I’ve heard so many people in the last
week ask “how could this happen?” “How could this go on for so long?”, “why don’t
the girls come forward?” when talking about the news about the repulsive
predatory behaviour of a group of young men.
Tragically, they usually answer the
question themselves, and in a bitter aftertaste, most don’t even recognise that
they are the answer.
The next step in the lunch room
conversation is to speculate about the victims of sexual crime, and “young
people today”. What women are wearing, where they are going, who they are
choosing to hang out with.
Why is the next logical step in
breaking down the cause of a crime to look at the victim? Why not the
assailant?
Why not our culture, which allows
young men to feel so entitled to sex that there is a socially acceptable term
for a friendship with a WOMAN WHO WONT HAVE SEX WITH YOU. (Friend zone). Like
having a friend is some kind of hardship.
What is wrong with us?
I sort of understand. If we can find some “otherness” about victims, then we can fib to ourselves, and be reassured that if we are not like them, we will not be hurt.
If we jump over cracks, and turn the
light switch on and off, cover our knees, and do not wear high heels we will
somehow be immune to the Bad Man, who is some mythical boogie monster.I sort of understand. If we can find some “otherness” about victims, then we can fib to ourselves, and be reassured that if we are not like them, we will not be hurt.
We need to turn 180 degrees, stop
investigating the victims like there is some kind of magic thing that makes
them a good target, and start looking at why we have young men with repeat predatory
behaviour by the time they hit their teens.
Why do men rape is an incredibly
complex question, but why do they CONTINUE?
Because they can.
Because the victims are put on trial
too.Because being unable to say no is STILL being treated like the equivalent of yes.
Because people still truly believe that rapists are the bad man in the darkest corner of our public parks or night club.
Because when someone is attacked, we avert our eyes from the normal looking rapist, and speculate on what makes a victim.
Because the victim’s reputation is under attack in the media and their community as much as the perpetrator.
If your response to these stories was any
question about the nature of the victims YOU are part of what makes attackers
stronger, more confident, and more likely to re-offend.
That's how this can happen.
2 comments:
Yes.
Great post, on a horrendous subject.
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