I agree with this but am wondering if and how society will adjust to certain new realities. Your post yesterday inspired me to create an OT thread about this in the “Anything Else” forum. Would be very interested in your thoughts on that thread because it sounds like something you’ve been thinking about too.
Good question, and really it all depends on the culture. But history proves examples of how disruptive technology was handled.
First: Society attempts to ban the technology.
Second: They attempt to regulate it by either making it too expensive by creating artificial monopolies and scarcity.
Third: People find was around the limits, alternate (black markets) are created.
Forth: Alternative or Black Markets increases demand making the tech more profitable
Fifth: The technology explodes into wide use.
Sixth: Society goes through rapid change.
Seventh: The slow process of integration occurs and eventually normalization into a new paradigm results.
Eighth: This change creates new change, then we go back to
First.
In free societies, or societies with lots of competition, these steps happen rapidly. This is us. Right now we are in
Seventh .... what the
Eighth will look like is unclear. But you can look at history to get some clues.
Recent history you can look to portable music. At first when cassette recorders were produced. The music industry tried to ban them, and created "8 Track" products which were inferior... they tried to ban cassette recorders, when this didn't work the music industry started producing their own cassette products... but the quality of cassette recorders improved, and copies of albums became widespread. Then the music industry tried to impose a 'tax' on all blank cassette tapes... this didn't happen, so then they adopted CDs... well, eventually CD copying technology was available... the industry attempted to compensate for their loss in revenue by increasing the price of CDs... this just accelerated the process of copying... which resulted in the development of MP-3, then came Napster and internet file sharing... they successfully shut down Napster, but the cat was out of the bag... and now few people buy CDs anymore... the industry embraced on-line music and companies like Spotify emerged.... anyway... with music being widely available, there is a renaissance of vinyl LPs and turn tables.. as the actual quality of music became important again.
I believe male - female relationships will follow the same path. Sure there will always be those that do not care about 'quality' and continue to take advantage of cheap validation... but eventually this will play out... and women will realize that it is much better to have a handful of quality men in their lives than 100 low quality orbiters .... but this will take time.