Category Archives: BLOGGERY: politics, religion & brain purges……

Sexy Back

I was in Germany last weekend, so didn’t make it to Club Pedestal. It seems I was missed, at least by one kind gent, who sent me this message when I returned home:

“Hello. Pity you weren’t at Ped. Feeling you should be worshipped there at least in effigy, I went to the body painter. I described your personality and she drew you. Derek photographed it and promises it will be on the Gallery. I hope you like it. I think she really captured you.”

…and here it is. Click the thumbnail to enlarge, or click here to see the entire March Pedestal gallery.

Self-Regulation Fail

A lot of people, myself included, signed the petition below to reform the Press Complaints Commission:

“Following the article in the Daily Mail on Friday 16th October by Jan Moir in relation to the death of Stephen Gately, the PCC received over 21,000 complaints; however the chairman the Code committee for the PCC is currently the editor of the Daily Mail Paul Dacre. As the formula one boss Max Mosley said when giving evidence to the culture, media and sport committee at the House of Commons “It’s like putting the mafia in charge of the local police station. You can’t let them regulate themselves.” The PCC was weakened by preferential treatment to the newspaper industry and it lacked sufficient powers to appropriately deal with cases. The government needs to abolish the current PCC and re launch the committee as a public body so the public can have faith in the PCC once again.”

The Office of the Prime Minister today gave this particularly half-arsed response:

“The Government strongly supports the freedom of speech and a free press as fundamental to our democracy.

Freedom of expression means that sometimes material may be written and published which some people may disapprove of.

However, the press must of course abide by the law. In addition they sign up to a Code of Practice, overseen by the Press Complaints Commission which imposes further restrictions on them.

We feel it is appropriate that there should be a system of self-regulation, rather than a statutory regulator.

For the public to have confidence in a system of self-regulation it must be effective and robust. The Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport has welcomed the recent Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee’s report, and has said he looks forward to the Press Complaints Commission implementing its recommendations.”

For further disappointments, go to Number10.gov.uk.

Necessary Illusions?

In 1989, Noam Chomsky published a book called “Necessary Illusions: Thought Control in Democratic Societies”. It was about how distortion and distraction are used by media propagandists to keep the public malleable to those in power. When the populace thinks it is living in a free society, and that the information available is unbiased, it is then possible to dominate it.

On an individual level, Dominatrices use a similar strategy when it comes to public relations. We are fantasy figures. Our own mythology dictates that we are the most beautiful, powerful women in the universe, more intelligent and innately talented than all those mere mortals beneath us. We stride through the world with the confidence of a religious zealot, stepping over lesser beings and trampling them beneath our towering stiletto heels.

I’m not just talking about Pro-Domming here. This isn’t about business. As a lifestyle, in public, in relationships, we Tops project our own grandeur but keep the finer details of our successes somewhat hazy.

The truth is carefully filtered so that all available evidence reasserts our greatness. We are mysterious figures, only glimpsed from flattering camera angles in favourable lighting, wearing outfits that squeeze, pad and prop to make our bodies impossibly desirable. Our infinite talents are hinted at, our intellectual prowess and creativity whispered about in hushed awe among the ranks of the teeming ignorami. We are sexual superbeings.

Yet what are we if we strip away the mystery? Naked in every way, we become just as lumpy, insecure and as mentally unremarkable as everyone else. And we all are. There’s no getting away from it. None of us can possibly live up to our own hype. If we show too much of ourselves – intellectually, creatively, emotionally – the chase is over and the spell is broken.

So, submissive men, I pose a question: is it better for a Domme keep her personality in its metaphorical corset? Again, I’m not talking about business here. I’m talking about every kind of intimacy and the D/s dynamic. Are necessary illusions preferable to the disappointing reality of a multi-faceted, deeply-flawed and comparatively mediocre human being? Your thoughts on this are welcome.