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BobKKKindle$
4th March 2009, 02:55
Mark Blasius: How would you envision a sexually free society? Do you think any limitations should be placed upon a sexual revolution, and what role would cross-generational sex play in a sexual revolution?

Kate Millett: A sexual revolution begins with the emancipation of women, who are the chief victims of patriarchy, and also with ending of homosexual oppression. Part of the patriarchal family structure involves the control of the sexual life of children; indeed, the control of children totally. Children have virtually no rights guaranteed by law in our society and besides, they have no money which, in a money economy, is one of the most important sources of their oppression. Certainly, one of children's essential rights is to express themselves sexually, probably primarily with each other but with adults as well. So the sexual freedom of children is an important part of a sexual revolution. How do we bring this about? The problem here is that when you have an exploitative situation between adults and children as you have between men and women, cross-generational relationships take place in a situation of inequality. Children are in a very precarious position when they enter into relationships with adults, not only in a concrete material sense but emotionally as well, because their personhood is not acknowledged in our society.


Do you think that a tender loving erotic relationship can exist between a boy and a man?

Of course, or between a female child and an older woman. Men and women have loved each other for millennia, as have people of different races. What I'm concerned about is the iniquitous context within which these relationships must exist. Of course, these relationships can be non-exploitative and, considering the circumstances, they are probably heroic and very wonderful; but we have to admit that they can be exploitative as well - like in the prostitution of youth.

Don't you think that age-of-consent laws are barriers to exploring possibilities for non-exploitative crossgenerational relationships and, more importantly, serve to further deny the right of youths to sexual expression?

Well, they were originally meant to protect the child from exploitation. But what's interesting is that the right to child sexuality is not being approached initially as the right of children to express themselves with each other, which was the issue in the '30s with the early sexual liberationists. Instead, it's being approached as the right of men to have sex with kids below the age of consent and no mention is made of relationships between women and girls. It seems as though the principal spokespeople are older men and not youths.

That's probably because children or youths have no political voice. But most gay male youth groups seem to support lowering or abolition of the age of consent as a first step. How prevalent are erotic relationships between women and girls, do you think?

In general, women are given more freedom than men within patriarchy to love across generations. But I don't see the correlative of man/boy relationship existing in lesbian culture as I know it. There's a lot of cross-generational contact among lesbians and even heterosexual women -for example between older and young women artists - but they're mainly as friendships or as mentor relationships. And cross-generational sexual relationships are more of a topic within the male homosexual movement than the female homosexual movement and women in the movement often condemn its advocates. As women, we're probably, more protective of children. Also, having been exploited, we're more sensitive to the possibility of exploitation - we've been minors all of our history. We're more sexually repressed than men, having been given a much more strict puritanical code of behavior than men ever have. Men engage in sexual activities that women often regard as promiscuous - it's as though men don't have the defenses that women have against mutual exploitation - against sexual use to the degree of abuse. So as women, we've experienced a great deal of sexual repression; at the same time, we're less exploitative. It's possible also that the condition of lesbians has been so repressive that it prevents them from seeing female people below the age of consent as sexual partners. There's still, I think, a holding back among lesbians from converting that Platonic mentor relationship across generations into an erotic one because of the enormous and potentially catastrophic complications involved in doing so. Catastrophic not only in the personal sense but also in terms of the persecution inflicted by the outside world.

The dialog about these issues within the lesbian and homosexual male movements raises very interesting issues. Have you thought about incest as an issue too? I've always wondered about the power of the incest taboo because, as child and adult sexuality reaches out to greater and greater freedoms, the proximity of family members makes one experiment and challenge this taboo. The incest taboo has always been one of the cornerstones of patriarchal thought.

We have to have an emancipation proclamation for children. What is really at issue is children's rights and not, as it has been formulated up to now, merely the right of sexual access to children.

But shouldn't one of the rights of children be that of choosing to have an erotic relationship with an older person?

Oh sure, part of a free society would be that you could choose whomever you fancied, and children should be able to freely choose as well. But it's very hard to be free if you have no rights about anything, if you're: subjected to endless violence - both physical and psychological, if you're not permitted to speak, if you have no money, if you're already governed by a whole state system whether you want to be there or not. I would think that, given the conditions under which you're a young person in this society, many things would be at least as important to you as your sexuality.

It strikes me that there is a contradiction in supporting children's liberation while maintaining paternalistic age-of-consent laws and stigmatizing adults who have erotic relations with young people.

If you don't change the social condition of children you still have an inescapable inequality. That's like the story of the 1917 revolution. Men and women were declared equal one morning and everybody could divorce each other by postcard. It's just that the women had the babies and getting divorced by postcard when you've been given no means to earn a living and no education and you're in an enormously inferior economic situation meant that you were only being declared equal while not being given the substance of equality.

I can see how gay youth groups would be very interested in abolishing the age-of-consent law because it must he very oppressive for them. But it just seems to me that this has been mainly an issue for older men rather than for gay youth.

The rhetoric of pedophilia-that of older men speaking out for the sexual freedom of boys-reflects the underlying powerlessness of children. One could say that it is symptomatic of this powerlessness. Boy lovers are directly and acutely cognizant of the social and economic conditions which crush kids. But it is these same conditions which prevent kids both from having a real political visibility and from acting on their own behalf.

But what is our freedom fight about? Is it about the liberation of children or just having sex with them? I would like to see a broader movement involving young people who would be making the decisions because it's their issue and their fight. Theirs is the authentic voice.
http://www.ipce.info/ipceweb/Library/interv_kate_m.htm

Janine Melnitz
5th March 2009, 19:54
Just a heads up for the paranoid: that link is to a pro-pedo group's site. If you aren't scared of the Feds, go ahead.

BobKKKindle$
5th March 2009, 22:46
Oh really? I just searched up Kate Millet into google, and this came up. Anyway, regardless of its origin, Millet makes an interesting argument - removing age of consent laws under capitalism and socialism should not be treated in the same way, because children living under capitalism are generally placed in positions of weakness by virtue of the fact that they have no independent source of income and are encouraged to respect the decisions of authority figures such as adults even when these decisions are perceived by the child as being unjust or wrong, and this weakness means that the potential for exploitation in relationships between adults and children exists, leading to sexual abuse in cross-generational relationships. By contrast, the elimination of economic dependence under socialism, and changes in the way society treats children, could create a basis for consensual cross-generational relationships. It is important to understand that socialist revolution is not just about changing the way we organize the production and distribution of material goods as a means to abolish poverty and economic hardship - it also involves changes in the way people perceive the world and interact with each other in order to enrich our personal lives, including sexual interactions, and so if we eliminate hierarchy in the economic sphere, it is not unfair to assume that we would also be able to fight against hierarchy in the social/sexual sphere as well, resulting in new possibilities for sexual expression and mutually-beneficial relationships.

WhitemageofDOOM
6th March 2009, 00:04
I think child liberation is important, as there the social group most oppressed by the current system. On the other hand I'm a bit skeptical about enthusiastically supporting an admitted pedo, but he is rather reasonable in his statement that it is the children's voice that matters not anyone elses, the problem is as he also admits children don't GET a voice.

Bitter Ashes
6th March 2009, 01:36
The way I see it, voting age, age to drink/smoke/etc and age of consent should be the same. Whatever age it's decieded that should be, should apply for everything because at that point you're declaring that person is capable of making rational adult descions and they are prepared to be held responsible for the consequences of thier actions.
I really dont mind if that age is 21, 18, 16, younger or older, or even if it's determined by some kind of "responsibility test" or something, so long as there's a clear milestone set. That milestone is the point when an individual is able to stand on thier own two feet and accept that thier actions are thier own and that ultimatly the buck stops at the them however things effect them for good or ill as a consquence of those actions.
Until that point is reached, I do not believe that individual can give informed consent any more than somebody who is drunk, severely mentaly ill, comatose, or the like and anyone attempting to have sex with that individual is clearly taking advantage of a vunerable individual who doesnt know any better.

rioters bloc
6th March 2009, 03:19
Oh really? I just searched up Kate Millet into google, and this came up. Anyway, regardless of its origin, Millet makes an interesting argument - removing age of consent laws under capitalism and socialism should not be treated in the same way, because children living under capitalism are generally placed in positions of weakness by virtue of the fact that they have no independent source of income and are encouraged to respect the decisions of authority figures such as adults even when these decisions are perceived by the child as being unjust or wrong, and this weakness means that the potential for exploitation in relationships between adults and children exists, leading to sexual abuse in cross-generational relationships. By contrast, the elimination of economic dependence under socialism, and changes in the way society treats children, could create a basis for consensual cross-generational relationships. It is important to understand that socialist revolution is not just about changing the way we organize the production and distribution of material goods as a means to abolish poverty and economic hardship - it also involves changes in the way people perceive the world and interact with each other in order to enrich our personal lives, including sexual interactions, and so if we eliminate hierarchy in the economic sphere, it is not unfair to assume that we would also be able to fight against hierarchy in the social/sexual sphere as well, resulting in new possibilities for sexual expression and mutually-beneficial relationships.

I agree, although I would argue that like other systems of oppression and marginalisation, the way that we construct childhood and conceptualise children and their relationship with adults is just as much socially and culturally influenced as it is economic and so it will be a hard fight in my opinion. Also important to remember that the concept of childhood holds radically different meanings in different cultures and amongst different socioeconomic groups.

To be honest I find it hard to talk about this kind of stuff with other people because they usually act as though I support child sex abuse and molestation, which is completely the opposite of what I advocate which is autonomy , respect, and the active participation of children in decisions that affect their lives.


I think child liberation is important, as there the social group most oppressed by the current system. On the other hand I'm a bit skeptical about enthusiastically supporting an admitted pedo, but he is rather reasonable in his statement that it is the children's voice that matters not anyone elses, the problem is as he also admits children don't GET a voice.

Kate Millet is a womyn, just so you know for future :)

ev
6th March 2009, 08:09
I could critique this, there is much i disagree with and some things i do agree with like the liberation of children and abolition of a patriarchal structure, however I do have a problem with various aspects of this idea and regulation of some kind would have to be necessary to ensure that childrens interests are always kept in regard and that they are not exploited.

Cumannach
6th March 2009, 16:22
I read two of Kate Millets books. Still haven't decided if I hated or loved them.

Hegemonicretribution
10th March 2009, 14:32
The way I see it, voting age, age to drink/smoke/etc and age of consent should be the same. Whatever age it's decieded that should be, should apply for everything because at that point you're declaring that person is capable of making rational adult descions and they are prepared to be held responsible for the consequences of thier actions.
I really dont mind if that age is 21, 18, 16, younger or older, or even if it's determined by some kind of "responsibility test" or something, so long as there's a clear milestone set. That milestone is the point when an individual is able to stand on thier own two feet and accept that thier actions are thier own and that ultimatly the buck stops at the them however things effect them for good or ill as a consquence of those actions.
Until that point is reached, I do not believe that individual can give informed consent any more than somebody who is drunk, severely mentaly ill, comatose, or the like and anyone attempting to have sex with that individual is clearly taking advantage of a vunerable individual who doesnt know any better.

I can see the merit of standardising the point of adulthood, because there is something irrational about deeming an individual capable of choosing to smoke, but no drink, or the otehr way around. Likewise choosing how to dispose of income, but not about who or when to have sex with, or granting a choice about what subjects to study, but not about education in general.

There is a flipside, however, because any such distinction between 'childhood' and adulthood would be completely arbitrary. This is useful from an administrative point of view, and a legal point of view, but how much does it help the individuals who would have to live in such a world?

The problem with choosing any sort of age restriction is that the ability to deal with a situation is first determined by your experience in such situations, and secondly by general experience and your ability to relate to other situations.

In the case of sex, it is possible to be a sexually experienced youth with a fuller understanding of certain issues than an educated but inexperienced 40 year old virgin.

The ability to deal with exploitation and the negative side of relationships only comes about after a certain amount of exposure. This changes the central question slightly to "At what point do we deem an individual , not only rational enough to make decisions on matters that they have no experience of, but also to possess enough general 'life-experience' to conduct themselves safely in such affairs?"

The fact remains that age itself is not as important as subject specific experience, and an ability to relate other experience to the issue at hand.

A responsibility test can not account for this, because if it was to be meaningful then it would surely relate to the areas of life which are to become open to an individual after passing the test. This would of course lead to gaining an understanding of how to pass a test, but not the ssues under examination, or if it did, then the understanding would be of pre-approaved responses to questions and challenges. Now I am not saying that sexual revolutions are best initiated by virgins, or that new approaches to smoking ought to be generated based on the view of someone who never smoked. What I am trying to illustrate is that prescribing such poisitions (of accepted understanding of an issue) will have knock on effects for the way in which people will approach an issue in the future. I don't want to get caught up on this too much right now, but I am trying to suggest potential problems for autonomy in a society which specifies an acceptable attitude towards an issue which is then understood as necessary to accept before being able to discover things for yourself.

To return to the original problem, the older the inexperienced individual, the more life-experience you would have expected them to gain which they can then use as a guide for their initial forays in new aspects of life such as sexual activity. However, for the same reason that age cannot be taken as a strict guide for how experienced someone is in a certain activity, nor can it be cited as a definitive measure of how much applicable 'life-experience' one has.

This of course brings back the initial problem deciding when someone is capable, and to that I think I can offer only one possible situation. When they consider themselves ready.

I can see that this is not perfet, but given the nature of the problems surrounding this I don't think we can ever potentially reach a perfect solution, so I would claim that complete autonomy begins at the point when an individual claims it. Of course, it would be hoped that other, and more knowledgable influences will at least act as a guide, but given that even a child is essentially autonomous, and capable of disobeying the restrictions placed on them, there is not really much point in maintaining them. By removing them you place respoonsibility firmly upon the shoulders of the agent who is acting. Restrictions suppose the responsibility of an agent to be insufficient to cape with certain cases, but as sufficient to blame them if they do not adhere to prescribes modes of conduct.

Difficult, difficult topic. Autonomy is so important to everything, and yet when you start trying to refine the concept so that it can be applied you present yourslef with as many problems as those you solve.