Difference between revisions of "Sex strike"

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Janelle Monáe called for a sex strike.<ref>https://qz.com/958346/history-shows-that-sex-strikes-are-a-surprisingly-effective-strategy-for-political-change/</ref> While there was widespread media attention there is no evidence that a sex strike occurred.
 
Janelle Monáe called for a sex strike.<ref>https://qz.com/958346/history-shows-that-sex-strikes-are-a-surprisingly-effective-strategy-for-political-change/</ref> While there was widespread media attention there is no evidence that a sex strike occurred.
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=== November 2018 ===
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CNN calls for a sex strike to influence how men vote.<ref>https://twitchy.com/brettt-3136/2018/11/03/this-is-cnn-womens-sexual-pleasure-has-never-been-more-political-how-about-a-sex-strike-before-midterms/</ref>
   
 
=== May 2019 ===
 
=== May 2019 ===

Revision as of 15:34, 24 December 2019

Feminists seem to call for a sex strike on a fair regular basis. These strikes are often inspired by or compared to the ancient Greek play Lysistrata. There is little evidence that female sex strikes happen let alone effect change. Calls for female sex strikes typically garner media attention for some cause but do little beyond this.

April 2017

Janelle Monáe called for a sex strike.[1] While there was widespread media attention there is no evidence that a sex strike occurred.

November 2018

CNN calls for a sex strike to influence how men vote.[2]

May 2019

Alyssa Milano proposed a sex strike to protest restrictions on abortion in the United States.[3] Many women such as Bette Midler and Maureen Shaw supported Milano's position while others disagreed on the basis that it portrayed sex as something that women give to men.[4] While there was widespread media attention there is no evidence that a sex strike occurred.

References