I believe I saw that card in the Hallmark's Psychopathic Christmas collection.
Note the slip in the argument, though. For illustration, let 'female' be the 'sexual partner' and 'fuji' be the 'their' in the sentence.
Absolutely it's true. When I was in university I had a super hot girlfriend for one semester. She definitely was more attractive than I am and she absolutely leveraged that to cal all the shots. She went to her home town for christmas break and fucked her ex boyfriend. I got outraged but in the end took her back. Definitely she had the sexual power in that relationship and absolutely used it.
back then I was a starving student with only looks and personality with which to hook girls, now my succeess had made me more attractive and I am able to hold the upper hand but I have definitely been in relationships before where I was the weaker party, and felt it.
Debate all you want, anyone who is human knows exactly what I am talking about.
True, individuals are ultimately the moral agent of their own choices. But when we make those choices, we make them as parts of collectives. The error in Fuji's thinking is to grant that the outside world shapes our choices, but then to suppose that at the moment the individual chooses, the outside world vanishes
Nonsense, I don't appear that at all, you are having to misrepresent my statements to pretend that you have a counter argument. Plainly we do make our own choices in a social context. My social context includes Lawrence, Camus, Nietzche, and Herrick, as well as the observation that my peers commit infidelity regularly, and more often if they are higher status individuals. That is the context of my choice.
Wrong. Theft happens. Therefore embrace it, celebrate it, value it, not doing so is not life affirming. I channeled Fuji and, yes, it hurt.
More dishonesty. Intentionally ignoring my having told you the difference is dishonesty. Theft is not ordinary, and is less likely to be committed by higher status people, the opposite of infidelity.