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Originally posted by getreadyalready
reply to post by BadPenny
Honestly, I have very rarely seen anything sexually related at all. The couple of examples I put in that post are probably the handful of things I have seen in 12 years of playing multiple sports and being involved with fraternities (I am not in a fraternity, but I have been around them quite a bit.).
The point was, whatever the flavor of hazing happens to be that day, the object is to either resist it, ignore it, endure it, or turn it around on someone else.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
The absolute worst thing to do is run and cry about it.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
My personal point of view is that any actual sexual assault would probably result in a justifiable homicide! It is certainly not acceptable to "violate" somebody, but there is a huge jump from exposing yourself, or making a sarcastic quip, compared to actually sexually assaulting someone.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
The closest I have ever come to feeling helpless in some hazing came my freshman year in highschool football. 3 seniors grabbed me out of a hot shower and attempted to put me in an ice bath. I didn't go in, but one of them wound up fracturing a forearm and missing a game. Coach was extremely pissed, but not at me. A little later that same year, one of the other two pulled some dirty junk at practice and I came out from under a pile and lit into him, and it took two trainers about an hour to get his helmet off of his head where I had busted the facemask and clips. We didn't face off any more that year. I was wrestled at 112 lbs that year, and these guys were senior varsity starters that went on to play college ball.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
The point is, everyone gets tested, and you either stand up for yourself, or you find somewhere that you fit in better. You don't run and tell mommy.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
If it was real sexual assault, and there was real trauma, then there should have been violent repercussions, or jail time.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
Since I didn't hear about 50,000 murders in the military, or even 1,000 attempted murders, then I don't believe it was real trauma. I believe it was harmless pranks, blown out of proportion, probably with an ulterior motive of getting a reassignment, light duty, or seeking a lawsuit.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
Let's not forget. This isn't band camp. This is the US Military. If someone tries to rape a US soldier, they better wind up dead. If I was a commanding officer, and someone came to me with male on male rape accusations, and neither party looked injured, I'm not going to take it too seriously. To rape a soldier ought to take some enormous amount of violence, or he isn't much of a soldier.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
I agree to a certain extent, rape is all about power and control. For a dominant soldier to dominate and control another soldier is probably an ultimate kind of challenge, but first the aggressor has to be that type of sociopath, and next he has to be successful in his attempt, and lastly he has to get away with it without repercussions. I just can't believe the statistics for that would be anywhere near 50,000.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
As I said before, I can believe there was perhaps 110 rapes, and I agree with the other poster, the offenses against enemy troops are probably much higher, and that is appalling and sad.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
Still, I think hazing does have its place. I think bullying has its place. I think it is a right of passage. Many great people were motivated by the lessons they learned from a bully. Many people find out they are capable of more than they imagined, because they were pushed or cornered.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
I'm not saying "all" bullying is good, there are some obvious cases where it ends badly, and sometimes it requires intervention by an authority, or a parent, or an older sibling, but in general, I think the natural progression, and natural life lessons, and natural consequences are the best solution.
So, maybe there were 110 cases of actual rape, maybe there were a certain number of actual sexual assaults or traumas, but I will never believe the majority of those 50,000 cases were actual trauma. Some probably were, and hopefully they were punished accordingly, but I think it is a bad idea to completely eliminate hazing and male bonding.
Originally posted by getreadyalready
I will equate it to the bail out of General Motors. Innovation is born from necessity. Many a nerd grew up to do great things from the motivation of vengeance on a bully or a girl. If GM had been allowed to fail, thousands of workers with experience and ideas of their own would have flooded the market, and several start-ups and innovations would have had a chance to pop up and prosper. When we deny the natural progression of things, we stunt our own growth. If we stop all bullies, we will lose a certain amount of natural motivation that nature has provided.