R
    June 26th, 2015 @ 11:59 am

    Never. He’s a STAR. And we don’t want to be prudish, you know. It’s pefectly normal for kids to experiment. We should celebrate his edginess!

    /sarc

    When is the girl’s father, assisted by various male uncles, godfather, cousins, &c. going to kick the shite out of the little pervert? Oh, wait: that’s ILLEGAL.

  14. HouseofSuffering
    June 26th, 2015 @ 12:12 pm

    The idea that people are strong and smart enough to chart their own course through life free from any external societal constraints, traditions or other guiding pressures has done a massive amount of damage to the world. Forcing everyone to reinvent the wheel when it comes to love, dating, marriage and every other aspect of interpersonal relations is liberating in the same way that chucking a child who doesn’t know how to swim into the deep end of a pool (or perhaps, better, into the surf). Sure, there are plenty of people who will turn out alright, but it’s not the best way to teach someone to swim. (I am so sorry for how inelegantly my thoughts are phrased here).

  15. Quartermaster
    June 26th, 2015 @ 12:34 pm

    But, if he were the President of the local Chapter of Young Republicans, he’d already be sentenced and rotting in a supermax somewhere.

  16. Gunga
    June 26th, 2015 @ 12:37 pm

    Sorry but when it comes right down to it, there’s not much of America left to have mercy upon.

  17. SCOTUS: 6-3 for Obamacare, 5-4 SSM | Regular Right Guy
    June 26th, 2015 @ 12:40 pm

    […] Let’s Bring Back Guilt and Shame […]

  18. Finrod Felagund
    June 26th, 2015 @ 12:40 pm

    Idle note: bisexuals are less accepted by homosexuals than they are by heterosexuals.

  19. Adam G. Yoksas
    June 26th, 2015 @ 12:42 pm

    This blog entry leaves me confused…how can we, on the one hand, argue that ‘guilt and shame’ have gone away while, on the other hand, say that ‘yes means yes’ is all about liberation? Yes means yes is about Ezra Klein’s notion of the “cold spike of fear”: that the problem isn’t that many men (and even, perhaps, many women) are guiltless and shameless…it’s that they aren’t guilty and shameful enough.

    Yes means yes doesn’t seem very liberating…not when matters of primal, pre-linguistic desire between loving people are criminally scrutinized, simply because these desires weren’t constantly verbalized and intellectualized in the act of placating them.

    Guilt and shame, it seems, have not gone away…they seem to have been shifted away from those things that were previously seen as guilty and shameful (affairs, non-conventional sexual practices, etc.) to things that were hardly worthy of scrutiny (sexual practices between husbands and wives as the prime example).

    Did you and your wife have “affirmative, conscious, and voluntary agreement” to do the things you do? And did you verbalize these things, continuously and unambiguously, at every step of the process? If not, or if you aren’t sure, you might be a criminal…shame on you!

  20. kilo6
    June 26th, 2015 @ 12:52 pm

    Either we’re due for some Divine Justice or else God owes Sodom and Gomorrah an apology

  21. ECM
    June 26th, 2015 @ 12:54 pm

    All the proof you need of this is to cast your eyes northward, where Canada has already blazed the trail we’re about to follow…

  22. Whitney
    June 26th, 2015 @ 1:29 pm

    I think that we are all about to find out WHY those prohibitions are in the bible. Should be interesting.

  23. Russ Emerson
    June 26th, 2015 @ 1:33 pm

    The mistake the Left has made was in failing to disarm the rest of us.

    The remainder is left as an exercise for the reader.

  24. Jim R
    June 26th, 2015 @ 2:12 pm

    I get what you mean, I think. Humanity has learned – often painfully – what does and doesn’t work. There ARE some people (supermen, I suppose is the term) to who those lessons don’t really apply, but such people are few and far between (and I’d say that a real “superman” would understand that, just because he CAN, he really SHOULDN’T). I don’t advocate unthinking, blind conformity to tradition, but I think that the parable of the fences almost always applies: it was put there for a reason, and so it’s very wise to try to understand why before one pulls it down.

  25. MichaelAdams
    June 26th, 2015 @ 2:54 pm

    However, with the present state of our media, it will take decades before we can find out what the result will be. Remember, it is already impossible to explore possible scientific causes of homosexuality.

    There is a strong attempt to make
    denial of anthropogenic global warming a crime. I think that people who assert a scientific rationale for believing in the intellectual inferiority of Blacks are full of spit, but we can’t refute them with science, because the study is off limits to scientists. Meanwhile diagnosed schizophrenics get academic tenure, and their books are published and reviewed by people who have some claim to being of sound mind.

  26. robertstacymccain
    June 26th, 2015 @ 2:56 pm

    Did you and your wife have “affirmative, conscious, and voluntary agreement” to do the things you do?

    Officer, I have the right to remain silent and to have my attorney present during questioning. I hereby invoke those rights. You can take me back to my cell now.

  27. Isa
    June 26th, 2015 @ 2:56 pm

    mercy? no, justice is what is needed. this country’s leaders and many of its people have squandered God’s mercy and ignored the warnings of His prophets. now it is time to pay the consequences.

  28. robertstacymccain
    June 26th, 2015 @ 3:03 pm

    “I did what I was supposed to do! I was supposed to get Prince Charming! WTF???”

    This sense of entitlement — the belief that women have a right to Have It All, if they just follow the scripts written for them by Hollywood, by feminists, by Cosmo magazine — leads women to develop a sense that they have been cheated out of something that was rightfully theirs. It is this irrational resentment that feminists exploit for votes and money and book sales. Yet we are expected to bite our tongues while these foolish women lecture us, as if we are to blame for their problems.

  29. robertstacymccain
    June 26th, 2015 @ 3:04 pm

    Carter Reynolds is a Genius in France, just like Woody Allen and Roman Polanski.

  30. RichFader
    June 26th, 2015 @ 3:36 pm

    I was a yoot when “Get The Knack” came out. Which means I’m old enough to remember when Doug, the bard of teen lust (and lust after teens) was the sketchy Fieger brother, before Geoff started defending Jack Kevorkian.

    And is “Dear Penthouse Forum” still the contemporary equivalent of “Once upon a time…”?

  31. Dianna Deeley
    June 26th, 2015 @ 3:42 pm

    I don’t think I ever heard a kid tease another as a lesbian in sixth grade.

    By eighth, yes, but sixth? Nope.

  32. Fail Burton
    June 26th, 2015 @ 3:53 pm

    There is a new moral ethos in town and it is a bit of hate speech which has been brilliantly molded and propagandized. We’re not talking about something as old-fashioned as needing a tattoo or losing one’s virginity to be cool, we’re talking about being trans-whatever to be moral and avoid immorality. Most vectors of oppression wins – least loses. Why is anyone surprised kids are scrambling to essentially be black, feminine and gay. It’s a hierarchy of morality and it is taken very seriously. It’s a stunning new form of virtually institutionalized bigotry. Orwell would be proud because success is failure and failure success, normality itself evil. Why wouldn’t normal married women declare themselves bi-sexual; there’s everything to gain and nothing to lose. It’s just a declaration of solidarity that allows the angel of death to pass one’s door. It’s reverse-engineering M. Luther King’s colorblindness as now laughable with unforeseen results as a new ellitism that is far more clever and weaponized than a starry-eyed teenage John Lennon listening to blues records.

    “Often, we do not even speak of human difference, which is a comparison of attributes best evaluated by their possible effect and illumination within our lives. Instead, we speak of deviance, which is a judgment upon the relationship between the attribute and some long-fixed and established construct. Somewhere on the edge of all our consciousness there is what I call the mythical norm, which each of us knows within our hearts is ‘not me.’ In this society, that norm is usually defined as white, thin, male, young, heterosexual, Christian, and financially secure. It is within this mythical norm that the trappings of power reside. Those of us who stand outside that power, for any reason, often identify one way in which we are different, and we assume that quality to be the primary reason for all oppression. We forget those other distortions around difference, some of which we ourselves may be acting out within our daily lives. For unacknowledged difference robs all of us of each other’s energy and creative insight, and creates a false hierarchy.” – Audre Lorde, An Address at Hunter College, 1984

    Indeed it does. There are people who are sophisticated and there are people who are clever. Lorde’s rhetoric sounds all fine and good until you look how it has actually been used. It stuns its prey before eating it. Are we glad Lorde never had an army? Yes we are. Morality is a good substitute for power. Ask the apostles. But what if it’s not morality? And what if it eventually gains power? We’ve seen what happens. This is why hate speech is at once so dangerous and so clever. At it’s far end this is the dismantling of rules, a strike zone, law and our Constitution. Only some flags are shameful and get banned. Only some groups are smeared – others: never. Without rules we’re dependent on love from people who use that word a lot but in fact have declared over and over again they hate us and consider us the source of all the ills in their lives. In what world will we be rewarded by intersectional feminists? A cul-de-sac is now success and success considered a cul-de-sac.

    We’ve brought back guilt and shame… in reverse.

  33. Jim R
    June 26th, 2015 @ 3:57 pm

    I feel cery sorry for a lot of these girls and even women: they have been, in a sense, flimflammed. They’ve been told since they were in the crib that life is supposed to be a certain way… and it usually isn’t.

    Add to it that guys are also told that life is supposed to be a certain way that plays off this, and there’s a recipe for a lot of heartbreak. And social diseases.

  34. Ilion
    June 26th, 2015 @ 4:09 pm

    I think we *are* seeing the consequences/judgment in the homojihad.

  35. concern00
    June 26th, 2015 @ 4:26 pm

    Sodom and Gomorrah enshrined as law.

  36. RKae
    June 26th, 2015 @ 4:56 pm

    Everything these kids believe is based on a single, faulty premise: “Old sexual taboos were invented out of thin air by people living under repressive superstition, who then forced that belief on everyone else.”

    It will never occur to them that sexual taboos were indeed created by trial and error and the best ideas were moved forward and codified in law.

    For example, this is why polygamy is found in the OId Testament and then shut down in the New Testament. (And, incidentally, it is merely found in the Old Testament, not ordained by God.)

    While their faulty premise maintains, they can puff themselves up with great pride while they dismantle civilization. Every hookup (the more bizarre the better!) is another example of how much smarter they are than their ancestors.

    Ironically, it is this wave of current “enlightened sophisticates” who are forcing nonsense on the world.

  37. Jason Lee
    June 26th, 2015 @ 5:13 pm

    I don’t know how to raise my daughter in this world.

  38. RKae
    June 26th, 2015 @ 5:20 pm

    Tell her about how Christians used to meet in secret (for 300 years), and when caught, they were thrown into an arena to be executed for the entertainment of “the enlightened.”

    She has to be prepared.

    Watch the movie “Quo Vadis?”

  39. RKae
    June 26th, 2015 @ 5:42 pm

    They think they’re spreading enlightenment and freedom, but they’re only spreading damage. When damaged people think that their damage is their sexual orientation; when they write books and blogs about it, they turn their readers/believers into damaged people.

    So we’re going to get a whole generation of people who act like they’ve been raised in abusive homes, even though they haven’t, because they imitate their adored cultural leaders.

    This makes it impossible to track down causes. “Look, millions of people act this way, but only a few were raised in abuse. So it’s not abuse that causes it.”

  40. RKae
    June 26th, 2015 @ 5:44 pm

    You ask “Where will the thrills come from when nothing is taboo?”

    As usual, check the Bible. The thrills come from banging on the doors of people who don’t want to participate and ordering them to come out and be raped in the street.

  41. RKae
    June 26th, 2015 @ 5:48 pm

    …the rock-and-roll idols of yore were generally a bunch of sex-crazed drug addicts, at least they bothered learning to sing, play instruments and write songs.

    Heck, drug-addled Keith Emerson even went so far as to write a piano concerto — and he had the cojones put it on the whole first side of an album!

    So, yeah, I do a lot of forgiving when it comes to talented musicians. But, even as a youth, it never led me to think drugs were OK. I could always separate the fact that he was a good musician that I admired and the fact that he took drugs. I wish more people could put a dividing line between those!

  42. Wombat_socho
    June 26th, 2015 @ 5:57 pm

    Truth.

  43. Wombat_socho
    June 26th, 2015 @ 5:58 pm

    Society is built on discipline. We are living through the experience of what happens when discipline is abandoned, and people make beasts out of themselves to avoid the pain of being human.

  44. Wombat_socho
    June 26th, 2015 @ 6:00 pm

    I didn’t even hear that stuff in my suburban DC high school. It might have been whispered about, but nobody actually got in anyone’s face and accused them of it. But that was in the 1970s, when society was still in the process of changing.

  45. Adobe_Walls
    June 26th, 2015 @ 6:04 pm

    Conservatism is pointless when there’s nothing left to conserve.

  46. Adobe_Walls
    June 26th, 2015 @ 6:05 pm

    We most certainly will.

  47. Adobe_Walls
    June 26th, 2015 @ 6:10 pm

    The ultimate inability to commit.

  48. Adobe_Walls
    June 26th, 2015 @ 6:12 pm

    Wow, been there.

  49. Adobe_Walls
    June 26th, 2015 @ 6:14 pm

    Ultimately leading to a ”frank exchange of views”.

  50. Wombat_socho
    June 26th, 2015 @ 6:16 pm

    Or as one bisexual friend of mine once lamented, “Twice the opportunity to get turned down on Saturday night.”