I had to go back and re-read that after having a bit of a wtf.
This is one of those statements that give me a momentary brain glitch when I try to parse it. All violent crime and especially sexual assault and rape have been on a steady decline since the 1980s in the West.
A quick check with the Department of Justice reveals the rate of rape in the US dropped by a staggering 94% from 1979 to 2003. The rate of sexual assault and rape in the US dropped by 64% from 1995 to 2010 alone. It has since bottomed out and remained relatively level from 2010 to 2013. When you consider that the rate of reporting sexual assault to the police has conversely risen since the 1980s that is one hell of a shift in society. And yes, these figures include the estimated number of unreported sexual assaults and rape.
Yes, the US still has a rape problem, but to say it is unchanged from the last 20-30 years is profoundly ignorant.
As for the International study; Hyena already covered the problem with that. Southeast Asia has a huge rape problem thanks to underlying cultural issues, poverty, slow progress on civil freedoms and lack of effective justice.
Even I already pointed that sexual assault statistics in the US have a skewed up average thanks to a handful of areas with abnormally high rates such as Alaska. The same thing happens in the statistics in Canada due to the Yukon and Nunavut. Women of minorities and/or in isolated communities = much higher risk.
Hence my previous point about being a middle class suburban white woman and conflating the risk with that of a poor woman of a minority. Which is a much much deeper problem and one that will not be solved with just changes in sex education, etc. In the US especially its another symptom of a much wider systematic problem of racism and poverty.
Like all violent crime being poor, isolated and/or not white goes hand in hand with a dramatically increased risk.
Originally posted by BlaqueKatt
A quick check with the Department of Justice reveals the rate of rape in the US dropped by a staggering 94% from 1979 to 2003. The rate of sexual assault and rape in the US dropped by 64% from 1995 to 2010 alone. It has since bottomed out and remained relatively level from 2010 to 2013. When you consider that the rate of reporting sexual assault to the police has conversely risen since the 1980s that is one hell of a shift in society. And yes, these figures include the estimated number of unreported sexual assaults and rape.
Yes, the US still has a rape problem, but to say it is unchanged from the last 20-30 years is profoundly ignorant.
As for the International study; Hyena already covered the problem with that. Southeast Asia has a huge rape problem thanks to underlying cultural issues, poverty, slow progress on civil freedoms and lack of effective justice.
Even I already pointed that sexual assault statistics in the US have a skewed up average thanks to a handful of areas with abnormally high rates such as Alaska. The same thing happens in the statistics in Canada due to the Yukon and Nunavut. Women of minorities and/or in isolated communities = much higher risk.
Hence my previous point about being a middle class suburban white woman and conflating the risk with that of a poor woman of a minority. Which is a much much deeper problem and one that will not be solved with just changes in sex education, etc. In the US especially its another symptom of a much wider systematic problem of racism and poverty.
Like all violent crime being poor, isolated and/or not white goes hand in hand with a dramatically increased risk.
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