On Jun 13, 2005, at 2:35 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

From: Ronn!Blankenship <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

At 08:28 PM Sunday 6/12/2005, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In a message dated 6/11/2005 5:52:21 PM Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

How does procreation have to do with homosexual rape among prisoners and how to prevent it, which is what this discussion was originally about?

We are animals (I mean that in no pejorative way). Our sex drive is an adaptation that insures that we will procreate. Men don't have sex to have babies directly but the drive for sex is founded in procreation.

Initially, maybe, but all along our evolutionary branch there are abundant examples of penile play and penetration used to do many things *other than* procreate. Some are pleasant and probably reinforce social bonds. Some are not so much so and seem to reinforce social *hierarchy*. Reducing sex to something as simple as a drive to procreate (in humans) seems as sensible to me as attributing sexual orientation to a "gene".

So the persons the men who want sex most are young men because this makes for more babies and they want to have sex with young women. With gay sex the object of diesire is changed but the diesire for youth is not

Oy. Not quite sure where to start on this one...

For most of our evolutionary history, few of our species ever made it past 30 or so. If there's any inherited component to sexual attraction, this is surely a factor that cannot be overlooked.

But I think you might be overlooking something significant, in much the same way that a fish doesn't notice water: Culture. In the US for certain, a LOT of value is artificially placed on youth. In the midst of our "look-young-or-die" culture, drawing conclusions about sex partners that claim to be anchored solidly in biology seems a tad risky. We'd need a major longitudinal study of many cultures before we could look for something like biological causes to behaviors as complex as sexuality.

But all of this is apart from prison rape, which doesn't seem to be about social bonding; it seems more like a way of enforcing superiority on others, doesn't it? So the procreative aspects of sexuality are completely abrogated here; it's the social enforcement aspects of penetrative intercourse that are coming into play.


--
Warren Ockrassa, Publisher/Editor, nightwares Books
http://books.nightwares.com/
Current work in progress "The Seven-Year Mirror"
http://www.nightwares.com/books/ockrassa/Flat_Out.pdf

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