Originally posted by Tassman
View Post
.
Again, the point is that diversity is meaningless, as a matter of fact it may well undermine social cohesion.
Where did the beliefs of the Christian slave owners the oppressors of women and minority groups differ from NT principles? They justified them with their particular understanding of scripture just as youknows
anyone in a position of power and authority - has never been accepted as appropriate or normal.
So you admit that bonobos do practice adult/juvenile sex and forced sex is rampant with other primates:
Male chimpanzees that wage a campaign of sustained aggression against females sire more offspring than their less violent counterparts, new research finds.The results suggest that such nasty behavior from males evolved because it gave the meanest males a reproductive advantage, said study co-author Ian Gilby, a primatologist at Arizona State University in Phoenix.This chimpanzee behavior could also provide some insight into the roots of sexual aggression in men. https://www.livescience.com/48743-ag...duce-more.html
Animal coercive sex
Further information: Sexual coercion, Sexual selection, and Sexual conflict
It has been noted that behavior resembling rape in humans is observed in the animal kingdom, including ducks and geese[citation needed], bottlenose dolphins,[1] and chimpanzees.[2] Indeed, in orangutans, close human relatives, copulations of this nature may account for up to half of all observed matings.[3] Such behaviors, referred to as 'forced copulations', involve an animal being approached and sexually penetrated as it struggles or attempts to escape. These observations of forced sex among animals are not controversial. What is controversial is the interpretation of these observations and the extension of theories based on them to humans. "Thornhill introduces this theory by describing the sexual behavior of scorpionflies. In which the male may gain sex from the female either by presenting a gift of food during courtship or without a nuptial offering, in which case force is necessary to restrain her."[4]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociobiological_theories_of_rape#Animal_coercive_s ex
Animal coercive sex
Further information: Sexual coercion, Sexual selection, and Sexual conflict
It has been noted that behavior resembling rape in humans is observed in the animal kingdom, including ducks and geese[citation needed], bottlenose dolphins,[1] and chimpanzees.[2] Indeed, in orangutans, close human relatives, copulations of this nature may account for up to half of all observed matings.[3] Such behaviors, referred to as 'forced copulations', involve an animal being approached and sexually penetrated as it struggles or attempts to escape. These observations of forced sex among animals are not controversial. What is controversial is the interpretation of these observations and the extension of theories based on them to humans. "Thornhill introduces this theory by describing the sexual behavior of scorpionflies. In which the male may gain sex from the female either by presenting a gift of food during courtship or without a nuptial offering, in which case force is necessary to restrain her."[4]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociobiological_theories_of_rape#Animal_coercive_s ex
You are, not I.
Comment