M/F INEQUALITY: SEXUALITY IS PART OF EVERY POLICY INTERESTING ARTICLE ON THE IMPACT OF SEXUALITY ON SOCIAL FUNCTIONING, AND THE RESULTING POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES. TRAUMA SEXOLOGY ADDRESSES THIS DILEMMA IN THE BED, HAS METHODOLOGIES, MODELS AND INVITES ANYONE WHO WORKS AND WANTS TO WORK TOWARDS RECOVERY FROM THIS TRAUMASEXUAL VIRUS.
On May 8, 2018, the Van Dale promoted the word 'incel' to word of the day, after Alek Minassian killed ten people in Toronto just before that. He stated that that act should be the start of a so-called incel-revolution, the word incel comes from involuntary celibate. In other words: boys who can't get a girl. Also in the recent attack by the German right-wing extremist Thomas Rathjen, the afterthoughts were not only about his depopulation theories, but also about his eighteen-year-long sexual drought.
Unfortunately, population is not the only radical right-wing idea with which Dutch politicians also flirt. After all, the problematic relationship with women runs like a thread through the oeuvre of our own Thierry Baudet. Last year journalist Hiske Versprille tweeted her experience with a 20-year-old student who started complaining about a friend of hers in the Amsterdam metro. She's a slut. She's done it with the whole school. To which Versprille said, "Not with you, huh?
Three years ago, I interviewed Baudet for Quote. He told me how women don't have that much ambition and that they need a right-wing man to explain the world to them. I was laughing about it back then. When the camera went off, he spoke to our intern, a young girl, who was operating the camera.
He stood up extra straight and looked at her tightly. Do you know what it's like with women in the Netherlands: they don't get fucked properly. Do you recognise that?' The white pulled out press officer Jeroen de Vries did not know how fast he had to guide us towards the exit.
When Baudet, after swiping to the right half of Amsterdam, finally managed to play chess with a young girl, he explained to the trade journal Story: 'I notice that I am so much in love that I no longer have an eye for other women. I don't even want to masturbate anymore, because that would be a mistake for her. I want to be able to make myself completely available to her.' Replace her with Him, and you'll hear a monk.
Now, there are a lot of things you can say about your great love when you begin to fall in love, but the fact that Baudet chose this is no coincidence, of course.
His remarks about masturbation are entirely in line with the incel culture within the alt-right youth, in which supreme priest Jordan Peterson preaches that there is nothing noble about masturbation. It is the great overlap between extremist ideologies, from radical Islam to Nazism: one learns young men not to masturbate in order to keep them malleable for more important matters. This is understandable, because a man with a pleasant sex life has no desire at all for some holy war. Witty enough, the latest book by FvD-ideologist Paul Cliteur has a cover with a catholic cross, dangling between two breasts. As if the professor wants to test his students on their tenacity.
The message of alt-right is clear: keep it dry, until you find a pure specimen that also knows its place. In his consideration of the work of the French writer Houellebecq, Baudet leaves no room for misunderstanding; women should not work full-time, because then they will have an unhappy marriage and too few children.
Baudet's fiancée recently showed herself to be a good student when she told in - again - Story that a career was not for her, and the Dutch people will soon, when Baudet is in charge, 'have another wife to look at besides Maxima'.
Baudet's appeal to Christians cannot be separated from his rejection of emancipation - 'even the new life in the womb can be destroyed so as not to disrupt individual freedom'. And perhaps Baudet's appeal is not limited to transformations. After all, Houellebecq once let it be known that he finds it best to make a bargain with the Islamists. At least they have a sense of honour, and feminism is always worse.
Sander Schimmelpenninck is a journalist and entrepreneur.