Safe-Keeper
My avatar is not a Drumpf hat
OK, so in the past six weeks there has been a wave of sexual assaults in downtown Bergen. Recently, amidst political pushes for more visible police, harsher punishment for rape, and other measures I support full-heartedly, the authorities issued a warning to women to not walk alone in downtown at nighttime. Almost immediately, several politicians and other talking heads reacted negatively. The advice was 'reminiscent of a curfew', it 'restricted women's right to walk freely around in their town after nightfall', and it was 'an attempt by the police to void itself of responsibility'. It was also stated that advice to take care of yourself could result in a feeling of guilt in rape victims - a feeling that the assault was their fault because they didn't take adequate measures to protect themselves. And it very likely does.
Look, I've suffered from major depression and bipolar disorder in the past, and I currently attend a High School for teens and adults who due to mental illnesses have fallen behind and want to finish their High School education in a more 'relaxed' setting. As such, lots of my friends have problems in their lives, and I've lost count of how many rape victims I've gotten to know the last four years since I got ill. So the last thing I want is to blame them or make them feel guilty about what happened to them. But I still feel it's in order to tell people to take care of themselves.
What it comes down to is this: I've got friends, downtown residents, who I love very much. I don't want them to get raped, and we advise each others to take care of ourselves. Because when it comes down to it, I believe there's a difference between 'for your own safety, don't walk alone at night' and 'if you walk alone at night, you waive any assaulter of any responsibility for what he or she may do to you'. And the police is quite capable of improving its routines and telling people to take care of themselves.
Look, I've suffered from major depression and bipolar disorder in the past, and I currently attend a High School for teens and adults who due to mental illnesses have fallen behind and want to finish their High School education in a more 'relaxed' setting. As such, lots of my friends have problems in their lives, and I've lost count of how many rape victims I've gotten to know the last four years since I got ill. So the last thing I want is to blame them or make them feel guilty about what happened to them. But I still feel it's in order to tell people to take care of themselves.
What it comes down to is this: I've got friends, downtown residents, who I love very much. I don't want them to get raped, and we advise each others to take care of ourselves. Because when it comes down to it, I believe there's a difference between 'for your own safety, don't walk alone at night' and 'if you walk alone at night, you waive any assaulter of any responsibility for what he or she may do to you'. And the police is quite capable of improving its routines and telling people to take care of themselves.