• pebbles@sh.itjust.works
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    15 hours ago

    Homie idk how many times I gotta say it. I’m agnostic to who’s more horny. I get why I seem stubborn.

    You can believe what you want. Your evidence is too indirect to convince me.

    I really think we’re arguing slightly different things though. Like it is even important for me say wealth inequality in the world means that sex spending better represents rich countries interests? Therefore has a very very large cultural bias. Not abstact, real cultures are different. Lots of people are unaccounted in your metric, and lots of peope are extremely over counted.

    I can be convinced, you just haven’t done it. I am not confident the data is out there. Spending definitely has too many flaws to be a good indicator.

    • Lauchs@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      Like it is even important for me say wealth inequality in the world means that sex spending better represents rich countries interests?

      Okay, can you then admit that in rich countries, it appears that men are, on average, hornier than women?

      • pebbles@sh.itjust.works
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        13 hours ago

        I agree that it can look like that at a glance, but why would we expect spending to reflect horniness when sexual expression is less accepted for women in many rich countries? Can you say to what degree that affects it? They may feel just as much hornyness and express it more privately. How can you be confident?

        I admit, that if you look at the economic you presented, men spend more on sexual stuff. That is a fine conclusion. But it says very little to me about who is more horny.