Posted on 10/24/2003 8:29:20 AM PDT by Scenic Sounds
Today, I was sitting outside my education classroom waiting for a friend with whom I was having lunch. While I was relaxing, I could hear the sounds of a film that was being shown for a sexual trauma class next door. The door was open, and with careful listening, I figured out that the film being shown was an educational documentary about date rape. Curious, I moved my chair closer to the door so that I could hear more clearly. The more I heard, the more interested I became.
Men are, by nature, predators, explained the narrator. Women, especially young women on college campuses, are surrounded by rapists. These rapists are in the guise of your closest male friends. You may think they are on your side, but youd be wrong.
This was only the beginning. After a few more statements which I missed because I was scrambling for my notebook the female narrator began to explain the warning signs that women should look for in their male friends to see if he was a rapist. The first signal, said the woman, was drinking. Rapists tend to drink alcohol and become drunk at least once a month. The second was a fondness for exploitative mens magazines. The narrator listed Playboy and Penthouse as two of the magazines that are popular with rapists.
It sounded a bit ludicrous to me assuming that guys who drink and look at Playboy are automatically rapists especially college guys, since sometimes it seems that their only pastimes are drinking and looking at Playboy. This view, however, is typical of the paranoid outlook that some liberal feminists are teaching on college campuses.
On the other hand - there are so many varying ideas about rape these days that its hard to keep up with them all. There are people who think that women ask for rape by a look or a short skirt or a tight shirt, and there are people who think that any sex at all is rape, because men always prey on women. The pure version of these two ideas is served up mostly by fringe groups, but the more watered down versions are what get touted as truth to different groups of people at different times.
Sometimes the line between rape and intercourse is so finely drawn that it cannot be distinguished. There seems to be a new criterion for rape, which can be anything from saying no and then consenting to not specifically saying yes. There are new definitions of consent now. As Susan Estrich once put it: "Many feminists would argue that so long as women are powerless relative to men, viewing a 'yes' as a sign of true consent is misguided. For myself, I am quite certain that many women who say 'yes' to men they know, whether on dates or on the job, would say 'no' if they could. I have no doubt that women's silence sometimes is not the product of passion and desire but of pressure and fear."
Then, on the other hand, there are people (oddly enough, most seem to be women) who hear about a womans rape and immediately look for an excuse to justify the mans behavior. This is the other side of the coin but its equally wrong. There are brutal people in the world that will not hesitate to take advantage of someone weaker than themselves, and both women and men need to realize this. There cannot be excuses made for rapists.
Thats what rape boils down to: brutality. Rape is about power and violence, not about sex or the pursuit of sex or even lust. It is about dominance. It is not about regret the morning after, and it is not about whether the girl who was raped had consensual sex with another man the night before. It is about the act itself; it is about the emotional scarring that it causes; and it is about the physical damage that it causes.
Extreme definitions of rape dont help rape victims. Instead, calluses build up on the public consciousness and more victims of rape find themselves being given the cold shoulder by the courts and by the press. Its as though they are being raped all over again.
The truth is, before we open our mouths to discuss someones rape or accusations of rape, we should stop and think about the consequences of the ideas that we are promulgating. Are extreme opinions and ideas from either side going to help us see the issue of rape with more clarity, or less?
Cathryn Crawford is a student at the University of Texas. She can be reached at cathryncrawford@washingtondispatch.com.
No, I understand now. Thanks for explaining it to me.
Disgusting. And their definition of rape trivializes those that have suffered through the actual crime.
Campus Feminism has nothing to do with empowering women. It's only about Power, period. It achieves this by denigrating all men and belittling women that are capable of rising above the herd and individually accomplishing something.
I'm in a technical, male-dominated field. The women that I work with are some of the most independent and intelligent women that I know, and they'd all, to a woman, be incredibly offended if it was suggested that they got to their positions by anything other than hard work (they'd be right, too!). Not a lot of room for affirmative action or feminism when the fortunes of the company are riding on the decisions made. And I've sat through hundreds of meeting where managers have wished aloud for two more engineers, or techs, or electricians, or doctors, or......etc etc etc. Never been in one where anybody said "If only we had one more Women's Studies major, we could get this project done." That's the most telling ancedote of all, I think.
/rant off. Thanks for listening!
Well, I don't know what got into him, but he decided that one day we "juves" needed to learn the truth about rape by way of demostrative evidence. He held a small Coke bottle in his hand and challenged one of the female "juves" to try to stick her pencil into the hole as he moved it back and forth very quickly. She couldn't do it, of course.
So, that's how the "juves" at my school learned the truth about rape in the sixties. ;-)
She was a fun gal, but her "fetish," if you will, was being forced. Our relationship lasted many months, and that's always the way she liked it.
Michael
Hmmm... if you're not getting drunk at least once a month in college, you're doing something wrong.
Well, there is a new brand of condoms on the market that comes with a consent form. Perhaps you should invest.
(I'm being serious. There really is.)
I never knew you were a feminist, Gary. :-)
couldn't agree with you more...especially since he actually DID rape someone - I think her name was "The American Public"
Me sound bitter...me wonder why...me also sound like me was educated in publik skool
Great post! I've never understood that major.
You're missing completely the political dimensions of sexuality. Obviously, it's been going right over your head. ;-)
It devalues women. It takes away their dignity and their independence.
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