jimmy eat jazz
Well-Known Member
Only if it involved threesomes.
Seriously, why not ask about polyandry also? Polygamy has always been about asymmetric power relations. Women submit to it because they lack the power to oppose it. Men practice it because both they have the power and it gives them more power, and as I think we see with so many 'great men,' sex and power often go hand in hand.
In today's Western society, women are increasingly educated and earning incomes. I believe also in the US, women now outnumber men at universities and women are increasingly becoming the primary breadwinner in families, or if not the primary breadwinner, a significant contributor. It's not outside the realm of the thinkable that if current trends continue, women will become the/a dominant economic force within society and within households. Money is power, and power is . . . well you get it.
This whole discussion polygamy, and the corresponding lack of consideration for polyandry, only goes to show how inherently sexist this whole discussion is. Ask yourselves whether you'd like to be in a polyandrous relationship (I think we know the answer in 99% of cases) and then ask yourselves again why women would feel any differently than you where it comes to polygamy, particularly as they are increasingly less reliant on men for their economic survival.
I also just have to address the comment someone made about how polygamy was/is practiced because men out number women. This is a canard, never was the case, least of all in LDS history. It is a sexist practice that demeans and objectifies women on the whole.
How any otherwise decent person can rationalize this truly horrendous practice away as somehow divine and acceptable is far beyond my abilities to comprehend (and is one of many, but still primary, reasons why I left the LDS Church).
Seriously, why not ask about polyandry also? Polygamy has always been about asymmetric power relations. Women submit to it because they lack the power to oppose it. Men practice it because both they have the power and it gives them more power, and as I think we see with so many 'great men,' sex and power often go hand in hand.
In today's Western society, women are increasingly educated and earning incomes. I believe also in the US, women now outnumber men at universities and women are increasingly becoming the primary breadwinner in families, or if not the primary breadwinner, a significant contributor. It's not outside the realm of the thinkable that if current trends continue, women will become the/a dominant economic force within society and within households. Money is power, and power is . . . well you get it.
This whole discussion polygamy, and the corresponding lack of consideration for polyandry, only goes to show how inherently sexist this whole discussion is. Ask yourselves whether you'd like to be in a polyandrous relationship (I think we know the answer in 99% of cases) and then ask yourselves again why women would feel any differently than you where it comes to polygamy, particularly as they are increasingly less reliant on men for their economic survival.
I also just have to address the comment someone made about how polygamy was/is practiced because men out number women. This is a canard, never was the case, least of all in LDS history. It is a sexist practice that demeans and objectifies women on the whole.
How any otherwise decent person can rationalize this truly horrendous practice away as somehow divine and acceptable is far beyond my abilities to comprehend (and is one of many, but still primary, reasons why I left the LDS Church).