HussarVanburen
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2007
- Posts
- 695
Paging John Norman, one of your characters seems to have escaped...
Hm, can't tell whether you're deliberately misconstruing her or just oblivious to your own context.
In case it's the latter: you equated virginity to virtue, and that is the context of the reply. Like a handshake, a sexual act certainly can have moral weight. But if a woman showed up and said that shaking hands is the measure of a man's virtue, we'd laugh at her. Like we're laughing at you now.
The context it not merely virginity. To quote her own words:
"Sex is not a moral issue".
And surely, virginity is not the measure of a woman's virtue entirely. A woman can still be virtuous when no longer a virgin: As a wife, a mother, et cetera. However, her moral character is tainted when the loss of virginity (voluntary loss) stems from a moral failure.
Also, all sex is of a moral character. The very nature of the act is such that it cannot be amoral. It is too intimate in the relations and of too serious of gravity by nature to be anything -but- a moral issue. As I said, even casual matters with human beings often are subjects of moral value. How can this be anything but?
So glad we have an expert here to tell us who is and isn't a feminist.
Read feminist literature. I have had the distinct displeasure of doing so. The majority of the real feminists have been strikingly anti-sex.

