Link Roundup: May 2026


Sawatsky: Sexual pain in Christian Women | The Asexual Agenda – Okay, so this is for my journal club, and I wrote up the discussion notes.  But I have a few things more to say here.  The paper is exploring possible causes for the high prevalence of sexual pain among Christian women (primarily Evangelicals).  But the authors of the paper are evangelicals, and they frame it like religious belief is generally great for sexual outcomes.  To them, sexual pain is this one mysterious exception where religious women are doing worse.  Color me skeptical.

I recalled that a long time ago, there was a study that circulated among atheist blogs, seemingly claiming the opposite, that people who leave religion have better sex lives.  The study was called “Sex and Secularism” by Darrel Ray in 2011, and it was based on a survey that recruited a lot of participants through Pharyngula.  You can find news articles talking about it, but the article itself is totally gone. I’m skeptical of that study too, and the ephemeral circumstances of its publication certainly don’t help.

The thing is, “better sex life” is a normative judgment, and perhaps it’s not very surprising that any given value system results in better sex lives, as measured by researchers who share that value system.  Obviously my values would overlap more with Darrel Ray’s than with the evangelical authors.  But I’m also ace, which tends to come with its own sexual values.  Like whenever “better sexual outcomes” means higher frequency of sex, I’m just going to roll my eyes.  But sexual pain, that’s uncontroversially a bad thing, even when ace people have it.

Why was I invited to Beast Studios | Folding Ideas (video, 1:30 hours) – MrBeast is the most subscribed youtube channel of all time, valued at $5 billion dollars.  But they’re losing money, viewers, and their film production is at once lavishly expensive, yet made of paperclips and glue.  Dan makes few attacks on Mr. Beast’s character, yet exposes the organizational rot at the heart of his media empire.  They prioritize viewing metrics above all else, and seem uninterested in hiring any real expertise.

Prediction Markets are Ruining the Finance Industry | The Plain Bagel (video, 27 min) – Prediction markets have gotten really big because of a favorable regulatory environment under the Trump administration.  However, most people who participate in prediction markets lose money.  Insider trading is much more difficult to catch in prediction markets compared to traditional investment markets.  And some people will even manipulate outcomes to win a bet.  Think athletes betting against themselves and then throwing matches, except that now it’s for everything, including sports.  Don’t just say no with your wallet, say no with your vote.

The Rise and Fall of Misery Memoirs | Sarah Z (video, 2:05 hours) – Sarah talks about the genre of misery lit, supposedly true memoirs about harrowing experiences, such as growing up in Holocaust concentration camps, or dealing with drug addiction, or satanic cults.  Many of these stories were wholly fabricated, but the point isn’t just that they’re false.  It’s that even the true stories are censored, edited, and reshaped according to expectations and commercial demands.  The flipside of false misery memoirs are the true stories of sexual violence that are disbelieved because the victim didn’t react the way people expect perfect victims to react.

 

Comments

  1. says

    isn’t fortunetelling banned in the bible, even tho the prophets get to do their own flavor of it left and right? im no expert on that shit, maybe it was just some particular sect that opposed it i’m vaguely remembering. prediction markets put me in mind of this for some reason.

  2. says

    @Bebe Melange,
    I’m sure. Within the first few seconds of the video, he shows a bet on the 2nd coming of Jesus.

  3. Alan G. Humphrey says

    Will Jesus come with Mary or before her?

    Will he use a condom this time?

  4. says

    @Bebe Melange
    In the bible it’s more like, you’re not allowed to get your fortunetelling predictions from “witchcraft” or the “wrong” gods, but prophets get their info from the “right” God so that’s fine. So it’s more about the rivalry between gods/ making sure you pick the right one to be loyal to, rather than the practice of fortunetelling being wrong in and of itself.

    If you’re interested in really weird bible stories, you should read about Saul and the witch of Endor in 1 Samuel 28. https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Samuel%2028&version=NIV The point of this story is you *can* use witchcraft to communicate with dead people- it really works- but it’s BANNED because it uses the “wrong” kind of spiritual power and isn’t from the “right” God.

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