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RedCairo
I'd rather be raped once than jailed for a month let alone years.
On the list of injustice the latter is just as bad, at least.
That probably does suggest that 'education' about rape (including about avoiding being accused of rape, even when there is clear disagreement between the two people on whether it qualified) might be useful for some segment of the population.
I feel like you unerstand it the least.
If a store owner closes the store for the night, leaves the money in the till, leaves the door unlocked, and puts the till on the sidewalk, is he/she not at least the tiniest bit at blame for when he/she inevitably gets robbed? Would anyone who calls him/her stupid be a "victim blamer"?
Moron? Maybe. But not at fault.
And does it make the theif less of a theif? No, it doesn't. The theif is still 100% theif and the victim is still a moron.
Pretty sure I just spelled it out for you, and it makes perfect sense.
Obviously this isn't the case with a large number of rapes, I'm just trying to outline that what you're presenting as "sound logic" really doesn't make a lick of sense.
"sometimes women ask for it". Those were your words. That is not speaking of responsibility. That is saying there are times when it is ok to rape.
Since when does *responsibility* not translate into *blame*? Don't you see you are arguing semantics, or maybe I am just super stupid and dont get it. If someone accepts partial responsibility for something I think its taken for granted they also accept partial blame for something. responsibility=blame.
Why do you dodge the request? Where is your example of a state that has a law in which a victim can be held partially at fault?
And what do the laws being different from state to state, and from nation to nation mean to you? In what ways are they different, if not in how they assess situations to come up with a verdict?
Boo hoo. You are defending rapists. Own it.
Your black and white nonsense is irritating the heck out of people, including myself. I would really appreciate if you stop with all this defending rape nonsense, because its not true. Its childish behavior and deflection.
captaintyinknots
reply to post by LightOrange
Why is it that you guys can only draw parallels to other crimes, and not address the one of which we are speaking. Give me one single example of a time when a victim is at fault for being raped. Come on. Ive been waiting a long time for it, and no one can provide.
Moron? Maybe. But not at fault.
And does it make the theif less of a theif? No, it doesn't. The theif is still 100% theif and the victim is still a moron.
Pretty sure I just spelled it out for you, and it makes perfect sense.
Obviously this isn't the case with a large number of rapes, I'm just trying to outline that what you're presenting as "sound logic" really doesn't make a lick of sense.
Exactly. THe guys were 100% at fault. Period.
My friend, a very attractive girl, was promised free coc aine a few weekends ago while at a bar. She got in a car with 4 men and went to their shady house downtown. She got her free coc aine. She also got felt up by two guys at once, and when she tried to leave the other guys blocked the front door. She eventually got out through the garage and called me and we came and got her.
Again we have a situation where these guys were obviously 100% at fault, and complete scumbags. But what do you think happened when she told me the story? I told her she made an incredibly stupid decision, an that if she had gotten raped, the guilt woul be on her for making a stupid decision. Her response was to give me the "suck it" sign and say "FREE COCAINE, B****ES!".
Fantastic. Either way, though, it would not have been her fault had she been raped. What happened to her was not her fault.
She agreed when she was sober. And guess what? She no longer drinks as much at the bar and is more skeptical about the kind of people she talks to. She also won't get coc aine by going into someone's house, especially by herself.
Bull. What I said is a person that would blame the victim, and say it is their fault, or that they were asking for it, is a victim blamer. And they are.
However, in your opinion, she should go with 4 shady guys into a shady house to get free coc aine whenever she wants to, it's not her fault they're scumbags. Anyone who would tell her that doing so is irresponsible and ridiculous falls under the dishonorable title of a "victim blamer". Thank god there are intelligent people who don't buy into this rhetoric.
Victim blame.
Wrong. In any situation the vast majority of people would tell the person in this situation that it is their own fault, and they would be correct. And that store owner wouldn't do that again, despite his likely initial rant about how someone robbed him and they are human trash.
So where is my example then? Where is the example of a victim being at fault? No one has shown a single one yet. Because a victim cant be at fault. Which is the point.
Maybe if I was 14 years old and couldn't apply my own brain to select situations, then you'd be making progress in making me as shallow as you and your senationalist possy who would like to keep this topic as black & white as possible -- most likely in defense of personal situations and anecdotes which do not apply accross the board.
UnifiedSerenity
-- snip --
What was revealed on this little questionnaire was that over 85% of the males said "yes" to, if they were out on a date and knew with 100% certainty that they could have sex with their date and not get into trouble would they even if she didn't want to have sex... ie rape her.
We have a sickness of soul / heart and it is showing by the way we disrespect one another in small and big ways.
captaintyinknots
"sometimes women ask for it". Those were your words. That is not speaking of responsibility. That is saying there are times when it is ok to rape.
Yeah, but I am arguing semantics....
Why do you dodge the request? Where is your example of a state that has a law in which a victim can be held partially at fault?
Boo hoo. You are defending rapists. Own it.
Quit backtracking and own it.
this woman alone set back female rape victims so far back its not even funny
In March 2006 Crystal Gail Mangum, an African American student at North Carolina Central University[1][2] who worked as a stripper,[3] dancer and escort,[4] falsely accused three white Duke University students, members of the Duke Blue Devils men's lacrosse team, of raping her at a party held at the house of two of the team's captains in Durham, North Carolina on March 13, 2006. Many people involved in, or commenting on the case, including prosecutor Mike Nifong, called the alleged assault a hate crime or suggested it might be one.[5][6][7][8]
On a Friday night in 1990, after hanging out with a friend for several hours at a club - said friend disappeared for the night and left his female friend (stranger to me) without a ride and about 35 miles from home. I was plastered, and not going to drive as the club was next to a motel. She asked for a ride and I offered to drive her home in the morning as she was about 6 months pregnant, but I was going to have to get a motel room for the evening as I was drunk and not driving in such a state. We decided to split the cost of the room and both agreed that sleeping was all that was going to take place. She was pregnant and also not my type in the slightest. At the time, I thought I was in love with a woman attending UNCW. I seem to recall we even had separate beds. I woke up about 2 hours later - still destroyed by the alcohol - to find my clothes removed from the waist down and the girl on top of me wailing like a banshee and quite roughly enjoying herself. She had apparently brought me to erection - not hard as I'm one of those men who can hold one for hours, awake or asleep, sober or drunk. She told me everything was okay and to go back to sleep and despite my best effort to the contrary, I was unable to move or speak coherently in my still very inebriated and half-conscious state and did fall asleep again quickly. After most of my drunken stupor wore off around 7 am or so, I awoke again to find her on top of me - this time with a more menacing attitude as she knew I was in a better position to respond physically this time. I had began to wiggle out from under her (taking care not to hurt her baby) when she sternly warned me to "be quiet" and "not be forceful" and made it clear that she would cry rape if I tried to stop it. I was stunned to say the least and not sure how to respond. I could easily have thrown her across the room and off of me, but was concerned for her child and took her threat very, very seriously. She said it so easily that I doubt I was her first. I weighed my options for a moment and came to the conclusion that a sober, 6 or 7-month pregnant college student of 24 was far more likely to be believed by the authorities than a drunk 19-year old Marine in the best shape of his life. I frequented that club a lot and I'm sure several people saw me leave with her. I was pretty much #ed - in more than one way - at that point. I complied by lying still while she continued to warn and threaten me and she eventually orgasmed again and got off me. I don't know how long that rape took as I tried to disconnect my mind from that scene. Further, I have no idea how many times she had actually raped me that night (at least twice), but I was extremely sore for a few days. As a small favor, she turned out to be disease free. I've always tried to pretend it was nothing or play it off like a wild night that ended weird whenever the memory surfaced. After 17 years of pretending, the floodgates opened this week and it has been extremely difficult to deal with as my denial was swept away. I have a lot of counseling in my future in order to heal after the band-aid was ripped away. This was very difficult to admit, not only personally, but to a very dear friend who has been there before. As you know, rape is about power and control. She had power over me that night, even though I could have easily thrown her across the room and out the window. Her pregnancy and threat of jail against me were the only weapons she needed to have her way that night. My family is unaware and I'm still trying to figure out how to tell them. Eventually, I'll write about it myself.
thesuperfluousman.blogspot.com... yeah sure looks like males are the only ones encouraging rape and victim shaming here...... bonus comment by some one saying men need to be raped more often in the comment section.... yeah like thats gonna help things
1. He must have wanted it, since he remained erect (I guess women being raped never experience lubrication, either), or he was somehow “asking for it” in one way or another, such as getting drunk or sharing a room. Any of this sound familiar? 2. Men, being on average the more sexually driven sex, don’t mind being raped and aren’t traumatized by the experience. Another parallel: Though less often said openly nowadays, one still sometimes hears it suggested that raping a promiscuous woman or a prostitute is in some sense a lesser crime than raping a “decent” woman, on the theory that it wouldn’t be as big a deal to the victim. 3. It serves him right for being such a weakling. The frequency which with this one was repeated is interesting because in traditionalist/patriarchal morality, strength/power is often considered the prime virtue of a man, just as chastity is considered the prime virtue of a woman. In other words, we have here a masculine parallel to “The slut had it coming.” Violate the expectations placed on your sex, and there will be no compassion for you. Thus, we have a nearly perfect recapitulation of the traditional ways of denying, minimizing, or condoning the rape of women. In fact, there were a number of women in the comments saying stuff like this. That initially surprised me, but it shouldn't have. It’s worth noting how people can suffer from positive stereotypes about their sex. Much of the indifference to crimes like this (By no means all- there are also “progressive” reasons not to care, which sometimes overlap), or to men being raped in prison, or to male victims of domestic violence, and so on, can be attributed to the traditional belief that men, who are supposed to be the strong, stoic sex, don’t let themselves be harmed or abused by others, don’t (or at least shouldn’t) feel pain the way women do, and certainly shouldn’t admit it to it if they do. A perusal of the comment thread at the linked article will certainly testify to that, as will observing attitudes on the issue of men being raped in prison. A crying woman inspires compassion; a crying man inspires contempt. It’s drilled (or beaten, as needed) into everyone from an early age. God only knows how much injustice and misery has happened through the years because of this mentality, and how much we’ll continue to see. And I don’t think it’s ever going to end.
In feminist circles much time is dedicated to issues that stop women from reporting rapes. The Curvature is an excellent example of a blog that daily posts about rape, and its effects. When I think of the hardships that women face getting rape to be treated seriously by the authorities, I cannot help but wonder how much harder is it for men, who have very few support networks in place? How much harder is it for men, if they can be publicly ridiculed when they share their accounts? Men who are raped by other men fear being labelled homosexual even though rape is a crime about power and not about sex. "People will tend to fault the male victim instead of the rapist. Stephen Donaldson, president of Stop Prisoner Rape (a national education and advocacy group), says that the suppression of knowledge of male rape is so powerful and pervasive that criminals such as burglars and robbers sometimes rape their male victims as a sideline solely to prevent them from going to the police." It makes one wonder how many are suffering in shame and silence, afraid to talk about their experiences? This is something we need to start addressing and creating support networks for. No matter the gender, rape is a violation of the worst kind. Rape crisis counsellors estimate that while only one in 50 raped women report the crime to the police, the rates of under-reporting among men are even higher (Brochman, 1991). We think of men as always strong and therefore there is this understanding that they should be able to protect themselves in all situations. Women hold take back the night rallies, but do we stop to think that darkness may be just as dangerous to men? A predator, is a predator and if they seek to assault an individual, gender may not play a role on who is victimized. Men are taught to hold in their emotions and not express their pain. How many suffer because they feel it is the "manly" thing to do. How many ignore their pain because we have taught them as children that males don't cry when they are hurt, they simply move on to the next task?
this talks about how it looks like crime is down but its really reporting that is down more or less or at least thats what i took from the article
When it comes to rape, the numbers look even better: from 1980 to 2005, the estimated number of sexual assaults in the US fell by 85 percent. Scholars attribute this stunning collapse to various factors, including advances in gender equality, the abortion of unwanted children, and the spread of internet pornography.
I said what I said, but it was within a certain context. You are clinging on to a few words and running with them perpetually. Technically the women could be accused of rape if she goes too far. Its a gray area between women forcing themselves on to a man, and a man forcing themselves on to a women. Sometimes the lines are blurred when intoxication is involved and people get the wrong messages. They are submissive at first or even enjoy it and suddenly change their mind. Humans are complicated animals.
Please provide citation to back up the claim that judges decide how at fault victims are.
It is taken for granted that victims are partially at fault when the judge decides a verdict. If there were was durress involved such as weapons, if there was intoxication, if the messages given were clear enough, how the women acted(not just dressed), if there were any witnesses, the past history of each person, etc.
How serious is not the same as a victim being at fault. Every crime out there has varying sentences. They exist so that a judge can take into account factors about the perpetrator, not the victim.
The judge/jury will determine IF it was actually rape and how serious it was. Why do you think there is 0-15 year sentence applicable?
*you meant you're.
Your not mature enough to discuss complicated topics like this. Boo-hoo back at you!
So Ill pose the same question to you as I have to others: Can you provide a single example of any time a person can state "No" or "Stop" in a sexual situation, and the other person forces them to proceed, that is not black and white?
I think the minute anything becomes "there is no context whatever" there is a problem -- nothing in the universe is that polarized. Only great emotion makes it seem so. The definition of rape (not stranger-rape obviously, this thread has been dominantly about consensual not-quite-sex got- out-of-control for quite some time now) has a subjective factor, and is not always the same for men and women in the same situation.
The perpetrators point of view does not matter. If the victim stated "No", then the perpetrator is in the wrong.
Even times when it is legitimately rape from the woman's point of view it may not be from the man's, and this is particularly so when (as the person above noted) there are mind-altering substances involved and/or the situation is a last-instant mind change (in part because at that point depending on the situation, there are some mind-altering hormones going on in the male for that alone).
Ill await your example, then.
Consideration for other human beings ought to be a given, and nobody even on this thread that I have seen, would support what ought to legitimately be called rape by anybody. But there is definitely a spectrum in this situation just like there is in every other spectrum of human behavior and relationships which exist.