to all of you, thank you for your many responses. As the originator of the post, I am asking that you stay on topic; the objectification people for the purpose of profit, and how said objectification is perceived as prermission, by some people to abuse others.
However, not all of us are willing to make ourselves into sex objects and it causes the ones who don't want this kind of attention in their lives a lot of trouble.
Sorry
@RussH that the thread got so hijacked.
I'm not so entirely sure it did get hijacked. There were clearly several different ways it could have spun off under the above stated intent (pick a Bachelor of Arts major, any BA!)
I think that the knee-jerk reaction to deny others the same freedoms we grant ourselves (our choice of employment, avocation, entertainment, choosing our own ethical mores, following the dictates of our own consciences, etc.), when they
disagree with our own decisions in any realm is a very human trait. "I don't want to, so you can't, either." People start wars over these issues. Blow up abortion clinics. Riot against gay marriage. Insist on full Burkha. Kick women out of combat jobs (or jobs, period, not just the Taliban but the US & UK have done it a few times over the past couple centuries). Segregate by race. By sex. Enact laws. NGOs like Human Rights Watch
exist due to this very tendency to try and force other people to choose as we do. As do many dents in drywall from the forehead of parents of toddlers ;) I don't wanna! So no ones gonna!!!!
When you say that objectification for profit is wrong,
@RussH ? My knee jerk is "Then don't do it. :)" If it's wrong for you, that's your business, and you have every right to adhere to the dictates of your own conscience. If you choose to draw the line at profit, but not at religion (objectification is a structural component of most religions, even "no idols before me" abrahamic triad of Judeo/christian/Islamic religions have their saints & martyrs), or not at leadership (people becoming symbols to follow from the battlefield, to the board room, to the highest levels of government), or any other area of the private sector... I won't disagree with you. We are each of us free to choose our symbols, our heroes & heroines.
If you choose to believe that women's hair, or breasts, or thighs... Or men's chests, arms, legs (or any part of anyone, really)...are a private sexual matter between spouses, and should never be viewed by anyone outside of the covenant of marriage? I grant you the dignity of your own modesty.
I also ask for the same consideration.
I choose to fight in wars... While many women abhor the idea. Please don't ban me from my chosen field of employment, because others of my sex wish to live their lives differently. Bedroom, boardroom, classroom, wardroom, council room... Women find as many lives to their liking as men. Allow us to choose our own, as you choose yours.
I choose to wear my hair unbound, my breasts strapped up six ways from Sunday, my shoulders bare, my legs showing. Please don't assume my character and morals are less than those who cover themselves in full hijab. I am the same person wearing my Abaya in Saudi (I actually kinda dig abayas), as I am in sky high heels and little more than a smile on the runway, or in full battle rattle in a frozen mud hole. I know, because I've done all 3. Allow me to define my own character, and not tie it to my appearance, but give me my own dignity as well.
Moral laws... Time and time again... Simply lead to revolt. Military or social revolution. A thousand thousand times throughout history, have we attempted to force others to follow our religions, our dress codes, our sexual choices, our parenting choices, our marriage choices, our employment choices, our modesty choices, our aesthetic choices, etc. How we define "good" choices... As clearly only those that make "good" choices are human, and deserving of the same rights, responsibilities, privileges, and respect... Is a common argument. <chuckling> The laws that never cause outcry or revolt all revolve around one very simple principle "Don't take something that belongs to someone else." (Life, health, money, property, etc.). The rest all gets very muddled, (does this land belong to you, this spouse, this child, etc.) but the results are the same.
But on a personal level, I have had my freedom taken from me. Not when I enlisted, that was my own choice, to make certain sacrifices. Very different than when I was held against my will, denied every human right. As a result; The right to our own choices: true freedom, is more precious to me than anything. Whether I agree with someone else's choices or not, is a non issue. That you and I both have the right to make them? Too dear to ever take for granted. And too important to me to ever deny anyone else the selfsame right. Right up until they choose to deny me the same right. Or deny I have a choice to begin with.
That cover model? You see a sad object.
I see a person. Someone who has the freedom to make her own choices, and is doing so.
Which one of us is dehumanizing her?
I don't think you're a prude, or oversensitive. I do think you're treading perilously close to denying other the same rights, responsibilities, and privilege you grant yourself. You can disagree with what she does for a living, without making it wrong for her to do earn a living doing something you -or others of your acquaintance- wouldn't want to.