Shady firm touts weird ‘semen stealing insemination kit’ to make men dads ‘without permission’

BOP

Well-Known Member

Men stealthing to trap women? Illegal. When women do it, perfectly fine.​


Stealthing is the practice of a man poking holes in the jimmy to deliberately get a woman pregnant, or removing said jimmy at some point during the act for that reason. Or to deliberately try to give her an STD. California was worried enough about the later that they lowered deliberate infection to a misdemeanor, lest somebody (or a lot of somebodies) conclude that the young scholars giving willing partners an STD was somehow a bad thing, and think poorly of them.

Anyway, this sort of thing, which some are referring to as "spurglary" isn't a new thing. What is new, is how widespread it seems to have gotten - or at least it has gotten traction, thanks mainly to social media.


A company marketing an “at home insemination kit” on the social media platform X is encouraging women to fish used condoms out of the trash without their partner’s knowledge and then “use the collected semen” to get pregnant so as to “make him a dad without his permission.”

The company, MakeAmom, touts its $250 “semen stealing” product as a way to circumvent laws in the US that make it illegal to poke holes in condoms without the knowledge of both participants.

One of its ads on X notes that while poking holes in condoms without the knowledge of both sexual partners is illegal in most states, “stealing the condom without his knowledge” is “not illegal in any state.”
 
Top