The Sex Imperative
Table of Contents
Introduction by Dr. Llaila
O. Afrika i
Introduction 1
Chapter
1
A
Sexual Framework 11
Sex and Capitalism 15
Morality 18
Romancing a Stone 27
Chapter
2
The
Safety Valve 43
A Culture of Rape 46
House of Pain 56
Yurugu 59
Violating “Others” 62
Chapter
3
Superfreaks
67
Sex and Violence 68
Freudian Fixations 75
Frontiers without Boundaries 79
Outer Space 83
Revealing Flesh 86
Child’s Play 88
Eye Candy 91
Cybersex 96
Prepubescent
Obsession 100
Their Oldest Profession 101
Terms of Endearment 105
Mental
Rape 106
Orgiastic Society 120
Bestiality 126
In Any Event 132
Individuality 134
Anal/Oral Politics 140
The Best Medicine 143
Chapter
4
Another World 151
Lesser Rap/Hip Hop 153
An Evolving Musical Tradition 159
Chapter
5
The
Language of Love 167
Behavior Modification 171
Negative Population Growth 173
Scarcity, Surplus and Population Explosions 177
Nuclear Nightmare 182
Survival of the Fittest 186
Chapter 6
The Games People Play 189
Tremendous Trifles 190
Deceit
196
The Meat Market 201
Self-Test 204
Natural Born Liars 204
Chapter 7
Boys to Boys 209
Men and Boys and Women and Girls 211
Chapter 8
Fair Game 213
Manifest Sexual Destiny 216
Chapter 9
A Tradition of Purpose in Order 219
ENDNOTES 229
INDEX 257
|

The Sex Imperative is an Afrikan centered analysis of the West’s obsession
with sex.
This book details and explains the history, nature and peculiarity of
European sexual behavior and the culture which drives it. The author
brings the inordinate priority of individual and group sex in European
culture to our attention in a number of ways. He examines the printed,
oral and visual media’s efforts to aggressively and with conscious intent
highlight and promote the most extreme and individualistic sexual acts
and confusions. He delves into a family of languages that since the
earliest Greek writers has cultivated the degradation of females, the
sexual exploitation of children and animals, the priority of sexual
conquest and satiation, and a glorification of vulgarity. He analyzes
the sexual personalities and behaviors of the gods and goddesses of
Greek and Roman mythology whom they created and who provided the model
for mortal European sexuality. He looks at the sexual symbolism that
increasingly pervades public Western society, being found everywhere
from body ornamentation, such as tattooes and body piercings, to children’s
movies to the newest wave of “soft porn” romance novels. And he exposes
their normative sex-violence connection that for many makes sex their
all in all and gives them emotional content; and through looking at
the cultural history of gender/sex confusing initiatives, trends and
patterns having the deliberate end goal of global unisexualization.
These, of course, are only a few of the topics that are brought into
this critical and long overdue discussion of the peculiar historical
sex imperative of Europeans.
But not only does The Sex Imperative look at the source of the problem
and its many confusing and destructive manifestations, it specifically
addresses the introduction and spread of these perversions into the
Afrikan community. One way the author does this is to take us on a historical
journey through several generations of music to demonstrate that what
we hear and see today in the music and music videos is not new. Even
though the lyrics have become cruder and cruder, the message has remained
constant. Through the author’s eyes, we can see a natural progression
in this effort to somehow fit Afrikans into European sexual culture.
Attempts to graft the European sex imperative onto the Afrikan personality
began well before “old school” music, where a sexual priority was already
being pushed beyond its natural limits through the airwaves and personal
contact between members of these two groups. The goal has been the gradual
but complete internalization of the peculiar bedroom behaviors of Europeans
by Afrikans so that the extremes and perversions Europeans naturally
practiced would appear less abnormal to a world where Europeans have
always been a significant minority.
The Sex Imperative unlocks secrets, secrets that are hidden right before
our eyes in the music, commercials, schools, magazines, stores, technology,
trends, that allow Afrikans to fall prey to a voluntary sexual slavery
because we do not know what we are dealing with or where it is taking
us. Not only does this book provide an historical and contemporary cultural
map of the European sexual landscape, as truly seen and understood only
by them, but, if we let it, it also provides an Afrikan centered foundation
out of which we can sexually locate ourselves in the natural ways that
constitute the traditional mind of Afrika.
|

|
|