Date: December 9th, 2019 1:13 AM
Author: soul-stirring prole brunch
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
Recently, there’s been renewed debate about banning porn, which I welcome. (Spoiler: I support an outright ban.) It’s important to properly define what’s at stake in this controversy, so as not to descend into confusion, meaningless “status signaling” or Islamic-like nihilism.
58 replies155 retweets841 likes
Reply 58 Retweet 155 Like 841
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
Legalizing prostitution would be a recognition of the “fallen” nature of man. Man will always seek erotic experience. The question is, what will this be? A life-denying hyper-reality or a flawed but forgivable dalliance in debauchery? To ask he question properly is to answer it.
33 replies32 retweets258 likes
Reply 33 Retweet 32 Like 258
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
Prostitution that is overseen by the government can be reasonably safe. And legal, regulated prostitution would, no doubt, reduce the brutal human-trafficking and sex slavery that defines the practice today.
12 replies18 retweets189 likes
Reply 12 Retweet 18 Like 189
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
The proper corollary to any movement that seeks to ban porn is to *legalize prostitution*. Yes, prostitution brings with it problems. But prostitution is, after all, the *real* thing, not a virtual thing. It offers a human experience, not a hyper-real lie.
16 replies20 retweets178 likes
Reply 16 Retweet 20 Like 178
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
Modern porn gives us a glimpse of a world in which, like the Cartesian brain in a jar, humans are segregated into pods, given VR stimulation, and used as batteries—all the while enjoying their simulacrum of vitality.
3 replies23 retweets210 likes
Reply 3 Retweet 23 Like 210
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
Porn isn’t properly understood as deviant, decadent, or subversive. To the contrary, it is *puritanical* and a *form of social control*. It weakens men and women and saps them of energy. It is anti-erotic, properly understood.
3 replies32 retweets240 likes
Reply 3 Retweet 32 Like 240
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
Porn doesn’t inspire sex. To the contrary, it institutes abstinence and loliness and ultimately leads to the end of human life, if not the heat death of the universe. (Yes, the stakes are this high.)
3 replies28 retweets267 likes
Reply 3 Retweet 28 Like 267
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
Why would your average incel loser bother taking a girl on a date (not to mention courting her for marriage), when he can instantly experience an insane bukkake gang-bang at the click of button? Vanilla love-making IRL doesn’t compare to the extreme experiences he gets online.
8 replies15 retweets184 likes
Reply 8 Retweet 15 Like 184
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
The hyper-real sex life of your average porn viewer is something out of Don Juan’s or James Bond’s wildest fantasies—or rather nightmares! Bizarre and fetishistic, quasi-illegal, inflicting bodily damage, breaking every taboo, including increasingly incest.
8 replies11 retweets195 likes
Reply 8 Retweet 11 Like 195
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
Modern porn is *hyper-reality*. Porn sex is “even better than the real thing,” to quote Bono. The viewer doesn’t just get a glimpse of tits and ass; he *experiences* sex in high-definition, and in the coming year, increasingly through Virtual/Augmented Reality and 3D.
3 replies10 retweets176 likes
Reply 3 Retweet 10 Like 176
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
(Obviously, we‘ve all watched porn on the Internet. For some, it amounts to a dalliance; for others, a debilitating addiction—even those engaged in a relationship. But I’m trying to get at the *fundamental* problem of porn, and that’s bigger than its malign side-effects.)
2 replies11 retweets175 likes
Reply 2 Retweet 11 Like 175
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
How many couples watch porn to spice up their sex life? My guess is the this porn-viewing demographic is quite small. Overwhelmingly, porn is consumed *alone* by men and women who masturbate and who are *not* engaging in sex, not to mention marriage, child-rearing, etc.
3 replies14 retweets211 likes
Reply 3 Retweet 14 Like 211
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
The problem with porn is that erotica of the past acted as a *aphrodisiac*—that is, it inspired sexuality; it was life-affirming—whereas porn is a *sex-substitute*. Porn doesn’t “cause rape” (as many critics suggest); if anything, it prevents rape. It prevents sex altogether.
6 replies28 retweets280 likes
Reply 6 Retweet 28 Like 280
Show this thread
Richard 🎅🏻 Spencer
@RichardBSpencer
11h11 hours ago
More
I’m not against erotic art. indeed, I lament the fact that the world has become less sensual and colorful, and more rigid and lifeless. The fundamental problem with porn isn’t exactly the graphic, photo-realist depiction of sex, though that is an indispensable part of it.
4 replies14 retweets201 likes
Reply 4 Retweet 14 Like 201
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4397638&forum_id=2#39235688)