Why Do People Think Idubbz Is Funny

On March 31st, well-known YouTuber Ian Carter (channel name iDubbbzTV) posted a video defending his girlfriend, Anisa Jomha, after she announced that she was starting an OnlyFans Account.

OnlyFans is a London-based "social media" company that is akin to a Patreon for 'cam girls', or even softcore porn stars. Essentially, it lures in young women — who post their nudes or other lewd photos — with the promise of easy money. And lonely men, the women's patrons, are enticed to join, with the hope that funding a virtual 'relationship' between them and their cam girl might eventually lead to a more meaningful and lasting relationship.

Not only is the pursuit of these contrived relationships a spiritual dead end — and the path to a potentially catastrophic outcome for all parties involved — but this example demonstrates the challenges to men and women who wish to forge lasting romantic bonds in the 21st century.

We live in an increasingly permissive and amoral society. However recent polls have shown that as many as three-quarters of Americans still believe that having a sexual relationship with someone other than one's partner is cheating, and younger generations are even more likely to hold this view than in older generations, where fooling around may have actually been more commonplace than previously thought.

At the same time, flirting with someone other than one's romantic partner — on social media or a dating site — is viewed as a milder form of cheating, with only 51 percent of respondents, in the study cited above, maintaining the view that this behavior always constitutes infidelity (blurring the lines between healthy and unhealthy relationships).

What is happening in post-modern society, is that social media — originally established by Mark Zuckerberg as a dating site via Facebook — has gradually exposed women in particular to an environment in which they are almost guaranteed to receive immediate validation from thirsty men, as a result of posting sultry or alluring photos. And like a drug, women — as well as men — are gradually desensitized to content that would have previously been regarded as vain and borderline scandalous.

In order to jockey for traffic with one another, social media sites that require lots of pictures as a prerequisite brilliantly tap into women's competitive and jealous nature, forcing fellow e-girls to post photos and stories that are more extravagant, more ostentatious, or more sexualized than their c(hoe)rts cohorts — the modern embodiment of 'keeping up with the Jones's'.

What is more, many young women who post comparable content have experienced fewer and fewer barriers to monetization. For example, a relatively common phenomenon among indebted college students, known as members of the 'sugar baby' industry, allows a woman to act as a companion to an older/wealthier male, in many cases without the requirement to exchange cash for sexual favors.

So, what we are seeing is a society — much like in third world countries such as the Dominican Republic — where a growing percentage of healthy/attractive women are monetizing their sexual value for financial gain. This is likely to become part of the gig economy, and it will further endanger thousands of already unsound relationships in the coming years, devastating numerous families.

 While it may be true that the youtuber idubbbz is so libertine that he does not even care if his liberal girlfriend posts lewd pictures for her 'fans' on a mainstream website, this is the kind of attitude that gradually normalizes and rewards disgusting behavior that is practiced by the collective society as a whole.

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This 'simping' meme — the foolish pedestalization and overvaluation of unworthy women — is actually understating the severity of the problems that have been developing in our society. In a society where no-fault divorce and institutional feminism are already encouraging atrocious and vapid behavior among the youth, the glorification of the 'cam girl' or 'sex worker' will only place more pressure upon middle-class families, potentially turning everyone's mom or sister into a part-time street walker, in the service of a sexual gig economy.

Essentially this would be the straight-up cuckolding of numerous men — who would possess little leverage to put a stop to such behaviors. And while this might be okay for big corporations or idubbbz, it is not okay for a vast majority of men who just want a wife, and a stable home for their children that many of them probably never had growing up.

Of course, not every insta-hustler will cheat when they can earn money right from their bedroom. However, the flattery and temptations that a large percentage of them receive will be enough for cam girls to eventually take the leap and gradually break from their husbands or boyfriends once they receive attention from the most available and attractive local male 'celebrities'.

While not everyone will engage in this kind of behavior, it would be best for such temptations to be reduced through the modification of existing divorce laws, so that infidelity can be properly disciplined. Social media should be more tightly regulated, in order to better protect children and young adults. And men should cease their tiresome 'simping' so that they can achieve more meaningful goals, instead of validating negative female behaviors.

scottwilapplen.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.muckrakerpolitics.com/2020/04/why-the-idubbbz-simp-controversy-is-a-wakeup-call-for-society/

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