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From Prudery to 'Freedom': A Brief Review of the Sexual Revolution
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15465 |
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Section : |
MODERN THOUGHT
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| Issue
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12 / 1989 |
8,396 Words |
| Author
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J. Gordon Muir J. Gordon Muir is a former pharmaceutical industry research
physician. He is currently editing the forth-coming book,
Kinsey, Sex and Fraud, upon which this article is based. |
Revolutions often produce chaos without delivering the freedoms the participants were led to expect. The sexual revolution (which some say began with Alfred Kinsey) has been a case in point. The social consequences are everyday news: teenage pregnancy, abortion, and parents (often single and impoverished); unwanted children; child abuse; and the list goes on. The medical consequences are equally devastating: several venereal disease epidemics (largely unrecognized by those unaffected) bringing untold suffering and costing the U.S. economy several billion dollars each year. There are additional effects in terms of divorce, abandoned families, disturbed children, and the host of social and psychological consequences that follows these traumas.
What happened in the rush of sexual freedom was not the discovery of a new, free, and imaginative society, but one that threw out the baby (necessary codes of conduct for a healthy society) with the bathwater (Victorian prudery, repression, and hypocrisy). Of course, it was impossible for this morality pendulum to have stopped in some sane middle ground because, in addition to being impelled by its own momentum, it was commercially driven by the vast profits to be reaped by catering to a society in which large numbers of people wanted to see and hear everything. And a whole generation was told by many of the people it placed credence in that it was good to see, hear, and do everything.
The result is a society in the United States (and most Western countries) that is ecologically off the tracks--even more than its environmental ecology is derailed. The specifically human ecology is the biological and mental (some would add spiritual) state of society and its members and the interplay of factors
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