The Price of Pleasure: Why the Sexual Revolution Left Us More Alone Than Ever
The Unintended Consequences of Liberation
The 1960s promised a future where technology and social shifts would grant women the ultimate freedom: the ability to behave exactly like men in the sexual arena. By severing the link between sex and reproduction through the invention of
This shift wasn't a natural evolution but a technological disruption. While historical feminism focused on legal rights and economic participation, the sexual revolution focused on the commodification of the body. We traded old norms of protection and courtship for a "wild west" environment where the most aggressive actors set the terms. Understanding this requires looking past the glossy narrative of progress and examining the biological and psychological wreckage left in the wake of "no strings attached" culture. When we treat sex as a leisure activity—no different from grabbing a coffee or hitting the gym—we ignore the profound physical and emotional vulnerabilities that are hard-wired into the human experience.
The Myth of Sexual Disenchantment
A central tenet of modern liberal thought is the idea of "sexual disenchantment." This concept, borrowed from sociological theories about the enlightenment, suggests that we should strip sex of its "specialness" or sacred status. If sex is just work, just exercise, or just fun, then all the old-fashioned hang-ups about shame, reputation, and commitment should theoretically vanish. However, the reality on the ground—and particularly on the bathroom floor where many find themselves dry-retching after a "casual" encounter—tells a different story. Humans are not rational robots; we are social animals governed by instincts that predate the internet by hundreds of thousands of years.
Even those within the polyamory community or the "sex work is work" movement struggle to live out this disenchantment. If selling sex were truly identical to working at
The Asymmetric Warfare of Modern Dating
The technological shift has created a "matthew principle" in the dating market: the winners take everything, and the losers are left in a sexual wasteland. For the "top" tier of high-status men, the current culture is a paradise. They can access unlimited sexual variety without the traditional costs of commitment, provision, or protection. But for the vast majority of men and women, the landscape is bleak. We see a burgeoning underclass of sexless men—often retreating into the darker corners of the internet like the
This asymmetry is fueled by the denial of sexual dimorphism. By pretending that men and women have identical sexual psychologies, we've created a system that favors the male strategy of short-term variety. Women generally have a lower sexual disgust threshold and a higher propensity for emotional bonding through oxytocin. When the culture demands they suppress these instincts to be "up for it" or "adventurous," it isn't just a lifestyle choice; it's a war against their own biology. The result is a generation of women who are more educated and higher-earning than ever before, yet increasingly unable to find the stable, status-equal partners they instinctively seek.
The Super-Stimulus Trap: Porn and OnlyFans
The commodification of sex has reached its logical conclusion with
For men, the "super-stimulus" of online porn acts as a form of cultural
The Secular Case for Traditional Norms
Returning to more traditional dating norms isn't about religious fundamentalism; it's about social survival. Historically, monogamy functioned as a form of "sexual socialism." It was a redistribution strategy that ensured most men had a stake in the future by providing them with a wife and children, thereby lowering testosterone-driven aggression and crime. When we dissolve these norms, we don't just get "free love"; we get the return of polygynous dynamics where a small group of men monopolize women, and the rest of the society becomes unstable and violent.
Rebuilding the Human Blueprint
The sexual revolution was a grand experiment that assumed we could use technology to overwrite human nature. Six decades later, the data suggests the experiment has failed to deliver the happiness it promised. We see falling birth rates, rising loneliness, and a profound misunderstanding between the sexes. The way forward is not to descend into bitterness or resentment, but to acknowledge the inherent differences between men and women and respect the biological limits of our psychology.
Growth happens when we align our actions with our deepest needs for security, respect, and belonging. True empowerment isn't found in the ability to act like a high-status male; it's found in the courage to protect one's own boundaries and demand a culture that values the whole person over the sum of their parts. As we navigate this complex landscape, we must remember that some things are "special" for a reason. Reclaiming the sacredness of sex and the stability of the family isn't just a conservative whim—it is a necessary foundation for a resilient and thriving society.

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