Sexual Liberation

The right to say “no” is more important than the right to say “yes” in true sexual liberation.

Interesting, I thought that true sexual liberation and revolution was in the 1970s.

I’m not denoting the term to evoke a period of time, but instead a frame of mind. There is a big difference.

I see but I still think that there was a major sexual liberation frame of mind in the 1970s. I do not know if there has been any bigger revolution after that.

It was in the late seventies. Magazines like “Penthouse” began showing full frontal nudity, and things snowballed from there. What slowed down the sexual revolution was the AIDS virus. That put a damper on the sexual revolution, but people’s attitudes toward sex had been permanently changed. But again, when I spoke of sexual liberation I more meant that sex is something that should belong to the individual, and no one else has the right to tell a person how to express it. Unfortunately, in real life sex belongs to the society and social group in which you relate to other people. There is a lot of pressure to conform.

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