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| | Living on Earth: The Make Love, Not War Species |
 | | We never say, 'oh, well, obviously the females could be dominant if they wanted to, but for strategic reasons they're stepping back.' I've even seen in scientific literature the pattern that we see in bonobos has been described as "male chivalry," which is not at all an empirical term for a scientific paper. |
 | | And what's interesting to me about that is in chimpanzees it's males who attack females and are very, very brutal to them in many circumstances, and I don't see the same sort of sympathy, or the same sort of impetus to intervene, when it's males attacking females because we see that as natural. |
 | | For instance, one day I was watching a female named Louise, and she had a bunch of celery in her hand and I wanted her to turn slightly so I could take some pictures of her because the green celery looked so nice against her fl fur. |
| www.loe.org /shows/segments.htm?programID=06-P13-00027&segmentID=2 (2570 words) |
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