OrangeCatz
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2010
- Messages
- 399
I suppose if I dress up with the intent on picking up women, and a homosexual man sees me dressed up, I've just given him consent to rape me?
The column certainly could have been written more sensitively, as I think the author himself implies in his followup column (here). However, I think maybe the point of the article is valid and has been lost amid the justifiable outrage at the tone.
Is there a logical fallacy based on the failure to recognize that things have multiple causes? Because I'm seeing that mistake over and over again, and this is one such case. Saying that the way a woman dresses is a contributing cause of rape in no way condones the rape or shifts the blame or implies that there are also other (and possibly more significant) contributing causes to rape.
It's just an evident fact, which I'm sure could easily be supported by statistics if anyone bothered to do a study, that women who dress provocatively are more likely than others to provoke a rape. That's no different than saying that men who conspicuously carry huge wads of cash in rough neighbourhoods are more likely than others to get mugged. It's not a matter of blaming the victim, it's just good advice on how to avoid being a victim. Whether you choose to take the advice, or take the risk, is up to you.
No, it was not the police officer (Malalai Kakar) in the blood-stained burqa, but rather the grandmother of the wife. See image/caption at http://socjus.tumblr.com/Nat Geo did a study on women's rights in the Stone Age lands of today.
They had a photo of an Afghani police woman arresting a husband (with blood on his clothes) for stabbing his wife who dissed him.. She's in a burqa, with blood all over it.
The Taliban murdered the police woman!
Actually those are gems. If not in a philosophical ideal reality that we soberly define here at JREF forum, quite much in the real de-facto world, especially when some alcohol is around.Some other gems from his article:
Quote:
For example: Don’t trust your male friends. Don’t go to a man’s home at night unless you’re prepared to have sex with him.
Quote:
the male animal craves drama as much as food, shelter and clothing. Conquering an unwilling sex partner is about as much drama as a man can find without shooting a gun.
He sounds like one of those schizophrenics who think people on TV are sending them secret messages.And Mr. Rottenberg believes that "most men" will interpret this as meaning she wants to have sex with them, personally.
Deluded doesn't even begin to cover it. Does this guy honestly watch the Oscars and, seeing Angelina Jolie in a flimsy gown with Brad Pitt, think that "most men" will think this means Angelina Jolie wants to have sex with them?
Not only he does not remotely have a valid point, but he engages in countless fallacies too.However, I think maybe the point of the article is valid and has been lost amid the justifiable outrage at the tone.
Funnily enough, there HAVE been people who "bothered" to do a study (someone linked to one such study earlier in this thread), and it has shown that... what women wear has zero impact on the rape statistics. Huh. How about that. Something that appears to be "obvious", really isn't after all.It's just an evident fact, which I'm sure could easily be supported by statistics if anyone bothered to do a study, that women who dress provocatively are more likely than others to provoke a rape.
This analogy never fails to make me laugh in its sheer absurdity. But seriously, has anyone ever heard of a man "carrying huge wads of cash in a rough neighbourhood", like, ever?That's no different than saying that men who conspicuously carry huge wads of cash in rough neighbourhoods are more likely than others to get mugged.
He's managed to insult men too.the male animal craves drama as much as food, shelter and clothing. Conquering an unwilling sex partner is about as much drama as a man can find without shooting a gun.
On the question of whether "provocative" dress is a risk factor for rape, I think I've seen things that suggest that it may actually be conservative dress that is a risk factor. (I'll try to come back with some documentation, but I'm having some modem problems, so I may not be able to do the needed research.) Anyway, it seems to be well documented that rape is an opportunistic crime. In the case of stranger rape, the typical perpetrator usually has decided to commit the crime before he spots any particular victim. The typical selection criterion is also opportunistic: the perpetrator is looking for an easy victim. This is why pregnant women are at increased risk. So far, this is pretty noncontroversial.
What I'm hoping to track down is a claim I've seen that women in everyday sexy clothing are perceived as more confident than those in more conservative clothing, and so as less easy victims. If the clothing were so elaborate as to be a major physical hindrance, I expect that the result would be different.
I'm not an expert in the subject, but I have read a number of law enforcement interviews with sex offenders and this claim strikes me as consistent with the mentality.
I'm fairly sure that I've read that nuns have some excess stranger rape risk. This strikes me as consistent with both the vulnerability factor and another aspect of the personalities of some sex offenders. A few of them are outright sexual sadists. For them clothing that marks a woman or girl as sexually conservative may actually be an attraction on the idea that the rape will cause such a person more distress.
http://business.highbeam.com/435388...ate-rape-victim-dress-and-perceiver-variablesFairstein (1993, pp. 132-133) noted, "most sexual assaults occur when there is a combination of two critical conditions: opportunity and vulnerability. The rapist needs the opportunity to commit the crime, and he succeeds when a victim is vulnerable at the moment of his opportunity." Richards, Rollerson, and Phillips (1991) hypothesized that nonverbal, as well as verbal, cues may affect perceptions of a woman's submissiveness and, subsequently, a potential assaulter's judgment of vulnerability. They found that dominant and submissive college women displayed visually different appearances (e.g., submissive women wore body-concealing clothing). College men's perceptions of dominant and submissive women were based primarily on dress as impressions were not influenced by body movements or presence/absence of sound. Richards et al. (1991) concluded that there was evidence to support the proposition that college men selected submissive women for exploitation.
What about this article is not our domain?
He insults men as unable to act civilized and blames women for whatever men do to them. So far as I'm aware, most of us are in one of those two offended domains.
Amazingly if you extended the argument, since we all are born naked, it means we are all naive and are getting what we should have expected, decades later (that woman gettting raped in her 73 years ? She was on a nude beach in 1953). And if we wore jewels or anything expansive at some time, that means we should have expected to be robbed or murdered at another.
And chewbacca is a wokie on endor. it does not make sense , don't you see it ?
(that guy is either a troll , an idiot, and I will not commit a false dichotomy here he could also be both).
That's the number one excuse used by people who have a pretty misogynist mindset. Even though that's not the point. Rape is rape. No woman, even if she were to be as so bold as to walk the streets naked, deserves to be raped. Dressing provocatively does not give anyone the right to her body. That's "blaming the victim" definitely.
Advising women to take reasonable precautions in their dress -- like in crossing the street -- is not "blaiming the victim". It's blaming the vicim when the "reasonable precautions" turn out to be "any woman who dresses less modesty than I approve of".
It is blaming the victim if there is no indication that dressing one way or another would actually influence your risk of being raped at all.