In this episode, I confront one of the most disturbing realities of human history: mass sexual violence in war.
From Vietnam to World War II, from Rwanda to Bosnia, from Bangladesh to the Congo, the systematic r*pe of women has been used as a weapon of power, control, and humiliation.
This is not about biology.
This is not about instinct.
And it is not about s-x.
It is about dominance, dehumanization, ideology, and the psychology of cruelty.
We examine documented cases of war crimes against women, the evolutionary myths surrounding male aggression, the long term consequences for victims and their children, including the Amerasian population and post war “occupation children,” and why human intelligence allows cruelty at a scale no animal can achieve.
This is a philosophical and psychological breakdown of why men commit sexual violence, how societies enable it, and why true strength is restraint, discipline, and moral authority.
Topics covered:
war crimes against women, mass rape in war, psychology of sexual violence, human cruelty, genocide and sexual violence, Rwanda genocide, Bosnia war crimes, Vietnam War history, World War II atrocities, Amerasian children, power and domination, moral philosophy, human nature, masculinity and restraint, bystander effect, injustice in society.
If this conversation matters to you, share it, engage with it, and be part of raising the moral standard.