- Sep 26, 2009
- 2,848
- 1
- 11,485
Maxiton said:Yours is probably the most thoughtful post we've had here. In the latter variety of knuckle-dragging you cite, I couldn't help but feel you were referring to me, since I was I think the only one putting forth an argument even close to that. So i'd like to draw a distinction between what you're referring to and what I said.
I want to live in a world where the erotic is frankly acknowledged and experienced as something healthy and wholesome. Of course, we don't live in such a world (excepting maybe the Scandinavian countries) and so my desire stands in clear contrast to the shame and degradation that attends much of women's sports marketing, such as when female cyclists pose for cheesy magazines, and pretty much the whole of beach volleyball.
Cycling is arguably among the most homoerotic of sports and in any case there is no denying a certain erotic component to athletics in general. Indeed, the objection to women's participation in sports by so many "knuckledraggers" may stem in part from the sense of shame and general puritanism that still forms a powerful undertow in the Western world, most especially in certain corners of it - no need to name them, just look for the cross and measure the shadow it casts there.
Women's cycling can be fantastic precisely because of "the skill, excitement, guts, panache, tactics, ingenuity" that can sometimes be found there. None of that is in any way diminished by acknowledging also an appreciation of what amounts to the physical and spiritual vitality of female athletes - which is and always will be sexy.
...and this person has seriously lost it - wrong Forum mate - and an embarassment to cyclists !!
