Quote from: whatsername on November 24, 2008, 12:28:25 PM
My next sentence was vital to the message as a whole. I don't mean I do. I mean we as women do. I am a strong woman too. I'm not weak or helpless. But we know very very well what we have to do to protect ourselves, and I gaurantee you the strong women you know make similar concessions as the ones I (and every single other woman cis and trans I know) do to stay so. You don't have to quiver in fear over something to live with consistent consciousness of it.
Well as I said, at some point or another all guys undoubtedly feel a chill at the thought of being falsely accused. I mistook your point to be that woman feel afraid of rape all the time, my mistake.
Quote from: whatsername on November 24, 2008, 12:28:25 PMQuoteWhy do you think we have this engrained tradition of asking "do you want it" before we begin?
Well, I actually thought that was because some men aren't actually jerks and want to have willing partners...not to stave off a lawsuit. Silly me?
I didn't mention anything to do with lawsuits. The fear of being accused is as much to do with the horror of thinking you might actually have made her feel that way, as it is of simply the accusal itself. We don't want to be, be seen, or
feel like the guy who does that to someone.
It's the same fear, you're the only one focussing on the letigeous aspect of it.
Quote from: whatsername on November 24, 2008, 12:28:25 PM
Well it's getting off track at this point I suppose, but to try and compare the two fears is just... It doesn't make sense in my experience, they're just not equivalent fears, not by measure of emotion involved or adjustments in ones life made.
And yet you just finished telling me that I cannot possibly understand the female fear of rape. What makes you so sure you could possibly comprehend how it would feel to worry that you might make the one you love/make love with feel forced?
This is beginning to annoy me, because you are expressing nothing more than a typical femenistic dismissal of men's feelings. You think that just because you have to deal with the fear of being vulnerable that men could never feel anything close to that.
Don't you see the hypocrisy of that position? I can't claim to understand the female fear, nor am I allowed to dismiss it, but somehow you're allowed to do just that to men?
Being falsely accused can ruin men's lives, and bring raped can be just as destructive to females. So what you're really saying here, if you must insist on disagreeing with me, is that female lives are more important than male lives. Think about that, and ask yourself if that really is fair.
Quote from: whatsername on November 24, 2008, 12:28:25 PMThat would make sense if most people made this assumption. Look at the statistics of rapes reported, rapes estimated to actually happen, rape accusations that go to trial and then convictions had. The numbers are positively appalling. And then look at the conversations had around these trials. For every me and Nichole, willing to believe a victim, there's two others willing to blame her. I've had this conversation many times. Sometimes I'm vastly out numbered by folks casting doubt on the victim.
That has simply not been my experience, so perhaps the argument is moot. In my experience, the very mention of the word rape inspires total dismissal of the man, and total sympathy for the woman regardless of the facts. The reason I am driving in the point that I am is precisely because I too have had this argument a dozen times with the majority of people acting the way you are.
Quote from: whatsername on November 24, 2008, 12:28:25 PMIt is very hard to be the "perfect victim" needed to obtain a conviction in the country, generally speaking. So I'm sorry, but I just don't agree with you, even with my husband's background.
But surely being the wife of a man who was falsely accused you *can* appreciate the damage it can do? And with that in mind, how am I so wrong in saying that contributing to the witchhunt against a man in that position is unfair?
This is not about me arguing the frequency of that event, I'm *not* trying to say that men are falsely accused more than woman are genuinely raped, and I'm *not* trying to say that that women are always treated better than men in this situation, what I *am* saying is that assuming the man is guilty is no better than assuming the woman is faking it.
It's the *assumption*, and the double standards therein which I am objecting to. You simply cannot dissaprove of someone for making an assumption when you are going to do the very same thing.
Quote from: Nichole on November 24, 2008, 12:32:18 PM
TS, I appreciate your "even-handed" and "rational" take on something like rape or molestation or anything of that sort.
Hehe, the rest of your post would beg to differ.
Quote from: Nichole on November 24, 2008, 12:32:18 PMBut, I also find that you sometimes "do" the very things you say whatername and I should not do.
I certainly don't intend to, please provide examples of my hypocrisy so that I can work on it.
Quote from: Nichole on November 24, 2008, 12:32:18 PMIn your "rationality" you do make exactly an assumption: that being that some sort of totally objective pov exists among human beings. I am not "reading" your "rationality" as rationality, I'm reading it as simply cogitating about an experience you've never had and making some fairly breath-taking assumptions yourself about the frequency that men are "falsely accused" of rape. And how to try and balance those against the very real incidence of rapes, at least in many parts of the world.
I'm sorry, I'm not trying to be difficult but I honestly have no idea what you are trying to say here. The only thing I can discern from that passage is that you seem to think I am arguing that the frequency of false accusations is comparable to the frequency of rapes.
If you had read my posts properly, you would see that this is not the case. I'm only arguing that the assumption that the man is guilty is no less negative or destructive than the assumption that the woman is faking it. Assumptions cause harm, and there is NEVER any excuse or justification for them.
Quote from: Nichole on November 24, 2008, 12:32:18 PMIn point of fact, I am making an assumption. I am "assuming" that the jury had at least one member who was as "rational" as you are being here. They discussed relative veracity and the previous instability of the victim and that she was trans. They also discussed the relative social standing of the "poor doctor."
Again, we're not talking about lawcases and such, we're talking about the dismissal of the man's role in rape accusal.
Quote from: Nichole on November 24, 2008, 12:32:18 PMI'll own that "rationality" is not my gut-response to rape and that I am not likely in many cases to be able to "abstract" my own experience from my decisions. But, I'd also maintain that neither can you. Your "rationality" is simply as much a part of how you are inclined to view the topic as is my "experience" of something you've not experienced.
The difference is I am arguing a neutral point, I'm not making an assumption
one way or the
other, and as such neither am I being hypocritical in the presentation of my points. All I am saying is that it *can* happen either way, and as such we should never make assumptions either way.
Assumptions ruin lives. Don't assume that men are automatically guilty, don't assume that women are automatically lying. It's not a competition about who suffers the most, ANY amount of suffering is too much. DON'T ASSUME, that's my only point.
Truth Seeker