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Why haven't you adopted a celibacy resolution yet /r9k/? Once you come to the rational conclusion that you don't actually want to have sex at all, you no longer feel frustration for lacking access to women, and no longer feel contempt for women or female nature. I will share my reasonings here. Some of these are undoubtably personal, and may not apply to everyone, but see for yourself if you can learn to embrace celibacy as a voluntary lifestyle choice.
>all acts of physical and emotional intimacy, if allowed to develop unrestricted, will ultimately lead to sexual intercourse. All things desirable about the female form are not pure expressions of art and God, they only appear that way to you so that the succubi may milk you seed form you.
>the purpose of sex is procreation, and any sex acts always carry the risk of unwanted procreation. As for myself, my philosophical, political and economic views with regard to my own life are purely anti-natalist. Having offspring is something I absolutely positively never want to do. It is not my mission to convince others of antinatalism, but to thoroughly consider the ethical implications of being responsible for the creation of new human life. And responsibility is key here, some would tell you that your birth was simply an act of nature, or and act of God, but regardless, it was an act of procreation between your parents that made you. Likewise, it is fallacious to defer responsibility for reproduction to happenstance, you have the capacity to choose whether to create life, if given the opportunity, to engage in sex acts simply hoping to cheat nature, or to steer clear of procreation altogether.
>all acts of physical and emotional intimacy, if allowed to develop unrestricted, will ultimately lead to sexual intercourse. All things desirable about the female form are not pure expressions of art and God, they only appear that way to you so that the succubi may milk you seed form you.
>the purpose of sex is procreation, and any sex acts always carry the risk of unwanted procreation. As for myself, my philosophical, political and economic views with regard to my own life are purely anti-natalist. Having offspring is something I absolutely positively never want to do. It is not my mission to convince others of antinatalism, but to thoroughly consider the ethical implications of being responsible for the creation of new human life. And responsibility is key here, some would tell you that your birth was simply an act of nature, or and act of God, but regardless, it was an act of procreation between your parents that made you. Likewise, it is fallacious to defer responsibility for reproduction to happenstance, you have the capacity to choose whether to create life, if given the opportunity, to engage in sex acts simply hoping to cheat nature, or to steer clear of procreation altogether.
