R
RageAgainstTDL
Overlord
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This great find comes from @LittleBoy who first posted it here. Added to the Wiki here.
Isn't it hilarious how basically every single statement the media or feminists make about us is or where inceldom comes from is provably wrong? The Scientific Blackpill is bottomless. Just when I think we've already fully established our case, there's more to discover. We could fill a textbook on the Blackpill.
Women feel more "entitlement" to men's bodies for sexual pleasure than vice versa
Researchers in Australia surveyed differences between young men and women (aged 17 to 25 years) on a university campus to assess their sense of entitlement to sexual partner pleasure over 1-year with two waves of data collection.
They found that young women had significantly more entitlement to sexual partner pleasure than men did, and entitlement increased over time. The researchers review prior studies confirming these findings to be valid. They note that other research has also confirmed women place a greater emphasis than men on the role of having a sexual partner to meet their sexual desires and pleasures.
Many criticisms about incels in the media have centered around the notion that men feel too "entitled" to sex and female bodies for sexual pleasure. However, scientific research has shown women, not men, feel the greatest amount of entitlement to sexual pleasure from the opposite gender's bodies. Thus the idea that there is a problem because men are "too entitled" to women's bodies is not founded in the scientific literature. The the contrary, women clearly feel more "entitled" to men's bodies for sexual pleasure than vice versa.
Data:
Quotes:
References:
Isn't it hilarious how basically every single statement the media or feminists make about us is or where inceldom comes from is provably wrong? The Scientific Blackpill is bottomless. Just when I think we've already fully established our case, there's more to discover. We could fill a textbook on the Blackpill.
Women feel more "entitlement" to men's bodies for sexual pleasure than vice versa
Researchers in Australia surveyed differences between young men and women (aged 17 to 25 years) on a university campus to assess their sense of entitlement to sexual partner pleasure over 1-year with two waves of data collection.
They found that young women had significantly more entitlement to sexual partner pleasure than men did, and entitlement increased over time. The researchers review prior studies confirming these findings to be valid. They note that other research has also confirmed women place a greater emphasis than men on the role of having a sexual partner to meet their sexual desires and pleasures.
Many criticisms about incels in the media have centered around the notion that men feel too "entitled" to sex and female bodies for sexual pleasure. However, scientific research has shown women, not men, feel the greatest amount of entitlement to sexual pleasure from the opposite gender's bodies. Thus the idea that there is a problem because men are "too entitled" to women's bodies is not founded in the scientific literature. The the contrary, women clearly feel more "entitled" to men's bodies for sexual pleasure than vice versa.
Data:
Time | Young Men | Young Women | |
---|---|---|---|
Entitlement to partner pleasure | T1 | 3.79 | 3.94 |
T2 | 3.86 | 4.06 |
Quotes:
- Young women reported more sense of entitlement to sexual partner pleasure than young men, and the average level of entitlement increased from T1 to T2.
- This finding compliments the broader research on gender difference in sexual development and behavior, which indicates young women place more emphasis than young men on the role of a sexual partner to meet their sexual desires and pleasure.
- Young women reported more sense of entitlement than young men, and older participants reported more entitlement relative to younger participants.
References:
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