Co-Founder and former President of Open Love NY, Leon Feingold believes that monogamy is just a social
construct. What then should take its place? Attachment to multiple people at
the same time! Why not spread our love around and get our needs me? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FtdsZ8B7JQY&feature=youtu.be
Passion is king, but how does he justify it? According to Feingold,
it works. To defend his case, he polyamory is based upon compassion and truth. “Everyone
wins!” But how? If everyone is on the same page by honestly communicating their
wants and needs, all the participants can become friends and have their needs
met. To justify his case, Feingold points to the high divorce rates among
monogamous unions.
But do our wants and needs coincide so smoothly? According
to Feingold, they can. However, history presents a very different verdict. Israeli
pioneers coming from Europe and saturated with the idealism of their day –
radical socialism (Marxism) – regarded marriage as an illegitimate form of
ownership, along with the “possession” of children and clothing. They formed
numerous communities (kibbutzim) based upon these principles. Although a small
number have retained their communal raising of children, none have been able to
retain open, marriage-less sexual relationships. Contrary to Feingold, they
failed to prove their viability over the long run.
Although polyamory is attractive, it has never been
sustained in any culture. I think that this says something about its
workability. However, our affluent Western youth have seen so much
technological change, they are inclined to believe that change is possible in
all areas of life, even those that are closely associated with our human
nature, and history counts for nothing.
In contrast, the traditional monogamous union has a lot to
say in favor of itself according to the voice of history. In "Sex and
Culture" (1934) the anthropologist J.D. Unwin found a universal
correlation between monogamy and a civilization's "expansive energy."
He wrote:
·
"These [sexually progressive] societies
lived in different geographical environments; they belonged to different racial
stocks; but the history of their marriage customs is the same. In the beginning
each society had the same ideas in regard to sexual regulations. Then the same
struggles took place; the same sentiments were expressed; the same changes were
made; the same results ensued. Each society reduced its sexual opportunity to a
minimum [monogamy] and displaying great social energy, flourished greatly. Then
it extended its sexual opportunity; its energy decreased, and faded away. The
one outstanding feature of the whole story is its unrelieved monotony."
The late author, Aldous Huxley, summarized Unwin's extensive
research:
·
"Unwin's conclusions, which are based upon
an enormous wealth of carefully sifted evidence, may be summed up as
follows…[Sexual permissive societies] displays the least amount of mental and
social energy, the productive the most. Investigation shows that the societies
exhibiting the least amount of energy are those where pre-nuptial continence is
not imposed and where the opportunities for sexual indulgence after marriage
are greatest. The cultural condition of a society rises in exact proportion as
it imposes pre-nuptial and post-nuptial restraints upon sexual
opportunity."
·
"In human records there is no instance of a
society retaining its energy after a complete new generation has inherited a
tradition which does not insist on pre-nuptial and post-nuptial
continence." For Roman, Greek, Sumerian, Moorish, Babylonian, and
Anglo-Saxon civilizations, Unwin had several hundred years of history to draw
on. He found with no exceptions that these societies flourished during eras
that valued sexual fidelity. Inevitably, sexual mores would loosen and the
societies would subsequently decline, only to rise again when they returned to
more rigid sexual standards." https://www.tremr.com/Duck-Rabbit/sexually-permissive-societies-always-fall-anthropologist-says#.WoCempog4vY.facebook
Consequently, we should be suspicious of the glowing reports
coming out of the polyam community. Jase Lindgren has written
·
It isn't easy or fun to talk about abuse.
Abusive relationships come in many different iterations, and non-monogamous
relationships are not exempt from these kinds of unhealthy dynamics. It's
difficult for poly folk to speak publicly about abuse, as social stigma
discourages many people from sharing any negative or darker aspects of poly
relationships. https://www.multiamory.com/podcast/76-emotional-abuse
Blogger Alan M. recorded parts of prominent poly activist and
author Franklin Veaux’s keynote speech At a Poly Living convention in 2015:
·
“There was a time, long ago,” Franklin said […],
“when I had this naive idea that polyamorous relationships were less likely to
be abusive than monogamous relationships. Isolating a person is one of the
hallmarks of abuse. So if you’ve got more people in the relationship, it’s
harder to isolate someone, right? You have more eyes on a potential problem,
right?”
·
However, said Franklin, he came to realize that
because abusers are often influential and charismatic—and because groupthink is
such a known bug in human nature—an abuser can sway an entire group against a
person he or she is mistreating, belittling, controlling, or gaslighting.
(Gaslighting: undermining a person’s confidence in their own perceptions and
memories.) https://drfeminist.com/2016/08/29/dan-savage-is-wrong-exposing-abuse-polyamorous-relationships/
Based upon numerous online accounts, it seems that polyam
serves as a breeding ground for abuse, and this is not even to consider child
abuse and their inclusion within the polyamorous embrace.
Many studies have demonstrated that the safest place for
children is in a monogamous relationship between both biological parents. This
is also the wisdom of the Bible:
·
…the LORD was witness between you and the wife
of your youth, to whom you have been faithless, though she is your companion
and your wife by covenant. Did he not make them one, with a portion of the
Spirit in their union? And what was the one God seeking? Godly offspring. So
guard yourselves in your spirit, and let none of you be faithless to the wife
of your youth. For the man who does not love his wife but divorces her, says
the LORD, the God of Israel, covers his garment with violence, says the LORD of
hosts. So guard yourselves in your spirit, and do not be faithless. (Malachi
2:14-16 ESV)
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