Das Kompetenzzentrum für
Film – Schule – Kino
im Land Brandenburg

Libido Dominandi: Sexual Liberation & Political... [ BEST — Honest Review ]

: The book is often cited by those looking for a critical, traditionalist perspective on how modern media and educational systems (like sex education) contribute to the erosion of traditional values in favor of a more "controllable" population.

" Libido Dominandi: Sexual Liberation and Political Control " is a significant work by , published in 2005 , which argues that what is commonly celebrated as "sexual liberation" is actually a sophisticated form of social and political control . The Core Thesis

: Jones references Huxley's observation that as political and economic freedom decreases, sexual freedom tends to "compensatingly increase," arguing that modern society has intentionally used this dynamic to maintain power. Libido Dominandi: Sexual Liberation & Political...

: Jones suggests that lust can function as a form of addiction that "the current regime" exploits for its own benefit.

: The title is derived from St. Augustine’s City of God , referring to the "lust for domination". Jones argues that by "liberating" man from the moral order, modern powers turn Augustine's insight on its head, creating "masters out of men's vices". : The book is often cited by those

You can find more detailed summaries or purchase the book through retailers like Amazon or eBay .

: Jones traces how various technologies and disciplines—including psychotherapy, behaviorism, advertising, and pornography —have been used over the last two centuries to engineer this covert system of control. : Jones suggests that lust can function as

The central argument of the book is that the sexual revolution was not a spontaneous movement for freedom, but a calculated effort by societal elites to undermine traditional moral structures and replace them with a system of . Jones posits that when individuals are encouraged to abandon moral order, they become slaves to their own passions, making them easier to manage through external "social controls". Key Arguments and Themes