It makes me fucking furious that it's not considered a legitimate social problem, and I have a girlfriend.

It's not though.
People are in genuine pain. Why should I give more of a crap about, for example, colon cancer? Or, moving more into the realm of the intangible, clinical depression? Or is depression nothing to be spoken of in polite company, as well?
As much as they want people to think it is, there are reasons as to why concepts such as "incel" and "loveshy" aren't recognized by the physological community at large.
They should be, if not as a psychological problem, then a social one, as I'm not convinced it's involuntarily celibate people, or solely involuntarily celibate people, who are the fucked up ones. I think the problem is systemic, and cannot be solved unless a new system is adopted. If the old system is too entrenched, either by nature or through socialization, and if thereby there is no rapid or universal solution to be had, then it is still no mean thing to attempt to at least soothe the problem where we find it.
Mostly though in order to make this brief, their inability to obtain a romantic relationship usually is a symtom of other psychological issues. Throwing sex at them won't cure them, no matter what they want to think.
So what? Throwing money at poor people doesn't solve poverty, so they say, but does that mean poverty isn't a problem?
Besides, it isn't THAT hard to get laid, especially in this day and age. You need to satisfy your sexual urges? Either Jerk off or fuck a hooker.
Jerking off is inferior and hookers are illegal in 49 of these United States, which sort of goes to my point. The law pursues an active discrimination against the sex-poor.
Furthermore, for some people it
is harder to get laid than others. Perhaps not impossible, but it doesn't take an impossibility of opportunity to pose a genuine social failure.
trekkiedane said:
It's just like the old joke: Man comes up to a woman and offers sex with her, her response is likely to be "
Piss off pervert" and a good doze of mace. Woman comes up to a man and offers sex with the likely result that he almost faints "wh...wh...what? -you want to sleep with
me?"
This is the sort of nonsense double standard that I think reinforces my point. How can you expect a market to function with such unequal bargaining positions? As T'Girl pointed out, it
doesn't. Or, it does, with bad outcomes for a sizeable number of participants.
Char said:
Again, this may sound harsh, but it needs to be said. Sex is not a need. You won't die without it. It is a want and desire that no one is ENTITLED to.
No one is
entitled to anything. Natural rights rest on a pretty weak theory, in my opinion. That doesn't mean we should all live in the jungle and brain each other with rocks for our coconuts.
I would readily classify sex as a need, as well, though obviously not as immediate as oxygen or food. And in a way, you very much do die without it. The very limited immortality we have is only accessible through sex, which is why it we desire it, and why most folk consider it a long-term need. Also, I'd suspect long sexual droughts make you a bit crazy, and less likely to be capable of attracting a sexual partner in the future--a vicious cycle sort of thing.