Gilder's book ("Sexual Suicide", later re-issued as "Men and Marriage") was one of the first in what has become a long and continually growing line of books documenting the profoundly negative effects of the sexual revolution on women, especially from adolescence through the "empty nest"; on men, especially from the early-mid 20's through middle age; and, perhaps most of all, on children.
Looking back on that line of books (this came on my radar screen when I read "Men and Marriage" back in the mid 80's), what strikes me is how many of these books have been written by folks from the political left..."mugged by reality" because of their professional training/research....a clear indication that the chaos produced by the sexual revolution violates the "law written on the heart" and is therefore part of what we "can't not know."
Since this is the 50th anniversary of the technology that catalyzed that revolution (the birth control pill), I thought I'd mention a few random related items I've run across recently.
- "Why Are So Many Girls Lesbian or Bisexual?" - the author of this Psychology Today article has no moral objections to deviant sexual behavior, but he does wonder if deviant males might be a significant contributing factor.
- Gendercide - this short article from the Economist basically reprises Gilder's observations from 35+ years ago (i.e., the core challenge of any society is to ensure that young males are "civilized" by marriage)...his heresy has become the norm among demographers...though their focus has been on Asia, especially China and its one-child policy.
- "Living Together" - this book by Larry & Harriet McManus provides a nice summary of the data that clearly shows that (a) living together before marriage significantly increases the odds of divorce/breakup, and (b) a concerted community effort to discourage living together has significantly reduced subsequent divorce over the past decade or so in numerous cities.
- "Campus Attacks" - this joint Secret Service, DoE, and FBI study of violence on campus from 1909 to 2009 has numerous observations of interest (though it would be nice to see the raw data as coded). Figure 1 shows assault levels jumping dramatically in the 90's...makes me wonder about things like the mainlining of pornography and the rap culture. And, Figure 7 seems to indicate that nearly 2/3 of assaults involved a male-female dynamic (assuming that same-sex assaults were relatively rare)...a figure that would seem to be significantly under-reported given the amount of anecdotal "evidence" of not reporting date rape, etc.
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