Men Aren’t Paying For Sex Anymore Because the Internet Makes Free Sex Easy

Paying for sex may become a
thing of the past, and the Internet could be the cause. A
nationally representative survey suggests that the percentage of
men who pay money for sex, or get paid, is at its lowest point on
record.

The numbers come from the General Social Survey
(GSS), a massive, decades-long project of the independent National
Opinion Research Center (NORC). The Los Angeles Times

reports
some of the most interesting facts:

In a string of surveys between 1991 and 1996, nearly 17% of men
said they had ever paid for or received payment for sex; that fell
to 13.2% between 2006 and 2012. Last year, that number hit the
lowest point since the question was first asked — 9.1% — though
statisticians caution the unusually small number could be a
fluke.

The survey drew no distinction between buying and selling sex,
but men are widely assumed to be customers far more often than they
are sellers.

The numbers seem to be shifting with the generations: Older men
are much more likely to say they have bought or sold sex at some
point in their lives. Younger men, in turn, have been less likely
to report doing so than men of the same ages a few decades ago.

[…]

The sweeping survey, funded principally by the National Science
Foundation, has questioned more than 57,000 Americans since 1972.
Nearly 11,000 men have answered the question about paying or being
paid for sex since it was first asked in 1991.

The question is: Why? A range of possibilities exist,
from fear of AIDS to changing dynamics in the military. Another
possibility the Times points to is that the Internet makes
it so easy to get off for free.

The scale and
scope
of online dating and the niche-conducive culture of the
web make finding sexual partners easier than ever. As BuzzFeed

points out
, “ugly schmucks,” diaper-fetishists, and even people
with mullets have their own Web sites to find like-minded
mates.

For those not into commitment to other people, the Internet’s
endless terabytes of free, instantaneously accessible pornography
satisfies the appetite. As an added bonus, statistics have
shown for years
that there is a correlation between the rise of
porn and the fall of sexual crimes.

Although most Americans have a negative outlook about our
collective moral well-being, as Nick Gillespie
suggests
in “Society is Coarser But Better,” the growing
ubiquity of porn (and the relaxing of other taboos) is a pretty
good trade-off for a society in which “youth violence, sex, and
drug use are all trending down.” The GSS data indicates something
even better. Consenting adults do not need to make a trade-off; The
goods they want simply became more freely available.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/05/men-arent-paying-for-sex-anymore-because
via IFTTT

Men Aren't Paying For Sex Anymore Because the Internet Makes Free Sex Easy

Paying for sex may become a
thing of the past, and the Internet could be the cause. A
nationally representative survey suggests that the percentage of
men who pay money for sex, or get paid, is at its lowest point on
record.

The numbers come from the General Social Survey
(GSS), a massive, decades-long project of the independent National
Opinion Research Center (NORC). The Los Angeles Times

reports
some of the most interesting facts:

In a string of surveys between 1991 and 1996, nearly 17% of men
said they had ever paid for or received payment for sex; that fell
to 13.2% between 2006 and 2012. Last year, that number hit the
lowest point since the question was first asked — 9.1% — though
statisticians caution the unusually small number could be a
fluke.

The survey drew no distinction between buying and selling sex,
but men are widely assumed to be customers far more often than they
are sellers.

The numbers seem to be shifting with the generations: Older men
are much more likely to say they have bought or sold sex at some
point in their lives. Younger men, in turn, have been less likely
to report doing so than men of the same ages a few decades ago.

[…]

The sweeping survey, funded principally by the National Science
Foundation, has questioned more than 57,000 Americans since 1972.
Nearly 11,000 men have answered the question about paying or being
paid for sex since it was first asked in 1991.

The question is: Why? A range of possibilities exist,
from fear of AIDS to changing dynamics in the military. Another
possibility the Times points to is that the Internet makes
it so easy to get off for free.

The scale and
scope
of online dating and the niche-conducive culture of the
web make finding sexual partners easier than ever. As BuzzFeed

points out
, “ugly schmucks,” diaper-fetishists, and even people
with mullets have their own Web sites to find like-minded
mates.

For those not into commitment to other people, the Internet’s
endless terabytes of free, instantaneously accessible pornography
satisfies the appetite. As an added bonus, statistics have
shown for years
that there is a correlation between the rise of
porn and the fall of sexual crimes.

Although most Americans have a negative outlook about our
collective moral well-being, as Nick Gillespie
suggests
in “Society is Coarser But Better,” the growing
ubiquity of porn (and the relaxing of other taboos) is a pretty
good trade-off for a society in which “youth violence, sex, and
drug use are all trending down.” The GSS data indicates something
even better. Consenting adults do not need to make a trade-off; The
goods they want simply became more freely available.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/05/men-arent-paying-for-sex-anymore-because
via IFTTT

Nigeria Just Can’t Catch A Break, Blames Fed For Pulled Bond Sale

Global stock markets are soaring and near record highs. Credit markets are exuberant and near record tight spreads and low yields; and volatility (bond, FX, and stock) has been suppressed to the point of non-existence. So why is it that just 3 months after Nigeria issued debt (in an oversubscribed auction) at a yield below that of Portugal’s, Nigerian lender Diamond Bank has suspended the launch of its seven-year $550 million bond? It appears it’s the Fed’s fault! as the bond’s marketers noted “pricing turbulence in the international debt market,” in a presentation seen by Reuters on Tuesday. Still think the Fed will ever actually exit?

Via Reuters,

Our efforts towards injection of Tier II capital have been put on hold following the persisting pricing turbulence in the international debt market,” it said, ahead of a conference call with analysts on Tuesday to discuss its nine-month results.

 

Diamond’s bond was marketed by France’s BNP Paribas and Afrexim Bank as lead managers.

While that makes some sense, it is perhaps more an indication of investor anxiety about the future since Nigerian rates hve actually dropped notably in recent weeks as the world rallied off debt ceiling lows…

So is it concern that the flow will slow (meaning no more greater fool to spin this to) that has kept the money on the sidelines from buying Nigerian bank debt?


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/6EJh2sizdRQ/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Nigeria Just Can't Catch A Break, Blames Fed For Pulled Bond Sale

Global stock markets are soaring and near record highs. Credit markets are exuberant and near record tight spreads and low yields; and volatility (bond, FX, and stock) has been suppressed to the point of non-existence. So why is it that just 3 months after Nigeria issued debt (in an oversubscribed auction) at a yield below that of Portugal’s, Nigerian lender Diamond Bank has suspended the launch of its seven-year $550 million bond? It appears it’s the Fed’s fault! as the bond’s marketers noted “pricing turbulence in the international debt market,” in a presentation seen by Reuters on Tuesday. Still think the Fed will ever actually exit?

Via Reuters,

Our efforts towards injection of Tier II capital have been put on hold following the persisting pricing turbulence in the international debt market,” it said, ahead of a conference call with analysts on Tuesday to discuss its nine-month results.

 

Diamond’s bond was marketed by France’s BNP Paribas and Afrexim Bank as lead managers.

While that makes some sense, it is perhaps more an indication of investor anxiety about the future since Nigerian rates hve actually dropped notably in recent weeks as the world rallied off debt ceiling lows…

So is it concern that the flow will slow (meaning no more greater fool to spin this to) that has kept the money on the sidelines from buying Nigerian bank debt?


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/6EJh2sizdRQ/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Cross country tourney is this weekend

With the state championship cross-country meet coming up this weekend, a number of local teams and other individual runners have qualified to participate on the basis of impressive showings in last week’s region meets.

The top four teams and the top six individuals in each region qualify for the state championship meet in Carrollton this Saturday.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-05-2013/cross-country-tourney-weekend

McIntosh wins state volleyball championship

After coming up just short in last year’s state playoffs, the McIntosh Lady Chiefs had only one goal in mind for the 2013 season – going all the way.

“We’ve been thinking all year about that runner-up finish,” said head coach Wendy Weaver of last year’s AAAAA state finals, when her squad lost to Whitewater.
This year’s team steamrolled through its schedule and took home the state title last Friday by winning three of four games against Sequoyah in the best-of-five championship match at Marietta High School.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-05-2013/mcintosh-wins-state-volleyball-championship

Switching Roles Again

With two computers humming in my office, it’s fairly easy to get lost in my own little world of words and paragraphs, and ignore the domestic rumble from the kitchen. Dave is equally oblivious. He has one of those World War II remakes on, called something like “The Wall of the Atlantic,” so he’s occupied.

But there’s another sound coming from the kitchen. It’s the unmistakable clatter of canned goods on wooden shelves, occasionally yielding to a cabinet door closing or the refrigerator alarm pleading that someone will close a door.

read more

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/blogs/sallie-satterthwaite/11-05-2013/switching-roles-again

Guest Post: Why The Fed Likely Won’t Taper (For Long)… Anytime Soon

Submitted by Lance Roberts of STA Wealth Management,

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/q3cDN636aAM/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Guest Post: Why The Fed Likely Won't Taper (For Long)… Anytime Soon

Submitted by Lance Roberts of STA Wealth Management,

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/q3cDN636aAM/story01.htm Tyler Durden

US Rents Rise To New All-Time High; Homeownership Rate Stuck At 18 Year Low

One quarter ago, when we performed our regular update on trends in US homeownership and rents, we said that “The American Homeownership Dream is officially dead. Long live the New Normal American Dream: Renting.” What happened since then is that the American Dream briefly became a full-blown nightmare when in Q3 mortgage rates exploded, pummeling the affordability of housing, and ground any new mortgage-funded transactions to a complete halt (don’t believe us – just ask the tens of thousands of mortgage brokers let go by the TBTF banks in the past 6 months). Which is why it was not at all surprising to find that the just updated Q3 homeownership rate has remained stuck at 65.1%: the lowest since 1995.

And yet, even though household formation has continued to implode (more on that in a subsequent post) despite the shrill promises of housing bulls who still have to realize that the transitory pick up in home prices has nothing to do with organic growth or a stable consumer, and all to do with the Fed’s balance sheet, the now effectively finished REO-To-Rent program, and illegal offshore cash paked in the US, Americans have to live somewhere. That somewhere is as renters of Wall Street and other landlords. As the next chart shows, the median asking rent has once again risen in Q3, this time by just $1 from $735 to $736 per month.

Luckily Owner Equivalent Rent is largely adjusted (hedonically) by the Fed in its CPI calculation making it seem quite friendly, or else its all time highs may give the impression that inflation is not quite as dead as the Fed portrays it.

But what is perhaps more notable is that even asking rents are starting to roll over in almost all parts of the country except for the Northeast.

Finally, why are any of these upward trends in significant jeopardy? Because while the 0.01% are getting wealthier by the day, everyone else… isn’t. As can be seen on the chart below.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Y5u8ArvCKrI/story01.htm Tyler Durden