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Empowering Men:
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Sperm Count and Clothing
Peter Zohrab 2017 |
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So I emailed him as follows:
This was a not particularly original idea of mine, but it sometimes seems
as if academics are 1/3 ignorant, 1/3 stupid and 1/3 prejudiced, so I thought
it worthwhile at least to ask the question.
He replied promptly but negatively, saying:
We did not check it.
There is some evidence for that but this could not explain the decline
in Western world.
I followed up my original email to him (see below) but he did not reply
again, doubtless being very busy.
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I wrote (slightly edited):
I am 67 years old, and have lived mostly in the Western world. When
I was young, men wore Y-front underwear which were relatively loose. Feminism
was not as strong as it is now and the Sexual Revolution happened when
I was a young man, I suppose.
Because of Feminism and the Sexual Revolution, women started to
expect men to dress in a sexy way and that could include tighter underwear
and tighter trousers, because non-marital and premarital sex became more
common. I remember being told by a girlfriend in the 1970s not to put
my wallet in my side pocket, because it obscured the view of the bulge
of my genitals.
I suggest that you or I should research the history of male clothing.
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I further wrote:
I have no idea if the tightness of clothing has anything to do with the
sperm-count, but I also have no idea why Dr. Levine is not interested in investigating
this possibility. I guess that in places like Israel (and New Zealand) no
academic is allowed to be openly critical of Feminism, so my mention of Feminism
could have scared him off!
I am writing this short article because I don't want
to find out later that he has investigated the issue, without telling me,
and got a Nobel Prize or something for proving that this was the cause of
the problem! Once, when I was studying Linguistics at York (UK), I
told my Lecturer, Steve Harlow, that Nancy Woo's rules for Hokkien tone-sandhi
didn't work, and he suggested I tell Geoffrey Sampson at the London School
of Economics, which I did (by letter -- this was the 1970's). He replied that
he wasn't surprised, and that was the end of our correspondence. Some years
later (in Bangkok) I happened to read an article by Sampson in the journal
Language, where he included a footnote saying that Nancy Woo's rules
for Hokkien tone-sandhi didn't work -- without giving any details or saying
who had told him that!
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