Natasha Walter ‘Living Dolls’ – The Banned Review

The following is my Amazon review of ‘Living Dolls’ by Natasha Walter that was removed at the request of one feminist (several weeks ago a comment was left underneath my review from a feminist who stated that it was ‘offensive’ and asked for Amazon to remove it).

In the book, Natasha Walter claims that society (i.e. men)  is sexualising and objectifying girls and young women. Her book has already influenced public policy in the United Kingdom, with the previous government using it to justify teaching 5 year old girls in school the dangers of male sexuality and male objectification. This is the same Natasha Walter who wrote a glowing book review defending Germaine Greer’s ‘Beautiful Boy’ – a book that calls for women to fight for the right to objectify and sexualise boys – or in Greer’s own words : “to reclaim for women the right to appreciate the short-lived beauty of boys“.  I haven’t looked at Germaine Greer’s book, but I’ve been told that it is full of naked and erotic photographs of boys who appear to be under 18.  If this is true, it should clearly be categorised as level 1 child pornography according to British (feminist made) law.

You just couldn’t make it up. You see why I’m thinking of quitting?

Feminism is the history of unattractive, aging women, forever trying to play catch up in their attempts at closing the free sexual market as new technology continues to widen it.

Thus the first wave of feminism began as men and women moved from the countryside into the cities, and men suddenly came into contact with more young females than previously they had in a lifetime. Young girls were no longer married off at the height of fertility but were sent to work in the new factories – in itself increasing the ‘availibility’ of young flesh to any tempted husband. Simultaneously, prostitutes flocked to the new metropolises to take advantage of the growing spending power of the working man. The first feminists called not for the vote, but for the raising of the age of consent and for restrictions against prostitutes. Feminism has always been primarily a sexual trade union for women past their peak fertility.

The second wave of feminism began immediately once the contraceptive pill became available, which instead of ‘liberating’ women, simply freed up the sexual market – something that the second wave and the rush into employment and education was a ‘necessary’ response to. In a single generation, 10,000 years of ‘patriarchy’ was undone. Similarly, the internet and globalisation again threatened to leave ordinary women sexually irrelevant. In the space of 10 years, women have gone from having virtually zero representation in high office, to near dominating the political and social agendas of every Western democracy. In their wake, moral hysterias over ‘sex trafficking’ and ‘paedophilia’ have appeared, the likes of which the civilised west has not seen since the witch burnings of the late middle-ages.

Such is the setting for Living Dolls, one feminist’s irrationalist and subconcious realisation that feminism was never about ‘equal rights’ with men, but simply preserving the sexual and reproductive interests of unattractive women. Enjoy as fake intellectual Soma if you’re a similarly sexually threatened unattractive woman. The rest of us, genuine seekers after truth and justice, can try to read it as a historical document of the last desperate gasps of the sexual trade union.

Meanwhile, to anyone genuinely concerned about the welfare of children and the rights of young people, I would suggest you perhaps read something detailing the way that promiscuous and sexually aware young women are treated in Islamic countries, things that are clearly of no interest to western feminists.

If you think that it is unfair of Amazon to remove the above review, you could perhaps show support by re-posting it under your own Amazon account.

6 thoughts on “Natasha Walter ‘Living Dolls’ – The Banned Review

  1. I wish I could read a little to see the content of that book.

    Unfortunately, there is no trial browsing version. Did you actually buy and read the book. I am in favor of what you say, but does it really apply to the book? As one other reviewer mentions, it is about sexualisation of young women, and not about old women. It could be, indirectly, about old women being jealous of sexualisation of young women?

    Because if they remove it for you saying unpopular things, but that are not befitting to the book, then they could even put up a good argument for that.

    By the way, did you get my email about one really relevant remark that would fit your blog to print? Check your spam filter, if not!

  2. Pingback: Linkage is Good for You: You Know What the Pattern Is Edition

  3. appreciate ur efforts mate. Feminists must be stopped from Getting access to such child -porniographic Book.. IT SHOULD BE BANNED !!!

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