Gumleaf
April 4th, 2009, 01:28 AM
MX 31/3/09
Young New Zealand women are regularly getting drunk and cruising around in packs, looking for men to have sex with.
A New Zealand TV current affairs show made the finding after an investigation into the sexual behaviour of Kiwi women, sparked by a survey finding last year that they were the world's most promiscuous. Not only that, but Kiwi men say they are being pressured into having sex.
The Durex Sexual Wellbeing Survey found New Zealand women had an average of 20 sexual partners, double that of their Australian and British counterparts and almost three times the global average of seven.
According to TVNZ Sunday reporter Janet McIntyre, anecdotal evidence from her report suggests the Durex survey findings were valid. "There's a new kind of mating ritual - sex is the point of entry into the relationship," McIntyre said.
McIntyre said if the first up sex wasn't good enough, women weren't prepared to waste their time persuing the relationship and would leave to find their next conquest. "There is no dating culture any more," she said.
Kiwi men are also feeling the impact from the new sexual tactics being employed by their women. A survey conducted by a New Zealand Sunday newspaper last year found 29 per cent of the 5000 men surveyed felt they had been pressured into having sex or had had sex unwillingly.
Young New Zealand women are regularly getting drunk and cruising around in packs, looking for men to have sex with.
A New Zealand TV current affairs show made the finding after an investigation into the sexual behaviour of Kiwi women, sparked by a survey finding last year that they were the world's most promiscuous. Not only that, but Kiwi men say they are being pressured into having sex.
The Durex Sexual Wellbeing Survey found New Zealand women had an average of 20 sexual partners, double that of their Australian and British counterparts and almost three times the global average of seven.
According to TVNZ Sunday reporter Janet McIntyre, anecdotal evidence from her report suggests the Durex survey findings were valid. "There's a new kind of mating ritual - sex is the point of entry into the relationship," McIntyre said.
McIntyre said if the first up sex wasn't good enough, women weren't prepared to waste their time persuing the relationship and would leave to find their next conquest. "There is no dating culture any more," she said.
Kiwi men are also feeling the impact from the new sexual tactics being employed by their women. A survey conducted by a New Zealand Sunday newspaper last year found 29 per cent of the 5000 men surveyed felt they had been pressured into having sex or had had sex unwillingly.