VeronicaChaos said:
I like how it is now. Sex is taboo, which is good for business, and violence is popular, which is great because not only do I love it, but violence censorship in America is ALMOST gone (the US censored A Serbian Film because they can't tell the difference between a real baby and an obviously fake babydoll....oi.) For me, personally, it's the perfect combination.
I had a hard time thanking this ^^^^^^ VC, and I wonder if you are really good with the prevailing attitude and censorship of all things sexual, and nudity to a great extent? I mean I understand it is good for business, but on a personal level doesn't it feel a bit insulting that most ppl would publicly frown on, or outright denounce what you do for a living as something unhealthy, or even dangerous to society? I don't think most ppl truly feel that way, but that many do, and most would be compelled to say they did is what is unhealthy, and endangers a society to remain un-enlightened.
I'll try to keep the Word Count down, but I want to say a couple of things.
First, after returning to see the sort of response the OP got, I felt like the dumb monkey with the typewriter who got lucky enough to hammer out something worthy. As I went through the replies my response was, "Yes, Yes, Exactly", to most of them. I am so glad that I'm not alone on this, because it has bothered me for a long time. When I have tried to point out to others that something as lovely as the human form, and sexuality are so shunned that even conversation of it is uncomfortable to most ppl, while the public demand for things like the story of seal team 6, and the assassination of Bin Ladin are so great that there are currently 5or6 books being written, their response has been to uncomfortable change the subject.
I also should be a little more clear about how I feel about open unrestricted public nudity. I think it should be just that, unrestricted, and unstigmatized. That's not to say that I think it would be a good thing if everyone went out tomorrow butt naked. Besides being impractical, I think the game looses a bit of its mystique when all the cards are face up.
My objections are not with the restrictions and censorship of nudity and sex themselves, or the lack of such in relation to graphic violence. My concerns are with the attitude, with the mindset that facilitates these. To me it seems so clear just thinking of how these two different concepts lay on the spirit. On one hand, the naked body, physical love, and passion, - On the other hand the international act of causing injury, or death to another living thing. I feel nothing bad, or stressful, or disgraceful about the former, and feel all those things about the latter.
Does that mean I think all laws, restrictions, and censorship on nudity and sex should be lifted? No, I think eventually they should just go away because a healthy society will have no reason for such silly shit. That does not necessarily mean that running around butt naked will not be considered unfashionable, or crass. But not doing something because it is not something a healthy well adjusted person cares to do, is much different than not doing it because it is a shameful thing that everyone is made to feel uncomfortable about identifying with, or because it is restricted for those reasons.
Do I think the glorification and commercialization of graphic violence should be more restricted and regulated than it now is? No, again it is about attitude and a healthy understanding of what it is we subject our spirit to. I would hope we might eventually reach a place where there no longer is any profit in violence, because there is no longer any taste for it. I think I have a better chance of selling the previous paragraph than this one, but really I feel no less passionate in my belief that the stimulation provided by violence for violence sake is a vile thing, than I feel the stimulation of physical love, the naked form, and passion of sex is a wholesome thing.
So ideally what I think we may get to 100 or 200 or 500 years from now, is a healthy attitude where sex, sexuality, and the naked human are not shameful ideas only to be acknowledged in dark private places. I believe that part of that healthy attitude will be a greater respect for human life, and for the violence that is so much a part of our everyday world that we give very little thought to in this day and age. I think we may come to understand it as the cholesterol that over time hardens our collective spirits.