I'd like to throw some thoughts out about CP and hierarchy for reaction and discussion. It's been a while since I have been here, so apologies if I hit an old discussion- if so, please feel free to sum up or direct me accordingly 
I've been thinking a lot about CP and hierarchy and abusive/opressi even dynamics.
And I find CP (couple's privilege) gets experienced by me as opression
Not the kind assigned to someone-- the kind couples assign themselves.
The overt signs- veto, etc, and the covert- not giving the person a real voice in their own relationship to "protect the couple"
My thoughts are: a person feeling they would like to spend more time in one particular relationship or prioritize it more is, well, natural. They may have responsibilities to keep, etc. they may have a history and value older relationships.
But it doesn't feel okay if a person deciding someone always comes first if the two are in conflict, and especially if the conflict is "spouse is uncomfortable, and instead of putting effort into support, and equal effort into understand my new partner's needs and seeing what might be acceptable, I will just unilaterally limit new partner, even if I don't want to, and if I thought about it, or really solicited and listened to feedback, i could know this was unfair."
Institutionalizinc such patterns as hierarchy is, to me, problematic.
Such that I'm thinking I just can't date anyone who is not willing to, when I am appropriately important, put their relationship on the line, if need be, to make sure I'm treated well.
I live my standards. I stand up for fair treatment for my partners, knowing if my other partners cannot reconcile it, we're done. That's scary, but I do trust my partners to be adult about it, and mostly I'm right. (I've lost a few, too.)
I want to do a double check. Is there any good reason someone should date me and impose a hierarchy on me or anyone else that would not indicate I should not date them?
To me, it's either a sigh of:
A. Entitlement ( I/we want to date. We would have big feelinvs if we just let it happen without controls. Therefore we can impose on people so we can date and not have feelings, as us dating is mor important than being fair.)
B. A sign of suspicion. They assume a new person will be most likely harmful, not helpful, to themselves as a couple, if they were to open up to dating-- normally. Where your default is " this will end up a good thing"
C. A sign of lack of trust in their judgment or spouse's judgement to judge whether I'm good for them or not.
D. The assumption that if I am really good for their partner,'I will be threatening o them, so lack of trust in their partner's skills to add something good to their life and still prioritize appropriately.
E. When kids involved, lack of trust in their partner to prioritize the kids appropriately.
All those indicate danger- I don't want to be treated like I'm dangerous, or be in a situation with either paranoia or legitimate non-trustworthyness.
And also, if someone's not flexible when this is brought up, it indicates no one will listen to me if I see a different better way, which shows I'm not able to be valued.
If I'm right-- this is a good filter. The people left are top notch.
If I'm not- not being able to come to terms with hierarchy deems me to a very, very fine filter of people I can date: we have to get along, they have to be pily (as long as I'm dating my current partners) and they also have to be willing to go against poly common practice and trust me to be good for them (if I merit it) and not set preemptive limits in case I'm not. Which should be a non-issue-- but it's not. Most poly people I know are hierarchical.
Thoughts? What am I missing?
I've been thinking a lot about CP and hierarchy and abusive/opressi even dynamics.
And I find CP (couple's privilege) gets experienced by me as opression
Not the kind assigned to someone-- the kind couples assign themselves.
The overt signs- veto, etc, and the covert- not giving the person a real voice in their own relationship to "protect the couple"
My thoughts are: a person feeling they would like to spend more time in one particular relationship or prioritize it more is, well, natural. They may have responsibilities to keep, etc. they may have a history and value older relationships.
But it doesn't feel okay if a person deciding someone always comes first if the two are in conflict, and especially if the conflict is "spouse is uncomfortable, and instead of putting effort into support, and equal effort into understand my new partner's needs and seeing what might be acceptable, I will just unilaterally limit new partner, even if I don't want to, and if I thought about it, or really solicited and listened to feedback, i could know this was unfair."
Institutionalizinc such patterns as hierarchy is, to me, problematic.
Such that I'm thinking I just can't date anyone who is not willing to, when I am appropriately important, put their relationship on the line, if need be, to make sure I'm treated well.
I live my standards. I stand up for fair treatment for my partners, knowing if my other partners cannot reconcile it, we're done. That's scary, but I do trust my partners to be adult about it, and mostly I'm right. (I've lost a few, too.)
I want to do a double check. Is there any good reason someone should date me and impose a hierarchy on me or anyone else that would not indicate I should not date them?
To me, it's either a sigh of:
A. Entitlement ( I/we want to date. We would have big feelinvs if we just let it happen without controls. Therefore we can impose on people so we can date and not have feelings, as us dating is mor important than being fair.)
B. A sign of suspicion. They assume a new person will be most likely harmful, not helpful, to themselves as a couple, if they were to open up to dating-- normally. Where your default is " this will end up a good thing"
C. A sign of lack of trust in their judgment or spouse's judgement to judge whether I'm good for them or not.
D. The assumption that if I am really good for their partner,'I will be threatening o them, so lack of trust in their partner's skills to add something good to their life and still prioritize appropriately.
E. When kids involved, lack of trust in their partner to prioritize the kids appropriately.
All those indicate danger- I don't want to be treated like I'm dangerous, or be in a situation with either paranoia or legitimate non-trustworthyness.
And also, if someone's not flexible when this is brought up, it indicates no one will listen to me if I see a different better way, which shows I'm not able to be valued.
If I'm right-- this is a good filter. The people left are top notch.
If I'm not- not being able to come to terms with hierarchy deems me to a very, very fine filter of people I can date: we have to get along, they have to be pily (as long as I'm dating my current partners) and they also have to be willing to go against poly common practice and trust me to be good for them (if I merit it) and not set preemptive limits in case I'm not. Which should be a non-issue-- but it's not. Most poly people I know are hierarchical.
Thoughts? What am I missing?