Introduction
Across cultures, continents, and centuries, one truth has remained consistent: sexual and emotional access has never been distributed equally among men. Yet today, in a world obsessed with equality, this fundamental truth is buried under ideology, censorship, and denial. The result? An epidemic of loneliness, rage, and violence among men that society pretends to treat but continues to ignore.
The Biological and Evolutionary Reality
Human evolution shaped men and women differently. Women are biologically selective a concept known as hypergamy, while men are wired to compete for access. This isn’t just sociology; it’s seen across the animal kingdom.

In virtually all species, females choose, and males compete. Only the strongest, most resourceful, or most attractive males reproduce. In early human tribes, it is estimated that only 40% of men reproduced, compared to 80% of women (source: “The Ape That Understood the Universe” by Steve Stewart-Williams).
The truth is that not all men get chosen, which is the reason men exist at all. Male gender is nature’s filter: to test, to compete, to eliminate the weak. Civilization softened that truth with systems of marriage and family, but postmodern society has broken those systems without replacing them.
What Happens When Male Needs Are Ignored
When society ignores the biological and emotional needs of men, especially young, sexually and emotionally isolated men, the results are not neutral. They are dangerous. History and modern data show that unmet male needs often manifest as violence, rape, coercion, and extremism. Whether it’s through assaults, incel forums, or radicalization into gangs, terrorist groups, or militaries, the pattern is always the same: neglect male intimacy needs long enough, and eventually, society pays the price in blood. Repression without redirection is not morality — it’s a time bomb.

The Spiritual and Historical Wisdom
Islam, Christianity, and Hinduism all had mechanisms for integrating sexuality. Islam permitted up to four wives (with deep conditions) and historically tolerated concubinage. Hinduism had sacred temple prostitutes. Christianity offered penance but also turned a blind eye to brothels among kings and clergy.
These weren’t signs of moral collapse. They were systems of channeling male energy into responsible, even sacred directions. Prostitution in many historical contexts wasn’t filth — it was service. It kept peace, prevented worse crimes, and served as a quiet backbone of social stability.
The Modern Collapse
Today, we shame men for their desire, mock them for their loneliness, then offer:
- Porn
- OnlyFans
- Sexless marriages
- Empty hookup culture
- Sex change encouragement for confused youth
- Feminist dogma that all male desire is toxic
- Influencers like Andrew Tate, who offer a seductive but ultimately shallow and destructive solution, promoting status-chasing, objectification, and domination — not healing or sacred connection
Meanwhile, millions of men are drowning in isolation. The only ones who speak to their pain?
- Terrorist groups promising heaven and virgins
- Militaries offering glory and brotherhood
- Extremist ideologies that make them feel seen
This is not accidental. It is a spiritual and ideological war on masculinity. The postmodern system does not want strong, grounded men. It wants broken, addicted, obedient ones.
The LGBT+ and Trans Agenda
This is not about hating LGBT people. Many are victims of confusion and trauma themselves. But the agenda — the ideological force pushing children into identity confusion, celebrating gender erasure, and criminalizing masculine strength — is not about tolerance. It is about control. It dissolves the male archetype until nothing stable remains.
Global Consequences: Rape, Violence, and Hypocrisy
Countries like India have staggeringly high rape rates. Why? Public morality is enforced, but no healthy outlet for male desire exists. Prostitution is hidden, criminalized, or abused. Compare that to the Netherlands or Germany, where prostitution is legal and regulated.
And yet even there, new feminist waves try to shut down brothels under the lie of “empowerment.” These nations are killing their last remaining pressure valves, forgetting that sacred sexuality once saved societies.
The Real Solution: Sacred, Regulated Sexual Sanctuaries
The answer is not more porn. Not more pills. Not more shame. It is to return to what worked:
- Legal, clean, safe brothels for men in need
- Spiritual recognition of sacred sexuality as service
- Protection for women who choose this path with dignity
- Re-education of religious institutions to embrace the role of sexual mercy and guidance
Let us call them what they are: Priestesses of Touch, Healers of the Forgotten, Guardians of Balance.
Conclusion
A society that ignores male suffering is a society that breeds chaos. We are watching it now. If we do not reintroduce sacred structures, if we do not speak the unspeakable, the system will continue to produce broken men, and broken men eventually break everything around them.
Let the return begin. Not with shame, but with courage. Not with dogma, but with ancient truth.
References & Sources
- Stewart-Williams, Steve. The Ape That Understood the Universe. 2018.
- Baumeister, Roy F. “Is There Anything Good About Men?” Address to the American Psychological Association, 2007.
- Regnerus, Mark. Cheap Sex: The Transformation of Men, Marriage, and Monogamy. 2017.
- Netherlands Government Policy: Legal Framework on Prostitution (Government.nl)
- Germany’s Prostitution Act (ProstSchG), 2002 and 2017 updates
- India NCRB Crime Reports (National Crime Records Bureau)
- Journal of Sex Research: Correlation of legalized sex work and decreased sexual violence (various studies)
- Pew Research: Global perspectives on gender, morality, and sexual rights
Sources for the Table:
Cunningham & Shah (2014), NBER – Decriminalizing Indoor Prostitution
Cho, Dreher & Neumayer (2013), Oxford Economic Papers – Legalization & Human Trafficking
Trilling (2020), Journalist’s Resource – Rape reduction in Dutch tippelzones
Vanwesenbeeck (2017), Springer – The Nordic Model and Sex Work: A Critical Analysis
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