Rape and responsibility When I heard the word "rape", I quickly imagined attack, violence, power, suffering. But today, some pills get into the drink, all cruelty is removed, and the attacker can walk around without problem. However, in addition to all medicine and physical violence, there is another more general story. Rape accusations and excuses. This generally means that women rape, meaning to awaken from insufficient situations to say alcohol abuse, substance abuse night, or "no".
A person can not stop rape. The essence of rape is the abolition of personal agents, so all responsibility for rape is a complete rape. The extent of rape and the extent of the victim indicates that the only thing in common is the existence of a person who chose rape. If they do xyz, tell people that they will not be raped. It strengthens the view that rape is due to the victims. (XYZ = not raping == rape = you did not do XYZ correctly / often enough). Note: This does not mean that people should not be discouraged from making reckless choices that endanger themselves and other people. However, the concept of "recklessness" can only retain water resources in the context of actual personal responsibility. Do not drink and drive. Tighten the seatbelt. There is no reflector, please do not ride in the dark. Please do not enter the sea at high tide. Because these are under human control, these are deprecated behavior.
Rape or sexual assault is the most skeptical among sexual offenses and is most vulnerable to media misperceptions. The response of media to rape has historically been dominated by a series of "rape myths". In these myths summarized by Helen Benedict (1992), rape is basically unchanged, the gender is not exceeded, the motive of the attacker is desire, the attacker is usually black and the lower class, the woman induces rape . "Loose" or abused women become victims, women often rape and be raped, only women are raped, and women can not become perpetrators of sexual assault. Overall, these myths have created a distorted understanding of sexual violence, suggesting that certain rape is more harmful or "genuine" than other rape, and stereotypes of sex, race and class Emphasize, deny the validity of a specific victim, and make mistakes. Local men and low ranking men are susceptible to sexual violence