Well done, Hyena. You made into words what my thoughts were on this topic that I couldn't have written nearly as well.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
University Students Invent Fingernail Polish that Detects Date Rape Drugs
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by BlaqueKatt View Postwell let's see, women and girls are generally told from a young age how to prevent being raped(while males are usually not sat down by parents/authority figures and told to respect boundaries, what constitutes consent vs. coercion-this is changing slowly), and then if when it does happen it's dismissed as not important.
Besides, if those rape facts you link are correct (and while some certainly are, others I have my doubts about)
Originally posted by BlaqueKatt View PostAlready posted the stats on rape and alcohol, but your understanding is dead wrong.
Rape myths
Addendum to my last post: when I said "crime of opportunity", I wasn't trying to say that rape is the result of men just being unable to control their sexual impulses. They can; anyone can. What I meant was, people taking advantage of other people being in a state of reduced situational awareness, without having deliberately engineered that state (--> taking advantage of a girl sleeping drunkenly at a party, vs. having made her drunk by spiking her drinks). Sorry if that was unclear.
Originally posted by BlaqueKatt View PostLook at various dictatorships, do they advertise that opposition will get you killed/imprisoned? When it does happen does anyone care? Does the victim have agency? Is the victim taken seriously by those that can do something about it?
Originally posted by Kheldarson View PostExcept they're tied together. Look at your examples. Boys are picked on for being small, weak. What adjectives do people use to describe such individuals? What kind of phrases? "You throw like a girl!"; "Man up!" (as opposed to woman up); "Grow a pair!"; "Pussy!"; etc. A lot of insults we throw at less manly guys are in direct comparison to being a female. It is an insult to be a woman in our society's language. So if our language supports the idea that one gender is lesser than another, how far away is it that the "greater" group starts treating them poorly, up to and including violence of all types?
We see it in hate groups all the time.
Any social animals congregate in groups. The larger the groups, and the more sophisticated the animal, the more and larger subgroups exist. But any social animal instinctively wants to belong to the group, wants to have status in the group. And one group member calling another a bad/weak member of the group is an attack on that member's status, nothing else.
A male calling another male a "Pussy!" is trying to show himself as the better male, and thus gain status.
A female calling another female out for not having children is doing the same - trying to make herself a better/more important member of the female group. It has nothing whatsoever to do with any kind of "rape culture".
Plus, as an aside: I've read quite a few articles from self-proclaimed feminists attacking other women for making the choice of staying at home and raising children - as if choosing to not "make something more" out of herself is treason to the cause. What kind of "culture" would that be?"You are who you are on your worst day, Durkon. Anything less is a comforting lie you tell yourself to numb the pain." - Evil
"You're trying to be Lawful Good. People forget how crucial it is to keep trying, even if they screw it up now and then." - Good
Comment
-
Originally posted by Canarr View Postthen consent isn't the problem, because anyone going out with a bag of roofies and the intent to rape isn't confused about boundaries or what, exactly, constitutes consent. He knows that full well - or he wouldn't have those drugs - and he just doesn't care. He's a criminal, simple as that.
Accidental rapists
International study
survey of high school students
some really disturbing stats that prove more education is needed
In a survey of high school students, 56% of the girls and 76% of the boys believed forced sex was acceptable under some circumstances.
51% of the boys and 41% of the girls said forced sex was acceptable if the boy, "spent a lot of money" on the girl
male college students:
One in 12 admitted to committing acts that met the legal definitions of rape, and 84% of men who committed rape did not label it as rape.
43% of college-aged men admitted to using coercive behavior to have sex, including ignoring a woman's protest, using physical aggression, and forcing intercourse.
Comment
-
Your numbers aren't as effective as you think.
The fact that people are more likely to admit to something when you use a term for it that is stigmatized doesn't mean they don't understand that it's wrong. People are more likely to see that question as an accusation. If you asked me if I've spent hours bullying people, then I'm more likely to say no, than if you ask if I've spent time making fun of roleplayers who don't meet my standards. That doesn't mean that I don't realize it was wrong or did it accidentally. It means that I am more likely to admit to wrongdoing if asked in a way that destigmatizes it.
Also, once you admit that you're not talking about situations like roofies, then "We need to teach men not to rape" is no longer a reasonable response to "We have a better way to detectroofies."Last edited by Hyena Dandy; 08-31-2014, 03:17 PM."Nam castum esse decet pium poetam
ipsum, versiculos nihil necessest"
Comment
-
Originally posted by BlaqueKatt View Postand again that's only 2.4% the remaining 97.6% there's quite a few that fall under the problem of consent.
Accidental rapists
International study
survey of high school students
some really disturbing stats that prove more education is needed
Plus: the disturbing stats you quote are from studies conducted between the early 80s and 90s, so the are more than 20, sometimes more than 30 years old. Certainly interesting as a baseline to measure development in this ares compared to now, but hardly useful to draw any conclusions about present-day society."You are who you are on your worst day, Durkon. Anything less is a comforting lie you tell yourself to numb the pain." - Evil
"You're trying to be Lawful Good. People forget how crucial it is to keep trying, even if they screw it up now and then." - Good
Comment
-
educating kids may well work for reducing rape long-term, however, that is not what the fingernail polish is designed to do. It's designed to tell you if your drink has X drug in it.
in a sense, it's similar to contraception. Does failure to use contraception mean you deserve an STD? No. Nor does this mean a woman who doesn't use it deserves to be raped. However, it is still a reasonable precaution where you are in a situation where your drink could have been spiked.
Comment
-
Except... if you don't teach people what rape is in a legal sense then you're going to have a hard as fuck time trying to curb it. I think the first time I understood from a legal standpoint the nuance of what was treated as rape and what was not was in college which came up in a business law course. Obviously this comes up not so much because rape is a problem in business but because it's an easy way to look at legal ideas such as coercion and fraud and how it impacts scenarios.
The problem is, a majority of the American population is sexually active before they leave high school so you have missed the boat on a large number of people who may not get that sidebar. I think "teach men to not rape" is accusatory and wrong headed but teaching men what actually IS rape is not only a good idea, it's really shocking it doesn't come up in high school when men are horny bastards that are dealing with the most hormones they'll ever feel, contradictory information about their "manhood" and essentially have every reason to feel confused.
Honestly? If it wasn't couched in feminist/not feminist language (side stepping conservative types that think any teenagers reading anything about sex is icky) it would not be too hard to get it accomplished in some form of class. Both men and women getting the same information on what is and is not rape is not a bad thing.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Canarr View PostPlus: the disturbing stats you quote are from studies conducted between the early 80s and 90s, so the are more than 20, sometimes more than 30 years old. Certainly interesting as a baseline to measure development in this ares compared to now, but hardly useful to draw any conclusions about present-day society.
Comment
-
my point wasn't that there shouldn't be better education about what rape actually is, but that the fingernail polish isn't in competition with education.
basically, education works on a macro level- it (should) reduce rape rates nationally. Things like this fingernail polish work on a micro level- they reduce the chance that YOU are the one raped. Is it a good idea for kids to be properly educated in consent laws? Yes. Does that help you in a situation where you aren't sure if your drink has been spiked? No.
Comment
-
Well if people would keep to the idea that it's not an either/or thing, things would be lovely. But people won't because there's a feminist and/or MRA boogieman to be slain. And until they do, I don't think people will spend to much time talking or implementing actual solutions.
What you'll get is this - university students coming up with these ideas on their own.
People spend a lot more time on rhetoric than actually fixing things these days.
Comment
-
Originally posted by D_Yeti_Esquire View PostExcept... if you don't teach people what rape is in a legal sense then you're going to have a hard as fuck time trying to curb it.
Comment
-
That doesn't work because you're teaching people what your conception of an acceptable relationship is. There are enough people in BDSM, fwb, or in simple one night stands to remove the love requirement. Many people can and do have non-rape sex with people they don't respect. I'm not saying I would disagree with your best practice (it's mine as well), I'm just saying that wouldn't prevent rape out of ignorance.
That said, teaching people what the legal definition of consent is and how it can be taken or removed legally by circumstances is useful information. Having sex with an extremely drunk person for example even if you're tipsy enough that you're not thinking straight yourself. If you know there's no legal way for consent to occur in that scenario, you ARE informed that you're in danger of committing rape.
If you don't realize that the two of you having a good time with drugs can put you in that scenario though... well that's a scenario a lot of guys have made the wrong decision on because they just don't know.
Comment
-
Originally posted by D_Yeti_Esquire View PostThat doesn't work because you're teaching people what your conception of an acceptable relationship is. There are enough people in BDSM, fwb, or in simple one night stands to remove the love requirement.
BDSM is another thing entirely, though. People who confuse BDSM with rape must be the same people who confuse fictional movies with real life.
Originally posted by D_Yeti_Esquire View PostMany people can and do have non-rape sex with people they don't respect. I'm not saying I would disagree with your best practice (it's mine as well), I'm just saying that wouldn't prevent rape out of ignorance.
Originally posted by D_Yeti_Esquire View PostIf you don't realize that the two of you having a good time with drugs can put you in that scenario though... well that's a scenario a lot of guys have made the wrong decision on because they just don't know.
Comment
-
Originally posted by TheHuckster View PostI feel like if you're going to just teach people how to have sex the legal consenting way, you're going to end up with quite a few who believe, "Well, she's an emotional wreck after I cheated on her and made her feel like crap, but it's OK because the cops aren't after me about it and she had consented."
That said, sexual ethics and rights should be a normal component of sex education. I should also point out that it IS a normal component of sex education in Canada and I learned all of this stuff alongside sex education in secondary school. If you're curious, here are the guidelines for sex education in Canada.
But that brings up the more fundamental(ist) problem in the US where even teaching vaguely realistic non-abstinence based sex education is a farking up hill battle in many States. Despite the MOUNTAINS of evidence that demonstrate just how badly such education or complete lack of education adversely affects things such as teen pregnancy rates.
There is a correlation between sex education in regards to sexual ethics and sexual assault as well.
For example, behold our consent posters in Vancouver that are in bars and nightclubs. The VPD runs this campaign every year ( As do police in several Canadian cities now ). Within just 6 months of the first time the campaign was launched sexual assault rates dropped by 10%. All because of some simple informative ( and blunt ) reminder posters in drinking establishments.Last edited by Gravekeeper; 09-01-2014, 05:08 AM.
Comment
-
International study is from 2013, you have any evidence to support your claim that present day society is different?
Because if you want to make a change, you need to show that a change needs to be made. Not "A change needed to be made 20 years ago." Unless you're talking through a time portal, the fact that something used to be true, and you don't THINK it's changed, is irrelevant. We shouldn't be making policy based on the past."Nam castum esse decet pium poetam
ipsum, versiculos nihil necessest"
Comment
Comment