Grandmaster Jogurt wrote:eion wrote:IF you give consent to an action, either through initiation or a failure to prevent or otherwise express your desire not to proceed
You are precisely the audience who needs to be lectured on how not to rape, apparently. If you think it's valid consent if the other person isn't saying no
hard enough by your standards then you have something to learn.
If someone doesn't want to have sex with me, and I keep asking, and rather than kicking me out or leaving themselves or hell calling the police they remain there, I would say that their resolve is weak or their mind is looking to be convinced. Until we have telepathy, we have to trust people on their words and actions. Don't want to do something? Don't do it. My, how simple. If you truly do not want to have sex with the person, and nothing is preventing you from leaving the area, WHY ARE YOU STILL THERE?
If you pressure someone into having sex against their will without realizing you are doing so, you're obviously not on the same level as someone who's doing it deliberately. But either way the victim is being hurt, so making people better understand when they are doing this reduces suffering.
Oh, I've pressured guys to have sex with me, knowingly. Sometimes they said yes, sometimes no, but I NEVER coerced anyone or forced anyone to do anything against their will. You know how I know? Because they weren't drugged or held against their will or someone I had authority over or threatened. PRESSURE DOES NOT EQUAL COERCION. If a child begs for a toy 5,000 times, they are pressuring their parents. If they tell their parents to buy them the toy or they'll stab their little brother, then it's coercion. In the former case should the parents give in we’d say they lacked resolve and should have stood fast, but are definitely accountable for their choice, in the later we say they lacked the ability to give meaningful consent and the choice is irrelevant.
"Girls need to get some backbone and stop having sex against their will"... or, maybe, boys could get some consideration and stop setting up situations where women feel it's the better choice to have sex against their will. Or not, since that's less convenient for men after all.
Lots of boys have consideration, but being young their hormones run away with them. And the same is quite often true of girls. They let their hormones get the best of them and perhaps sleep with a guy they wish later they hadn't. And so they convince themselves that they were in some way forced or coerced. And so we’ve taken a regretted, but entirely consensual encounter, and rounded it up to rape.
For the people who are arguing against me, do you see people giving in to sex they don't want as something that is an acceptable situation so long as there's nothing like overt threats of violence or abuse of authority? Or are you just arguing that it's not "really rape"?
No, I'm arguing that they do in fact want the sex. Lacking any method to remove the person’s ability to give meaningful consent: If they didn't, they wouldn't have the sex. It's a complex philosophical distinction you are clearly blind to. Without some manner of force, you cannot force someone to do something. You can beg them, you can pressure them, but without forcing their hand you can't force their hand.
Let's explore a little thought experiment. Two Boxes, both entirely impenetrable. They are connected by a pane of glass that is totally soundproof and impenetrable. An intercom allows a person in Box A to talk to a person in Box B and vice versa, but only if both people have their intercoms switched on.
The Person in Box A asks the person in Box B to press a button in that box which dispenses a candy bar in Box A. Person B refuses. Person A continues to ask, and ask, but that’s all they can do. There is no way for them to reach into the other box and press the button themselves. Person B could switch off their intercom at any time and prevent Person A from asking any more.
Three Outcomes are possible. In the coercion success outcome Person A does something to immorally pressure Person B into pressing the button, say threatening to harm themselves physically if the button isn’t pressed, In the pressure success outcome Person A says or does something that is not immoral to convince Person B to press the button, and In the ceased communication outcome Person A either stops asking or Person B turns off their intercom, preventing any further communications.
If later, after pressing the button, Person B claims to have been forced to do so, she can only rightly claim so if Person A used some immoral means to do so. Asking a question, no matter if it’s 1 time or 5,000 times, is not immoral. Dickish perhaps, but not immoral.
Talking someone into a contract is not the same as putting a gun to their head and making them sign it. Show me the duress, or show yourself out.
Weemadando, that would be walking through the city about 3 months ago coming home from a bar. A couple of guys were following us but we ducked into a diner and waited till a large group of people were walking towards the parking lot we were in. As we drove off they yelled faggot and such. But that is a VERY clear example of potential assault. Two horny teenagers rolling around on a dorm bed and one of them is reluctant but willingly remains is not a very clear example of such. You done with your red herring now?