I think the article makes a good point about the grey areas that occur because of poor sex education. Adolescents don't learn about communicating during sexual situations in health class; instead they learn from movies that stuff is supposed to "just happen" and not until later do they realize it's okay to talk during sex or sexually charged situations--it doesn't kill the vibe or ruin the mood. If two people want to have sex, that can continue.
That said, I can identify strongly with GasBandit more than I'm going to get into and I am 100% behind what he says, that the choice to forcefully have sex with someone when they don't want it is a choice made by the individual doing it. Doesn't matter the rapist's gender, their relation to the victim, age differences, whether they're alone or have accomplices, what their status on a football team is--they're making a conscious choice to violate another person.
As for rape culture, there is an element of entitlement among many men. I think what causes the situations where a rape is hidden by a community is more the trouble with small, tight-knit communities and their seclusion. That said, there is a problem in media perception where the rapists are not seen as rapists. That word isn't used, and that affects people who see what's happening. I read a blog post by a teacher where her high school class was discussing one of those cases, and students were noting the ruined futures of the football players. The teacher had to spell it out for her class that the boys were being punished because they are rapists. It hadn't occurred to anyone else in the room that what had happened to the girl was rape, or that by committing that rape, the boys were rapists. THAT perception is a problem and it needs to be fixed ASAP.
That said, I can identify strongly with GasBandit more than I'm going to get into and I am 100% behind what he says, that the choice to forcefully have sex with someone when they don't want it is a choice made by the individual doing it. Doesn't matter the rapist's gender, their relation to the victim, age differences, whether they're alone or have accomplices, what their status on a football team is--they're making a conscious choice to violate another person.
As for rape culture, there is an element of entitlement among many men. I think what causes the situations where a rape is hidden by a community is more the trouble with small, tight-knit communities and their seclusion. That said, there is a problem in media perception where the rapists are not seen as rapists. That word isn't used, and that affects people who see what's happening. I read a blog post by a teacher where her high school class was discussing one of those cases, and students were noting the ruined futures of the football players. The teacher had to spell it out for her class that the boys were being punished because they are rapists. It hadn't occurred to anyone else in the room that what had happened to the girl was rape, or that by committing that rape, the boys were rapists. THAT perception is a problem and it needs to be fixed ASAP.
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