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Culture War Roundup for the week of January 1, 2024

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To be fair, the prevalence of cheating is very strong evidence that monos (especially men) are indeed dishonest about their desires for extra-relationship fucking, either because they're lying to themselves, or because they're willing to abandon this desire as a practical concession to finding a partner in a monogamy-dominated landscape.

If you think of the relationship as a bargain, and suppose that the other half of the relationship isn't fulfilling what you thought you'd be getting in exchange for your monogamy, it's quite easy to imagine that the trade deal has no longer become worth its maintenance. If you're happy, the thought of straying doesn't appeal. If you're unhappy, you look for a quick fix of some kind of high to make you feel better -- emotional fulfilment, the feeling of being sexually desirable, just getting your rocks off, or whatever.

I think it's much more accurate to consider cheating, in many cases, a symptom of a failing relationship. Not always -- some people just want to have their cake and eat it, some people are genuine sociopaths and so on. But a lot of the time, the pull of sleeping with someone else isn't strong if you're not already quite unhappy. Similarly, asking to open a previously monogamous relationship is basically the same thing, since poly is just "cheating, but with permission" the request comes up in much the same situation; if this ever happens, the relationship is already doomed. I have never seen a previously-monogamous relationship survive becoming open.

Consider a parallel to religious doctrine; the urge to sin is always there, nobody never feels the urge to sin and no religion really expects you to, it's the ability to resist that makes you virtuous. This would make the equivalent of a poly society one where theft and murder are fine morally because who is anyone else to tell you that you can't do that stuff?

This nicely segues into the role of jealousy. It's considered a negative and disdainful emotion

I one hundred percent reject this framing from the outset. Jealousy implies value. If someone is jealous of something you have, that means it is worth a lot to them. If lots of people are jealous of something you have, that means it's worth a lot in general. This goes completely unsaid in normal life because it doesn't need to be said -- yes, you're jealous of the guy with the fast car because you want it for yourself but can't have it due to cost. You're not jealous of the guy with a bag of apples because you can just go to the shop and buy your own bag of apples. The more exclusive something is, the more value it has. If I make a great achievement, it's in my interests that that achievement stay difficult, or else it becomes devalued.

If it became well known that the world's hottest 11/10 woman would fuck literally anyone who asked, fucking her wouldn't be considered very much of an accomplishment, nobody would be jealous of anyone who did it (because they could just do it too) and she wouldn't be considered to have much value. Men congratulate and envy each other for getting to fuck not the hottest women per se, but the most exclusive women, and the women are the most exclusive because they're the hottest and can therefore afford to pick and choose to the highest degree. In the same way that getting into a prestigious university (used to) mean that your academic ability is higher than the rest, getting to sleep with such a woman means that your attractiveness is higher than others; or, that you have more value.

In my estimation, then, if poly practitioners don't feel jealousy, it's not because they have evolved to an enlightened phase, it's because they simply don't value any of their partners enough to particularly care if they lose them to someone else. There are always more, right? Perfectly interchangeable. This is in the same way that a lot of people with Masters degrees and so on can struggle to find minimum wage work; if you have a specific degree, it's relatively obvious to the store you're applying to that you're going to drop them the moment something better comes along, so they don't want to waste their time integrating you in the first place; this is how I imagine poly relationships are all the time. You're the "primary" only until the ever-rotating pool of partners washes up a better prospect than you, and then you're immediately sidelined.

Public declarations like pledge ceremonies and weddings "work" not because they physically prevent the oath-takers from subsequently breaking their commitments, rather the aspiration here is the pomp and circumstance of the ritual comes laden with sufficient social pressure to encourage ongoing compliance.

Not exactly. When you mentioned the concept, the first thing I thought of was that in the early days of my relationship, we were dating long distance, which is obviously fraught with trust issues from the start. But how I consoled myself was through costly trust signals; we kept driving the 4 hours each way to visit each other every weekend. I reasoned that this was a considerable outlay of time, effort and money if he was just planning on using me for a quick fuck and cheating on the side. There was no way he couldn't have found someone closer to use. It must have meant something because he was willing to put in the time and money to do these things that wouldn't have been necessary otherwise. There was no other explanation for going to such costs.

You can think of costly trust signals as ritualistic sacrifices of resources to prove devotion. I don't think social pressure particularly comes into it. Who shames divorces anymore, anyways?

In my estimation, then, if poly practitioners don't feel jealousy, it's not because they have evolved to an enlightened phase, it's because they simply don't value any of their partners enough to particularly care if they lose them to someone else. There are always more, right? Perfectly interchangeable.

Damn this stings. You might be on to something.

You can think of costly trust signals as ritualistic sacrifices of resources to prove devotion. I don't think social pressure particularly comes into it. Who shames divorces anymore, anyways?

I don't disagree at all. The part about social pressure was only one aspect of enforcement, and really only applicable to commitment rituals.