A selection of P R O B L E M A T I C points removed by our brave moderatorsIt’s ironic that people are held accountable when they drive drunk, but when they have sex drunk, the other person is held accountable. The flip side is what if both people were stinkin’ drunk, shagged, and then both claim the sex was non-consensual?If you're responsible for other things you do while drunk such as drunk driving, public intoxication, etc. Why is sex different. I have never gotten drunk and sex and later felt like because I was drunk I was raped or anything. If you're responsible for some things you decide to do while drunk, why are you not responsible for deciding to have sex?If both parties are drunk and decide to have sex, that is 100% perfectly fine.
In no way shape or form is being drunk an excuse for consenting to something then holding someone else accountable.I'll do my part and not engage with people I know are totally wasted, but I also don't agree that a sober person should be held responsible for a drunk person's actions. Because lets be real, men are not the ones coming out saying they shouldn't have had sex while drunk and getting people charged. It's women doing that, and we need to understand from a legal perspective why men are responsible for what women do while drunk.
About “Jigolo Har Megiddo”. The song’s title, like many others by Ghost, is a wordplay, using the words “Jigolo,” a man whose job is prostitution, and “Har Megiddo,” a city in Israel. The translation is roughly “Man whore of Megiddo,” however, the word “Armageddon” derives from the latter. The song is about lust and has a wonderful juicy melodic.