The feminist society where women rule men, there are no marriages, no nuclear families

It's a place where women rule, marriages don't exist and everything follows a maternity blood line. But is it as good for women as it sounds and as long as it lasts? Imagine a society without fathers; without marriage [or divorce]; or without nuclear families. Grandma sits at the top of the country; boys and [...]
It's a place where women rule, marriages don't exist and everything follows a maternity blood line. But is it as good for women as it sounds and as long as it lasts?
Imagine a society without fathers; without marriage [or divorce]; or without nuclear families. Grandma sits at the top of the land; her sons and her daughters live with her, like the children of those girls, following a line of maternity blood. Men are sperm donors for women, but they are not involved in their behavior.
This progressive world of feminist or anatrical mathematician exists in Yunnan, south-west China, in the most remote eastern lowland of the Himalayas. An ancient tribal community of Tibetan Buddhists named Mosou, they live in a sudden modern way: women are treated as equal, if not superior, to men; both genders can have as many sexual partners as they want, free from judgments and prejudices. But is it as utopic as it seems? And how long can he survive?
A successful Singapore lawyer, Choo Waihong, quit work in 2006 to travel to that country. She had worked in Canada, the US and London, but felt the appeal to visit China, the country of her ancestors. After reading about Mosuot, she decided to travel to the picturesque community, a series of villages. But something other than the amazing sights and fresh air seduced him.
I grew up in a world where men are bosses,” she said. My father and I fought a lot because he was a quantum male in a Chinese patriarchal community in Singapore. And I never had the sense of belonging to work; the rules were made for men to adapt, and I didn't think they'd get used to it, but not to me. I've been a feminist all my life, and Musoot seemed to put the female in the center of their society. It was inspiring.
The Muslim children were raised only by mothers, grandmothers, aunts, and aunts she discovered after a time in that community.
From the perspective of a foreign man, especially a woman from China, where most tourists come from the Mussuot are “condemned” as a society of single women, Waihong added, follows Periscopi.
Men and women practice what is known as " “walking marriage”. A thing like overnight attitudes. Couples never live together, and nobody says, “admitted”.
Women own and inherit wealth. Males offer power, plow, build, fix homes, kill animals, and assist in important family decisions, even though the final word always belongs to grandmother. Men don't have parental responsibilities, and women don't even know who their children's father is, and they don't get a move on that.
But things have started to change since Chinese tourists came in the early 1990s, bringing asphalted roads, an airport and community work in question. Their traditional way of life has changed, and it is considered old for young people. A lot of people are already married. Education has made a big difference. /Periscopi












