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==Feminist lies about rape== | ==Feminist lies about rape== | ||
[[File:50shades.jpg|thumb|right]] | [[File:50shades.jpg|thumb|right]] | ||
=== Definition creep === | |||
Over time, [[Feminist|feminists]] have stupidly expanded the definition of "rape" as being any sex they later regret, which is psychotic and evil. Often just a sexual encounter with an ugly or disappointing male or a voluntary encounter which unexpectedly lead to pregnancy, or literally any sexual encounter for any reason just because day-after-feels. It is also a common strategy for females to cry rape after their acts of infidelity are uncovered, in an attempt to negate any possible consequences from such actions. If they can convince the police to classify their act of adultery as a "rape", then it is far easier to receive the sympathy and money of the legal system. | Over time, [[Feminist|feminists]] have stupidly expanded the definition of "rape" as being any sex they later regret, which is psychotic and evil. Often just a sexual encounter with an ugly or disappointing male or a voluntary encounter which unexpectedly lead to pregnancy, or literally any sexual encounter for any reason just because day-after-feels. It is also a common strategy for females to cry rape after their acts of infidelity are uncovered, in an attempt to negate any possible consequences from such actions. If they can convince the police to classify their act of adultery as a "rape", then it is far easier to receive the sympathy and money of the legal system. | ||
The very same physical actions on the man's part could see him categorized either as a great lover or rapist depending on the later claimed emotional response of the female. Since it is not possible to objectively examine an emotional response, it follows that most rape cases are now prosecuted on spectral evidence, | 21st century feminism has also brought several confusing magnifiers of the term ''rape''. The invention of camera phones has brought the inception of the nakie, nelfie (naked selfies) or sexfie (sex selfie), or buttfie or belfie (nude butt selfie) or pelfie (a pussy or penis selfie), which has resulted in kids getting arrested for inappropriate pics of themselves while underage, thus necessitating the term "self-rape". | ||
There are also laws being passed in many [[gynocentrism|gynocentric]] societies (e.g. in France) that prohibit cross-examination of the victim in such cases, so the defendant is severely hamstrung in his defense | |||
It has gotten to a point that, in order to specify the traditional sense of the term rape as "forced sex", it is no longer sufficient to use the term ''rape'', but one needs to call it "rape-rape". Defining rape as "forced sex" is of course complicated by the fact that many women actually love being forced into sex and that women apply different standards based on their level of regret and the physical attractiveness of the offender. | |||
=== Women never lie === | |||
The very same physical actions on the man's part could see him categorized either as a great lover or rapist depending on the later claimed emotional response of the female. Since it is not possible to objectively examine an emotional response, it follows that most rape cases are now prosecuted on spectral evidence, relying ''solely'' on the accusations of the alleged victim, but women are truthful after all. | |||
There are also laws being passed in many [[gynocentrism|gynocentric]] societies (e.g. in France) that prohibit cross-examination of the victim in such cases, so the defendant is severely hamstrung in his defense. | |||
=== Rape is about power === | |||
It is also a common feminist assertion that rape is about asserting power and dominance not sex, echoing Oscar Wilde ("everything is about sex; but sex is about power"), however evidence for this assertion is lacking. There is evidence that that the reversal of the prohibition of pornography in some societies where it was previously proscribed led to lower rates of rape,<ref>https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101130111326.htm</ref> likely due to pornography acting as a release valve for sexual frustration. | It is also a common feminist assertion that rape is about asserting power and dominance not sex, echoing Oscar Wilde ("everything is about sex; but sex is about power"), however evidence for this assertion is lacking. There is evidence that that the reversal of the prohibition of pornography in some societies where it was previously proscribed led to lower rates of rape,<ref>https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101130111326.htm</ref> likely due to pornography acting as a release valve for sexual frustration. | ||
Robust evidence also suggests that making prostitution legal or more widely available leads to lower rates of sexual violence towards women in general and prostitutes, with this finding being replicated in various countries such as the Netherlands,<ref>https://www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=10.1257/pol.20150299</ref>the United States,<ref>https://www.nber.org/papers/w20281.pdf</ref><ref>https://thinkprogress.org/craigslist-erotic-services-platform-3eab46092717/</ref> and Australia (where the banning of brothels in the state of Queensland may have also been a causative factor in a large increase in male violent crime in general).<ref>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2064544</ref> Thus, it is clear that male sexual deprivation is one of the main causative factors of rape, but evidence suggests that typically only violent, psychopathic men will respond to this deprivation by actually committing acts of rape,<ref>https://www.researchgate.net/publication/229075046_Life-Course_Persistent_Offenders_and_the_Propensity_to_Commit_Sexual_Assault</ref> although a study in New York found the majority of men who frequent prostitutes reported that they may resort to rape if the indoor brothels they visited were made illegal in the future.<ref>http://www.micaelasviatschi.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/sex_crimeNYC.pdf</ref> | Robust evidence also suggests that making prostitution legal or more widely available leads to lower rates of sexual violence towards women in general and prostitutes, with this finding being replicated in various countries such as the Netherlands,<ref>https://www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=10.1257/pol.20150299</ref>the United States,<ref>https://www.nber.org/papers/w20281.pdf</ref><ref>https://thinkprogress.org/craigslist-erotic-services-platform-3eab46092717/</ref> and Australia (where the banning of brothels in the state of Queensland may have also been a causative factor in a large increase in male violent crime in general).<ref>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2064544</ref> Thus, it is clear that male sexual deprivation is one of the main causative factors of rape, but evidence suggests that typically only violent, psychopathic men will respond to this deprivation by actually committing acts of rape,<ref>https://www.researchgate.net/publication/229075046_Life-Course_Persistent_Offenders_and_the_Propensity_to_Commit_Sexual_Assault</ref> although a study in New York found the majority of men who frequent prostitutes reported that they may resort to rape if the indoor brothels they visited were made illegal in the future.<ref>http://www.micaelasviatschi.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/sex_crimeNYC.pdf</ref> | ||
=== Women don't want rape === | |||
Contrary to feminist claims, there is lots of evidence that women like to provoke sexual attention of other men, often indeed with the intention of being forced into sex. | |||
The threat of rape is integral part of women's expectations in sex as a famous [[feminist]] admitted: | The threat of rape is integral part of women's expectations in sex as a famous [[feminist]] admitted: | ||