Well said, Rockford! "Manlet"!
Also well said, FollowingHim
Also well said, FollowingHim
You bring up an important point about strong male headship. It is just like this in most denominations. Because they inherited the problem from the RCC. There was a time period during the Reformation, when the world was turned upside down and it could have changed. But it seemed to have been a bridge to far for them. It is worth remembering that sometime after Christ the RCC seized governing power over marriages from fathers. I'm not sure when that was but I would not be at all surprised to find out that to accomplish this they cut a deal with women to elevate them over men. Banning polygamy goes along with this since it is radically easier for a single wife to control her husband.
This ties into socialism too. All the socialist movements of Europe (Italian Fascists, NAZIs, and Bolsheviks) had as part of their program some form of liberation of women from social constraints. For the first two it was voting rights (Germany had already had its free love movement and Italy I'm less knowledgeable of but I suspect it was too Catholic for that to fly). But in Russia they attempted a whole sale destruction of the family: easy divorce, communal housing and kitchens and even private banning family dining. But that program went so horrifically wrong Stalin had to walk it back. But it was a very important task for them as they saw family as a hindrance to their revolution. And this is why even today in foreign aid women's lib is one of the first things pushed (foreign aid being a primary tool of the globalists as they attempt to destroy the native family and culture, which are hindrances to media influence and high consumption consumer lifestyle).
The free love movement in the early hippy period of the US has also been characterized as a sort of women in every bed socialist experiment as well. However absent social constraints on women that quickly devolved into what we see today where women chase primarily the top men while lessor men go without. Polygamy with strict social controls on premarital sex would actually result in more men and women in successful marriages than our present order. You see glimpses of the original free love women in every bed idea yet in the polyamory and sex positive feminist movements. But most of feminism when full man hating.
Of course the traditional Christians want to stuff the cat back in the monogamy bag but its too late for that. Monogamy already lost the cultural war; it isn't capable of winning a rejoiner on its merits. It may piggy back on a different revival movement, much like monogamy spread like a virus with the growth of Christianity. But given the current legal status of the sexes in the US it looks to me more like a poison pill to prevent success of any movement that has it as a core philosophy. In this context I see polygamy as a sort of sanctified "if you can't beat em join em" strategy in the culture wars.
Rockfox: It seems like you have read a poorly researched history of women in Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy.
Or, as he jokingly puts it: "We must seize the means of reproduction!"
Actually, the articles that were being reviewed in the video I saw were largely a moral panic from a leftist/feminist perspective, equating incels with misogynists, the alt-right, and 4chan, and denigrating them while advocating for their censorship.I could be wrong but aside from a few mental breakdown induced homicides, I don't expect any significant violent affect from rebellious incel's. Certainly not to the same level as we put up with from gang culture.
I see the main problem with them is in their support of feminism/far left politics in vain attempts to appeal to women. And even that is dwarf'ed by the damage done by the everyman's support of the divorce and domestic violence complex.
largely a moral panic from a leftist/feminist perspective, equating incels with misogynists, the alt-right, and 4chan, and denigrating them while advocating for their censorship.
Which becomes even more hilarious when you realise that Hitler was a socialist too...Everyone to the right of Stalin is Literally HITLER!
Hitler was not a socialist; the basics of socialism: egalitarianism and common ownership- are absent from Nazism.Which becomes even more hilarious when you realise that Hitler was a socialist too...
Nope. No holes to poke. I think you're right on target.I'm more interested to hear if anyone can poke holes in my idea of polygamy as strategically useful in the culture war or my thoughts about why polygamy is good in opposition to the Utopian anti-polygamy argument.
Eh? Its been that pretty much throughout its history, at least from Constantine's time. Certainly from the point that the RCC crowned Charlemange as Holy Roman Emperor. Even the Referomation didn't disentangle the church from political power, as various princes and nobles would choose to defend one side or the other, leading to a thirty year civil war in the Holy Roman Empire. England initially became protestant for a political purpose, to allow Henry VIII to divorce and remarry.The modern institutional church is (to a certain extent) and is becoming (to a greater extent) the "state church": It exists as creature of the state and functions as a propaganda arm of the state. Our 'fields white for harvest' are outside the state church...
That's underselling it a bit, but yes, the Founders self-consciously placed the establishment and exercise of religion outside the purview of government. That worked pretty well for over 100 years, until (unfortunately for this group) the Supreme Court gutted the free exercise clause in Reynolds v. U.S. (1895), prohibiting Mormon polygamy. Then in 1954 you get restrictions on free speech in the churches through the Johnson Amendment. This week we saw Paige Patterson getting hammered for comments that would have been unremarkable a few decades ago. And so it goes....I suppose America's maintained some degree of separation for the past 250 years or so, but that's not been the norm throughout history.
the Founders self-consciously placed the establishment and exercise of religion outside the purview of government.
Well, I figured that was understood.Outside the purview of the FEDERAL government; the first 10 amendments were originally meant to limit federal, not state, power.
Some did, many didn't. It wasn't a uniform practice.State governments were free to, and did, have official churches.
Hadn't thought of it that way, but I agree. Ideally, people would be free to define their own agreements, and then civil courts would simply be in the agreement-enforcing business, as with commercial contracts. The no-fault divorce isn't the problem isn't the problem as much as the anti-male bias ('tender years' doctrine). Level the playing field, and I'll bet we'd see a lot less quick-trigger divorces, even if no-fault were still the basic posture.That divorce is legal at all is horrible but our society could probably survive free and easy divorce if it weren't for the hammers wielded by that industry against men and their families.