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> Men burned more than women, at about 100 calories versus 69.

I chuckled.

I do have to smirk slightly, since a common complaint that I hear from people critical of millennials is that "everything is about sex these days!" as some sort of thinly-veiled way of dismissing people of a certain age group, when the facts seem to indicate that that simply isn't the case.

Anyway, I do have to wonder why this is happening? Is it due to the fact that there's less lead exposure, or is it just easier to find other stuff to do nowadays (which I realize sounds facetious but I don't intend it to be).

Anecdotally (which I realize means nothing in regards to science), I've noticed that I tend to have less of a libido when I am less physically active and/or I'm eating less healthily. I wonder if something like obesity rates have been directly correlated.

I would guess modern phones play a large role in this. Previously you would have TV or a book in the bedroom (and later laptops, but that was clunky). Now you share your bed with Instagram, WhatsApp, HN, Amazon etc.
Both can be true.

There is a thoery that overall less sex is being had, but the ones that do have sex are having it far more often than was common for an individual years ago.

Take it with a grain of salt though, the theory is popular with incels.

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>I do have to smirk slightly, since a common complaint that I hear from people critical of millennials is that "everything is about sex these days!" as some sort of thinly-veiled way of dismissing people of a certain age group, when the facts seem to indicate that that simply isn't the case.

Actually, it can very well be that "everything is about sex" for a group of people, precisely when that group of people have less sex than ever.

(Overcompensation and all that).

There are a bunch of studies over the last decade or so finding that teens (i.e. teens to ~28 year olds today) have shifted the balance of their social interactions away from in-person contact to online communication.

If the same thing goes for sexual topics, that would quite neatly explain this pair of interactions. Debating sex on social media or posting adult content online is publicly visible, hence "people are sexualizing everything these days!", but it's plausibly also an replacement outlet for what isn't happening in person.

(The other, simpler, take is that online accessibility just means we see an increasing amount of everything, even if the number of people involved is declining.)

>Anecdotally (which I realize means nothing in regards to science),

That was unnecessary to say.

I agree, except I wanted to make it abundantly clear that I wasn't using it instead of real evidence. A big pet-peeve of mine has always been when people try to pass off personal experience as something that can be used to dismiss statistics.
Sure it can be, if you can prove you're an exception.
Fair enough, but the testimony of some random eccentric on Hacker News is basically irrelevant, at least by itself.
It's because society keeps emasculating men.
This sounds like a theory without evidence, but it would be interesting to actually study.
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Gotta ask. Any relationship here with the global declining sperm counts?
Isn't the wide availability of internet pornography an obvious theory for one potential factor?