General Zod wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:But... it reduces risk. To me, that's like buying insurance: people who buy insurance aren't morally superior to people who don't, but we still encourage people to do so out of prudence and a desire to avoid disaster. You are not morally or mentally inferior for not having insurance- but... seriously, you should probably have insurance if you can arrange for it.
Does it? Buying insurance doesn't really reduce risk in most cases; it guarantees you won't be completely fucked if something goes tits up.
It reduces risk in the sense that actuaries and other risk-assessment professionals judge it, not in the informal sense of "risk" as "probability of bad thing happening."
If an insurance policy reduces the consequences of a bad event, without changing the likelihood of the event, then in the formal sense of risk-management, that insurance policy reduces the risk.
On the other hand, educating people, including women, on how to avoid criminally-inclined people (including rape-inclined men), may have a lot of payoffs, including reducing the number of rapes.
I think this runs the risk of creating stereotypes that a sociopath would eventually learn how to identify and take advantage of.
At least then they have to work for it, and you weed out some of the less talented psychopaths.
In warfare the concept is called 'virtual attrition.' If you do something that forces the enemy to
do less harm, you've won an important victory even if you never actually fired a shot at him. If you can come up with a way to cause 5% fewer rapes to happen, congratulations, that means hundreds of thousands and eventually millions of women
not getting raped. Which is a victory even if it doesn't have any effect on the other 95% of cases.
I think it's safe to say that men probably aren't the best people to go around giving this sort of advice.
There are certain men (for example, men with a background in criminal psychology or handling domestic abuse cases) who might have this knowledge. By having encountered many known rapists and dealt with many situations in which rape was a possible outcome of a situation, they might have learned to observe certain patterns that would allow them to say "this kind of behavior is what we see from a lot of rapists."
The average man is NOT a good choice to give such advice. Incidentally, I wouldn't make up such advice on my own; I only pass on the gestalt of what I have heard from other sources that I believe may be credible because they have a background of the nature I describe above. Even then I'm only giving examples and summaries, of advice that I know would be harmless to listen to even if it turns out to be bad advice.
At the same time, though, the average woman does not have an automatic magical "this guy is a rapist" detector built into her brain. The average normal human in general- male or female- doesn't necessarily have great insight into how psychopaths think, or how abusive personalities behave, unless they are
told these things. Which isn't just an issue with rape, it's an issue with all sorts of crime and toxic relationships.
So there is still room for that kind of education. And rape is one of many issues where a better understanding of psychology, and the psychology of pathological people, might benefit the average person.
Trying to stop suicides by telling people that dying is bad obviously isn't going to work, because basically everyone knows that dying is bad. Fear of death is about as instinctive as any human drive. So if we want to combat suicide epidemics, it is desirable to look at the details- how is this social epidemic transmitted through the population, can we cut some of the links that cause one suicide to result in others? It may not be immediately obvious how to do that, but doing it can still pay off.
Studies have shown a direct correlation between people's ability to commit suicide and the suicide rate. Gun owners, for example, were far more likely to commit the act than non gun owners who otherwise thought about it.
Well yes, that's the thing about a complex phenomenon- it's correlated with, and caused by,
lots of things. Not just one. Having ready access to things you can kill yourself with increases the risk of suicides- not just guns, either. A fair number of people decide to commit suicide by crashing their cars, and that may well be an impulse decision that occurs because the means to arrange a fatal accident for yourself are right there.
At the same time, suicide is also correlated with depression, with unemployment,
and with other people in one's social circle committing suicide.
There are lots of different angles of attack on a complex problem; it's pointless and useless to ignore the easy possibilities in favor of the hard possibilities. So trying to cut back 'rape culture' jokes and speeches and attitudes is a good idea,
and encouraging people to be aware of what kind of men are most likely to commit rape,
and all sorts of other things, can still be good plans at the same time.
If you don't have immediate access to a means of following through you were less likely to do it. I think there's a vector for rape that a lot of people are overlooking by focusing on bullshit like identifying social tics and cues.
If you're hinting at something, please tell me, because the only option I came up with on my own seemed dumb and I don't want to think you're dumb.
I imagine that mostly it doesn't. On the other hand, the kind of stuff I've been talking about is less about violent confrontation and how to win it, and more about spotting social cues and resisting the urge toward wishful-thinking.
Women are already better at spotting social cues than men in general, so I'm not sure I think we're in any position to tell them what to look for.
Again, that doesn't automatically mean that every woman is somehow born knowing how to spot the social cues that mark a potential rapist. Or that whatever cue-spotting they might have in that regard can't be
honed.
For that matter, it's not
me who should actually be the source of any of this. It could be any number of people who aren't me, male and female alike.
To me, any meaningful attempt to reduce the rape rate would revolve around helping them avoid the acquaintance rapes, the date rapes, and so far as possible the spousal and family rapes.
Obviously "don't walk through dark alleys" isn't useful advice. "Think carefully about who you can and cannot trust" is.
How are they supposed to avoid being rhoofied? Vigilantly hover over their drink the entire time and never take their hands off?
I don't know. Does that mean you think there is no way for a woman to reduce the probability of being drugged? Even if you're right, does that mean there is no way a woman could conceivably reduce the probability of
any of the myriad of scenarios that can result in her being raped?
I mean, at some point you're doing an awfully good job of denying that people can take rationally calculated actions to protect themselves. It's possible to be clear that the victims of rape are not to blame for the rape, without asserting that rape is this completely unstoppable crime and that all women are helpless and powerless to do anything to protect themselves.
True to a large extent- but even then, it is often possible for us to spot people who are trying to manipulate us into thinking they're good guys, as long as we take off the rose-tinted glasses. There's always some manipulative, date-raping psychopath who can slip under the radar, but it is better to have the radar than to not have it.
Hilarious and more or less wrong.
So basically... I don't even know what you're arguing here. That humans are defenseless against liars and cheats and have no ability to protect ourselves against crime, that we are incapable of realizing when we're dealing with violent or selfish people.
Because basically, every time I even say "you know, it's possible to figure out when you're being tricked, to look for signs of a manipulative or abusive personality, to avoid people with anger management issues," it's like this idea somehow frightens or repels you.
Do you think this constitutes blaming the victim, and therefore you need to mock the very idea that women can even have
agency in the process of reducing the rape rate? Because I don't.
Spekio wrote:I got the impression you don't think women can be rapists, Mike. This is a disturbing trend I've been seeing on this whole discussion, actually.
1) My name isn't Mike, though I get the joke.
2) While I am aware that there can be female rapists and male victims, the vast majority of rapes are male-on-female, and we all know that perfectly well. Therefore, when I am trying to write in coherent sentences, I may use "women" and "men" instead of more gender-neutral terms. Sorry, but I find it hard to imagine anyone doesn't know what I mean.
I'm not saying small changes cannot make a big impact, but there has to be a purpose to the changes. I'm at a loss on how exactly I am a rape apologist but not a murder one depending on the metaphor I use. Am I a spousal abuse apologist for refering to those shirt I don't know if there are any other names as wifebeaters? I'll point you back at the toy gun example.
Using the word "rape" as a metaphor for "score a victory over" isn't
rape apologism. It is, however, part of a cultural association we might want to break.
Indeed, I'd argue that it's one of those 'Western hangups about sex' you're talking about; the idea that the sex act can be a means by which one person claims power and control at the expense of another, and that it can be used by one person to defeat or lessen another.
Pretending the matter does not exist and not talking about won't matter in the scheme of things at all. In fact, I think it set us back, like most repression tatics do. Making words taboo gives some power to them. I'd point out that nigger is a taboo when cracker, paddy and mick are not.
"Nigger" has power because it's associated with a real history of oppression- it was a word used as a tool of oppression, to denote an infinitely lowly and unavoidable status,
before it became a taboo. By contrast, "cracker" never had that kind of power; it was at most an expression of black frustration with whites.
"Mick" and "Paddy" had power at one time, but as the Irish assimilated into American culture, in America at least that power was lost.
I think is asking us to be offended on principle, on rather arbitrary reasons, to achieve basically nothing. Sure, let's think we are smart and socially conscious and pat ourselves on our collective backs for doing basically nothing. Same as let say... carbon credits.
On changing a culture, it can be done and it can be done fast, not by drastic means. From the top of my head, I'd suggest legalizing and formalizing prostitution. Conjugal visits - Prison rape in Brazil was greatly reduced when conjugal visits were allowed.
It's unclear to me to what extent legalized prostitution would reduce the rape rate, because it's unclear what fraction of rapists commit rape because they want sex, and what fraction do it because they want dominance, or because they believe they have a
right to sex with a specific individual.
The thing is, while it can be a farce to ban the symbols of a act you want to stamp out
in the wrong context, that doesn't mean it's always going to fail. Making it socially unacceptable to, for example, promote racism
can make it easier to raise the next generation free of racism, for instance.