That would be the essence of progression. Or not?
I don't want to preach about morality here, because they say that after a certain age it is easy, let's leave it to the younger generation.
However, before I go into detail about what scandalized me, I would like to point out that I have used the human anatomy I was born with for most of my life according to its function.
To name just a few of these: my legs, for example, mainly for walking, my hands for grasping and related activities, my ears for hearing, my mouth and tongue for eating, speaking, tasting and assisting swallowing.
If this was not the case, then I certainly did not go up on a stage with that "ability" and present my "special knowledge" there. However, nowadays it seems that this is already happening, namely in the name of self-promotion.
As we learned from the daily news in Germany,
"an Australian woman played the flute with her vagina Supertalent in Lower Saxony."
So she bravely went up to the podium, sitting with her back to the audience, she showed the bottom of her panties, then she stuck a flute in her vagina and then - by moving certain muscles - she performed a children's song.
To all this, I would only add that according to the director of the Lower Saxony media authority (NLM), Professor Christian Krebs - who "assessed the scene from a legal point of view, from the point of view of the media impact on children and young people" - stated that:
"there is no suspicion of a violation of the provisions on the protection of minors..." because "it is not a pornographic case, as the general trend is not based solely on sexual stimulation and does not clearly exceed the "boundaries drawn according to general social values".
In connection with the case, they also examined the question of what effect this part of the program, which is usually watched by families together with their minor children, can have on the viewer and the minors. The professor's answer to this - on behalf of the media authority - was the following:
"It is not our job to sanction matters of taste." Such scenes do not represent "potentially harmful media content for development" for the target audience of twelve years or older. If he says… Then he continued:
"We don't see any danger of imitation either." The candidate who appeared in the program is "not an (attractive) identification figure for children and young people" because it has "nothing to do with everyday life".
In light of this, we can honestly be happy with the Hungarian government's child protection policy, which protects the healthy sexual development of minors with its measures.
Dr. Gábor Túri
Featured image: Photo: RTL / Stefan Gregorowius