Eleas wrote:Neither does your sum total of zero anecdotes/evidence make a case for the inverse. Failing that, the next step would be going back to statistics of relative gender values and/or incidence of rape as indicators of current trends. Your argument presupposes that the US is an anomaly in this instance, and I'd like you to prove it.
My argument is not that the U.S. is an anomoly at all. I am pointing out the progress the U.S. has made, and have stated repeatedly that I can't speak to the situation in other countries. The only area I can see that the U.S. appears anomolous is in the use of "rape shield" laws, and that may not mean anything at all since different countries have different legal systems and they may not serve any purpose elsewhere.
The relative incidence of rape is not what I'm claiming the U.S. has made progress on, either. Where I'm claiming progress has been made is in the attitudes of society in general and the legal system. Without change in the attitude of society in general, rape shield laws would not have been called for and passed. Neither would other legislation, such as the requirement for states to pay for a rape test at no cost to the victim as part of VAWA.
The statistics on gender trends and rape is precisely what I'm calling into question.
Indeed, the body of statistical evidence is all over the fucking place. Statistics for false rape reports range from 2% to 50%, and a large part of the problem is simply separating out what a "false report" is and when it has been made. Obviously a flat-out lie is a false report, but what do we call those situations where the female does not really intend to lie but rather convinces herself what happened was rape? Or when she simply does not understand the law?
You're falling prey to legalism here. The specific legal term has very little to do with prevalent attitudes, which was the subject on which we appear to differ. Indeed, in this quote you yourself point out the cognitive overlap.
I'm not falling prey to legalism at all. Rape is a crime - a serious one. That is a large part of the prevalent attitudes towards it.
You do claim that the US, unlike countries with a far greater degree of gender equality (a fact) has rid itself of victim-blaming when it comes to women.
I did not claim the U.S. has "rid itself" of that; I pointed out that it has been banned from use as a defense tactic, and that it is no longer the prevailing social attitude. Some people still may victim-blame, but they are a relative rarity now.
As for the "fact" of gender equity, I do not see that gender equity can be measured that precisely. To the best of my observation, the U.S., Canada, and most of Europe are all essentially the same in that regard, possibly certain other countries as well, and I do not see a lot of merit in attempting to precisely measure such a complex thing.
My cricticism was simply of your nose-in-the-air assumption that France must necessarily be superior on any social issue to the U.S. That alone causes me to question the validity of measures of gender equity as that attitude seems all to prevalent amongst those measuring such things.
That is an extraordinary claim, requiring commensurate evidence.
It is not an extradordinary claim at all. More importantly, what exactly is blaming the victim is the debate in the first place. My point has been all along that a lot of things that are claimed to be "blaming the victim" are really not - namely a healthy skepticism of taking an accuser at their word, a desire to see all the facts before rendering judgement, and a desire to see the rights of the defendant respected, and their reputation and life not trashed prior to a conviction. Some of these things, however, have been equated to a "short skirt defense" by some people here.
Your demand for statistical evidence of what country blames victims more often is dishonest because we are still debating what blaming the victim is - a fact you cannot possibly have missed. Moreover, it is a distraction technique: I am not claiming the U.S. is better than any other country; I am claiming it has made progress in the last 3 decades and current anti-rape advocacy is behind the times. Whether the U.S. is better now than it was in 1981 is not in any way related to how the U.S. compares to any other country, so I can only imagine you're trying to start a U.S.-Europe pissing contest so as to talk down to Americans for some reason.
I do not "act amazed". I point out that the US, in terms of a broad swath of social issues which just happen to be the subject at hand, is fairly considered reactionary by many nations, and should be expected to display their more parochial attitudes to a greater degree.
Quite frankly, I don't really give a shit how the U.S. is viewed by other nations, and I would point out that you're verging on an appeal to popularity.
Stop moving the goalposts. This is not about laws, this is about views. Laws are at best an indicator of this, and may be an outlier.
I am not moving the goalposts at all. Changes in the law which I have cited
reflect changes in social attitudes. They are certainly an indicator, but they are not an outlier; in fact they are the best indicator simply because
rape is a serious crime. How it is handled in the investigative and judicial process is
the most important social attitude issue. One of the major claims made in regards to social attitudes is that rapes go unreported
because of what the victim will be put through after reporting it. You are trying to draw a social/legal distinction that does not exist; the matters are inextricably intertwined.
Neither does blithe ignorance and insistence on your own superior viewpoint lend you authority, and yet you persist.
Ah, in other words "stop saying things I don't want to hear." The only people I see blindly insisting on the superiority of their own viewpoint are the "everything is blaiming the victim" crowd.
Plus, of course, the fact that you're flat-out wrong. Rape doesn't happen in a vacuum. It does not just qualify you to speak about the incident: it qualifies you to speak about the context in which it was set, the repercussions it had, the mechanisms behind it and, most saliently, the opinions that paved the fucking way.
No, actually it doesn't. It qualifies you to express your perceptions of those things, but it sure as shit does not suddenly make you a social scientist.
Shut the fuck up. You're privileged and you come across as utterly ignorant and safe in that privilege. Point two: I have been raped. My girlfriend has been raped. Several friends have as well. Your outrage on behalf of your partner is laudable, but it doesn't entitle you to shit in terms of credibility, nor give your patronizing assertions any sort of weight.
Neither does you being a rape victim, nor your girlfriend, so you can shut the fuck up. In fact, it calls your entire credibility into question. I, on the other hand, have been formaly trained on how to handle a rape case - unlike you my expertise does not come from my own sense of outrage at my victimization or that of my wife.
Claiming I'm "priviledged" is simply a bullshit attempt at poisoning the well, and how I come across to you is pretty much irrelevant. Quite frankly, I do not give a shit if your little feelings get hurt. That's precisely the attitude I'm arguing against - that rape victims are entitled to special treatment and to go completely unquestioned and unchallenged. It's bad enough that you do it on a message board; I shudder to think what might happen if this attitude were allowed to creep into the legal process.
Wasn't your personal outrage a fine argument just a moment ago?
My personal outrage was directed entirely at your assumption that I have no experience with rape simply because I'm not exhibiting what you think are the "correct" attitudes. Yours, on the othger hand, amounts to "I'm a rape victim! I get to tell everyone else what they're allowed to think, and anyone who doesn't I'll just start calling a bigot, privileged, equate them to racism or whatever other pejorative I can think of in order to shift the discussion to them defending themselves! Hevane forbid any hard questions are asked or serious debate is entertained!"
Or was that just a non-sequitur intended to stifle arguments? The first impulse of the bigot is, of course, to dismiss opponents as "politically correct".
Ahh, yes, the appeal to bigotry! "My attitude is correct, anyone who does not agree must be a bigot". A bigot against what? Rape victims?
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
Wow, we really are retreating into the poisoning the well here, I'll just claim SVPD is a bigot for.. no apparent reason!
No, you're a lying fucktard. Aside from the laughable assertion that I'm bigoted against rape victims,w hich would make me bigoted against my own wife, claims of bigotry and privilege on the part of your opponent simply for stating things you don't agree with is pretty much the
definition of out of control Political Correctness.
Anyway, nothing you said in the above addressed my statement. I pointed out that legal measures do not public opinion make, and equated this to the equally laughable idea that racism is dead because of equal rules and regulations.
Unfortunately, both your assertion and your comparison are wrong because rape is a crime, while racism is a broad range of social attitudes most of which are not criminal. How we legally treat crimes pretty much is the public opinion towards them. That's why we have a representative government, you do realize?
I then pointed out the incidence of threads where "this is what she did to deserve rape" reared its ugly head (seeing as the board is primarily US-dominated in its attitude), whereupon you predictably dismissed it with a strawman.
I did no such thing. Indeed, you simply asserted such threads exist. Given that you've a conflict of interest in trying to determine anyone else's attitudes towards rape, your assertion in that regard is pretty much worthless.
Just as your rank idiocy in making a blanket statement on the US as a whole, you now attempt to make a blanket statement on all rape victim organizations in order to dismiss their positions (however diverse they are in, you know, reality) as obviously invalid. I must take issue with that.
My rank statement about what in the U.S. as a whole? That it has improved int he last 30 years? It has. You're the one trying to start a pissing contest with European countries, a topic I did not entertain except to express surprise at the self-evaluations of some Europeans here and to state repeatedly I can't speak to other countries. So first, you can quit lying.
Second, you can take issue with it all you want, but conflict of interest is conflict of interest. Rape victim organizations have
absolutely no business compiling rape statistics, and even less business drawing conclusions based on those statistics. That is best left to people for whom the issue is an abstraction.
Shit like this is why I'm kind of glad it isn't legal to go around punching people in the crotch. You'd be able to track my movement from orbit from the sheer mass of idiots I'd leave lying on the ground clutching their privates in my wake. -- Mr. Coffee