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The uncomplicated truth about women's sexuality

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    In our culture we tend to see sex
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    as something that's more important
    to men than it is to women.
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    But that's not true.
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    What is true is that women often feel
    more shame in talking about it.
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    Over half of women quietly suffer
    from some kind of sexual dysfunction.
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    We've been hearing
    more about the orgasm gap.
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    It's kind of like the wage gap
    but stickier ...
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    (Laughter)
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    Straight women tend to reach climax
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    less than 60 percent
    of the time they have sex.
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    Men reach climax 90 percent
    of the time they have sex.
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    To address these issues
    women have been sold flawed medication,
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    testosterone creams ...
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    even untested genital injections.
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    The things is, female sexuality
    can't be fixed with a pill.
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    That's because it's not broken,
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    it's misunderstood.
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    Our culture has had a skewed
    and medically incorrect picture
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    of female sexuality
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    going back centuries.
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    If over half of women
    have some kind of sexual problem,
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    maybe our idea of sexuality
    doesn't work for women.
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    We need a clearer understanding
    of how women actually work.
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    I'm a journalist
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    and I recently wrote a book
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    about how our understanding
    of female sexuality is evolving.
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    So sexuality itself was defined
    back when men dominated science.
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    Male scientists
    tended to see the female body
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    through their own skewed lens.
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    They could've just asked women
    about their experience.
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    Instead they probed the female body
    like it was a foreign landscape.
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    Even today we debate the existence
    of female ejaculation and the G-spot
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    like we're talking about aliens or UFOs.
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    "Are they really out there?"
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    (Laughter)
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    All this goes double for LGBTQI
    women's sexuality,
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    which has been hated
    and erased in specific ways.
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    Ignorance about the female body
    goes back centuries.
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    It goes back to the beginning
    of modern medicine.
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    Cast your mind back to the 16th century;
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    a time of scientific revolution in Europe.
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    Men of ideas were challenging old dogmas.
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    They were building telescopes
    to gaze up at the stars.
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    We were making progress ...
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    sometimes.
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    You see, the fathers of anatomy --
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    and I say "fathers" because,
    let's face it, they were all dudes --
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    were poking about between women's legs
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    and trying to classify what they saw.
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    They weren't quite sure
    what to do with a clitoris.
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    It didn't appear to have
    anything to do with making babies.
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    The leading anatomist at the time declared
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    that it was probably
    some kind of abnormal growth --
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    (Laughter)
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    and that any woman who had one
    was probably a hermaphrodite.
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    It got so bad that parents would sometimes
    have their daughter's clitoris cut off
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    if it was deemed too large.
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    That's right.
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    Something we think of today
    as female genital mutilation
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    was practiced in the West
    as late as the 20th century.
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    You have to wonder:
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    if they were that confused
    about women's bodies,
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    why didn't they just ask women
    for a little help?
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    But you must be thinking,
    "All that was history."
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    It's a different world now.
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    Women have everything.
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    They have the birth control pill,
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    they have sexting
    and Tinder and vajazzling.
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    (Laughter)
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    Things must be better now.
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    But medical ignorance
    of the female body continues.
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    How many of you recognize this?
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    It's the full structure of the clitoris.
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    We think of the clitoris
    as this little pea-sized nub,
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    but actually it extends
    deep into the body.
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    Most of it lies under the skin.
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    It contains almost as much
    erectile tissue as the penis.
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    It's beautiful, isn't it?
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    It looks a little like a swan.
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    (Laughter)
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    This sculpture is by an artist
    named Sophia Wallace
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    as part of her "Cliteracy" project.
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    (Laughter)
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    She believes we need more "cliteracy,"
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    and it's true, considering
    that this structure
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    was only fully 3-D mapped
    by researchers in 2009.
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    That was after we finished mapping
    the entire human genome.
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    (Laughter)
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    This ignorance has real-life consequences.
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    In a medical journal in 2005,
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    Dr. Helen O'Connell, a urologist,
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    warned her colleagues that this structure
    was still nowhere to be found
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    in basic medical journals --
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    textbooks like "Gray's Anatomy."
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    This could have serious
    consequences for surgery.
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    Take this in.
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    Gentlemen:
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    imagine if you were at risk
    of losing your penis
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    because doctors weren't
    totally sure where it was
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    or what it looked like.
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    Unsurprisingly,
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    many women aren't too clear
    on their own genital anatomy either.
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    You can't really blame them.
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    The clitoris is often missing
    from many sex-ed diagrams, too.
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    Women can sense that their culture
    views their bodies with confusion at best,
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    outright disdain and disgust at worst.
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    Many women still view their own genitals
    as dirty or inadequate.
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    They're increasingly
    comparing their vulvas
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    with the neat and tiny ones
    they see in pornography.
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    It's one reason why labiaplasty
    is becoming a skyrocketing business
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    among women and teen girls.
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    Some people feel
    that all this is a trivial issue.
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    I was writing my book
    when I was at a dinner party
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    and someone said, "Isn't sexuality
    a first-world problem?
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    Aren't women dealing with more
    important issues all over the world?"
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    Of course they are,
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    but I think the impulse to trivialize sex
    is part of our problem.
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    We live in a culture
    that seems obsessed with sex.
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    We use it to sell everything.
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    We tell women that looking sexy
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    is one of the most important
    things you can do.
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    But what we really do is we belittle sex.
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    We reduce it to a sad shadow
    of what it truly is.
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    Sex is more than just an act.
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    I spoke with Dr. Lori Brotto,
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    a psychologist who treats
    sexual issues in women,
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    including survivors of trauma.
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    She says the hundreds of women she sees
    all tend to repeat the same thing.
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    They say, "I don't feel whole."
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    They feel they've lost a connection
    with their partners and themselves.
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    So what is sex?
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    We've traditionally defined the act of sex
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    as a linear, goal-oriented process.
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    It's something that starts with lust,
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    continues to heavy petting
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    and finishes with a happy ending.
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    Except many women
    don't experience it this way.
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    It's less linear for them
    and more circular.
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    This is a new model
    of women's arousal and desire
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    developed by Dr. Rosemary Basson.
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    It says many things,
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    including that women can begin
    an encounter for many different reasons
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    that aren't desire,
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    like curiosity.
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    They can finish with a climax
    or multiple climaxes,
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    or satisfaction without a climax at all.
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    All options are normal.
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    Some people are starting to champion
    a richer definition of sexuality.
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    Whether you identify as male,
    female or neither gender,
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    sex is about a relationship to the senses.
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    It's about slowing down,
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    listening to the body,
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    coming into the present moment.
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    It's about our whole health
    and well-being.
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    In other words,
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    sex at its true breadth isn't profane,
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    it's sacred.
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    That's one reason why women
    are redefining their sexuality today.
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    They're asking: what is sex for me?
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    So they're experimenting with practices
    that are less about the happy ending --
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    more about feeling whole.
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    So they're trying out
    spiritual sex classes,
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    masturbation workshops --
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    even shooting their own porn
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    that celebrates the diversity
    of real bodies.
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    For anyone who still feels
    this is a trivial issue, consider this:
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    understanding your body
    is crucial to the huge issue
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    of sex education and consent.
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    By deeply, intimately knowing
    what kind of touch feels right,
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    what pressure, what speed, what context,
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    you can better know
    what kind of touch feels wrong
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    and have the confidence to say so.
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    This isn't ultimately about women
    having more or better sex.
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    It's not about making sure
    women have as many orgasms as men.
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    It's about accepting yourself
    and your own unique experience.
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    It's about you being
    the expert on your body.
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    It's about defining pleasure
    and satisfaction on your terms.
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    And if that means you're happiest
    having no sex at all,
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    that's perfect, too.
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    If we define sex as part
    of our whole health and well-being,
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    then empowering women
    and girls to fully own it
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    is a crucial next step toward equality.
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    And I think it would be
    a better world not just for women
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    but for everyone.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The uncomplicated truth about women's sexuality
Speaker:
Sarah Barmak
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:20

English subtitles

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