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You know any post that begins with "I'm a 52-year-old man with sexual issues" is going to be entertaining, but even that opening salvo does little to prepare you for Philip Weiss' defense of Eliot Spitzer by way of attacking the “widely-upheld pretense that bourgeois American marriage resolves sexual life for all men.” It’s a revolution, Weiss cries! “Gays had their liberation, women had theirs, what about straight married guys?” 

Well, yes, why not? In fact, this very evening I plan to put the proposition to my wife in the plainest possible terms: “Look, we gave you the right to vote. Now you’re going to sign this permission slip saying I can have sex with whatever neighbor or acquaintance is interested in servicing a slightly chubby man’s sexual desires. You’ll do it because we both believe in equality.” Honestly, I’m not that optimistic and the sure-let-my-wife-screw-other-guys! revolution is no doubt a bit further off... More:

In Europe his needs would have a place. Not a place of honor, but a place. In the U.S. we make marriage a sexual stronghold in the midst of a hypersexualized culture, then stoke the men with Viagra like hormone-fed cattle, stroke them with internet porn, politicize married sex as a kind of covenant of citizenship.

Spitzer likely appreciates the support now, but one gets the impression he wouldn’t have been lenient with the supposed prostitution ringleaders he took down if they had only argued they felt like stroked hormone-fed cattle being forced into a puritan covenant. Me? I'm partial to Tabin's argument. I say legalize it, but let's not celebrate it.

Still, Weiss clearly feels passionately enough about Spitzer’s case to issue rare praise for Alan Dershowitz (“Execrable on Palestinian human rights, he was eloquent on Spitzer's”), whom he normally finds himself at loggerheads with over the vast Israel Lobby complex, as well as Spitzer’s call girl (“beautiful chick, amazing rack”). And if someone such as…Oh, I don’t know, say, Silda Wall Spitzer happens to believe maybe an “amazing rack” doesn’t supersede wedding vows or create an air of nobility, Weiss isn’t having it:

I know what [Spitzer] was thinking; I get it. And all the patronizing talk about men's stupidity bothers me. God made me this way. Any smart wife knows there's an upside.

Yes, quit being so stupid honey, and pass me the checkbook. I've been um, difficult with my special paid lady friend again, and she needs some more cash to accept it's...safe. Lord! “I'm not complaining about marriage,” Weiss insists in his original post, “it's the best thing in my life.” Just potentially not better than a legal, if a bit too pricey, prostitute.

topics:
Israel

About the Author

Shawn Macomber is a contributing editor to The American Spectator.

http://spectator.org/blog/2008/03/13/the-naughty-time-revolution

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