I usually stay out of these threads but not this time. RIO, can you not grasp that no one is suggesting you (or some other generic male) should not be aroused or attracted. No one is even suggesting that you (or that other generic male) should not look or notice an attractive woman. What is being SCREAMED at the top of our lungs is that you have no right to make any assumptions or expectations that your attraction is returned. You have no right to make assumptions about the motivations of that attractive female. And you have no right to expect that attractive female to appreciate your attraction.
I agree I have no right that my attraction is returned. But I do have every right to make assumptions about a woman dressed that way. In fact, that's my most basic of all rights, the right to free thought. And while I might be DEAD WRONG in my assumption or expectation, I still have every right to make it. Just like I have the same right to assume that a man in a suit is likely going to a business meeting and not heading to the gym. I could be dead wrong in that assumption, maybe he has gym clothes in the back seat and just left a funeral. But, it doesn't matter, my assumption is "business man heading to a meeting" and even if it's wrong, I have every right to that assumption. If I find that I'm wrong enough, eventually I may start to think "huh, guy in a suit, probably squat day at the gym for him".
And your right, I have no expectation or right to have my attraction returned. But if I don't have that right (the right to control another person's thoughts/actions) why on earth should she have the right to my thoughts and actions? "You shouldn't think "sex" when you see a woman walk by in a mini-skirt". OK, fine, maybe I shouldn't, but I do. I don't think "Wow, she probably really likes that dress" or "Man, I wonder if that's couture". Nope, I think sex, and, without going to broad, I'm pretty sure a lot of other men do too. But we're just as free to our thoughts as women are to theirs. If I dress up like a clown, you're probably going to think "he's a clown heading to a party somewhere" when maybe I'm just a guy who likes multicolor hair and messing with the people in the MCD drive-through window. But I don't get to tell you want to think, you think what you think. And I'd say that the same basic right applies to men too. Maybe I shouldn't think sex, but I do, as do many other people. That's reality, not the way it "should be" but the way it is. And my argument is that the no amount of social conditioning will change that because it's a basic and primal force. It would be like showing me images of perfectly cooked food and saying "don't think about eating". Well, it doesn't work that way, you don't get to tell me what to think, and, even if you do, I'm hungry and pictures of food I really like are going to make me even more hungry. Because, like sex, food is one of the basic core drives of our species.
Fuck what anybody else thinks—the “real” stuff is what *I* like.
And by all means, your free to express that and buy the things that you really do enjoy. That's not my goal at all in that analogy. I also own expensive watches and jewelry, but I don't really "like them", I like what having those things says to others about me. "Is that a Rolex"? Yes it is, and that tells some real quick a lot of things about me. Now, that said, I also own expensive things that are a blend. A car is a great example of this, I really do love my car, if you debadged it and nobody had any idea what it was or how much it cost, I'd still love it because of what it can do and the performance of it. But I also love it because other people know what it is, and it says something about me. And then there are other things that, no matter the cost, are just for me. The best example of this is probably something like my computer; it looks like a regular computer. Nobody would EVER know it's anything special. But oh my, is it special. It's a hand built rocket that has more power that 20 average computers sitting right next to me humming away and letting me spam up SI on a regular basis. ;) But about 5 people in the world have even seen it, and of those who've seen it, 0 of them have any idea of what they are actually looking at or how "special" it is. The value of that item is in what it does ONLY for me, nobody sees it, nobody knows I have it, and it doesn't require any "social proof" at all, it just IS an amazing machine if you know about it or not.
[This message edited by Rideitout at 12:35 PM, April 3rd (Wednesday)]