08-01-2012, 11:37 AM | #291 | |
Fact sphere is the most handsome
Join Date: Sep 2006
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I'm not going to talk as to the actual validity of that infograph because i can't the idea that it's actually representative of the usa population sickens me though, because there is a good chance the same stats would hold true in the uk.
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08-01-2012, 12:11 PM | #292 | ||||||||
Who am I again?
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 595
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There has been an outbreak of prostate cancer in males, by straight up tenfold. This is a massive health concern. Still, I don't see why it matters in the slightest whether it's true of all males, some males, males located in the state of Florida, males located on a particular college campus, or males located in any place where they'd happen to have the opportunity to interact with females in any way, shape or form. I just don't see how that would be relevant to solving the problem. Quote:
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Also something I thought up in a chat window that probably should be mentioned as a good reason always to strive for the truth of statistics. Quote:
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08-01-2012, 12:37 PM | #293 | ||||
Erotic Esquire
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But I think the crucial difference here is that prostate cancer is an outbreak that lacks a direct human cause, whereas rape simply can't happen unless a person acts with the intent to commit the act. That's a critical distinction. When analyzing a health outbreak it's genuinely important to attempt to statistically dissect it because the cause of said outbreak is in doubt. And from that perspective it is vitally important to make distinctions based on the location of the outbreak, the age of those affected, etc. With rape, there's a known cause: The perpetrator, who is a human being. And it really doesn't matter how old the perpetrator is, where the perpetrator is located, who the victim is, where the victim is from. To draw distinctions at that level is an attempt to narrow the blame of a cultural, society-wide phenomenon, that impacts victims of all races and religions and ethnic identities and ages, to a specific subset: "Oh, it's really just college boys that are the problem." No, the problem is much larger than that, because regardless of distinctions as to the identities of the specific perpetrators, our global culture as a whole enables the phenomenon, by doing exactly what you're doing: downplaying its severity lest we get the wrong impression of the complicity of men. Quote:
From that perspective, the mere fact that any significant percentage of men, anywhere, would suggest that a woman dressing provocatively "is asking to be raped" is an incredible source of concern. Rape doesn't occur in a vacuum. If there wasn't a culture that persisted in enabling it, it wouldn't be occurring with the freakishly frightening regularity that it does. And from that perspective, whether 83.5% of men, 50% of men, or even 20% of men believe that a woman 'deserves' to be raped when wearing certain clothing is irrelevant. The mere fact that any amount of men believe it is enough to merit the wholesale condemnation without demanding further statistical analysis. Quote:
Because I think the answer to that question speaks more to the subconscious bias in which you're approaching the issue, namely you simply can't fathom that so many guys would believe women 'deserved to be rape,' because some societal misperceptions about how rarely rape occurs leads you to give men the benefit of the doubt. Quote:
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08-01-2012, 01:01 PM | #294 |
Not a Taco
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 3,313
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Why does it matter if it's only 83.5% of males in the slums who think women were asking for it, or 83.5% nationally? That's still terrible, unless you believe that by living in the slums, women are asking to get raped, which is also terrible.
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I did a lot of posting on here as a teenager, and I was pretty awful. Even after I learned, grew up, and came to be on the right side of a lot of important issues, I was still angry, abrasive, and generally increased the amount of hate in the world, in pretty unacceptable ways. On the off chance that someone is taking a trip down memory lane looking through those old threads, I wanted to devote my signature to say directly to you, I'm sorry. Thank you for letting me be better, NPF. |
08-01-2012, 01:17 PM | #295 | ||||||
Who am I again?
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 595
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And no, I'm not suggesting that only college boys are the problem. I don't even see where you could have gotten that from. Quote:
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Rape doesn't occur in a vacuum. If there wasn't a culture that persisted in enabling it, it wouldn't be occurring with the freakishly frightening regularity that it does. And from that perspective, whether 83.5% of men, 50% of men, or even 20% of men believe that a woman 'deserves' to be raped when wearing certain clothing is irrelevant. The mere fact that any amount of men believe it is enough to merit the wholesale condemnation without demanding further statistical analysis. Quote:
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We can be 'aware' of a problem like this through bloating up the problem. We can 'solve' the problem through being precise and figuring out the exact 'whys' of it. |
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08-01-2012, 01:29 PM | #296 | |
Fight Me, Nerds
Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 3,470
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We can argue on making sure we are as accurate as possible in order to make the proper surgical strikes once we are done convincing people to take action and care in the first place.
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08-01-2012, 01:35 PM | #297 |
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 12,119
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You guys keep saying "asking to be raped." The statistic is actually for "argue that they may be asking to be raped." Completely different things because the latter is so easily manipulated.
Relm is right in that specific image, by itself, is some shitty ass data. And remember, everyone (here) agrees that rape is bad.
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"If I'm reincarnated, I want to be Musashi again!" - Musashi, Brave Fencer Musashi Last edited by IHateMakingNames; 08-01-2012 at 01:45 PM. |
08-01-2012, 01:55 PM | #298 |
Erotic Esquire
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Well, if this is so important to you.
I believe based on flipping through a truncated version of Margo Maine's book online that the numbers come from the 1988 version of "I Never Called it Rape," republished in 1994. The authors of that title surveyed 6,000 students from 32 colleges throughout the United States. Some of their findings, and some other findings, are summarized here: No, I am not going to waste my time looking up each statistic to determine whether this summary is wholly accurate. The graphics appear to be from RAINN, and you can see footnotes that include documentation for their statistics here: http://www.rainn.org/get-information...eporting-rates http://www.rainn.org/get-information...ault-offenders http://www.rainn.org/get-information...ssault-victims Now can we stop pretending it makes any meaningful difference whatsoever whether 83.5%, 60% or 40% of men argue that a woman in a provocative outfit may be "asking to be raped?"
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08-01-2012, 02:10 PM | #299 |
Who am I again?
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 595
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@Marc: Funny thing is, we don't need everybody on board to change things. If we understand the principles behind it, we can implement the social activity to solve it. (Even putting aside the issue that 'aware' isn't all that measurable, and that I'm not sure how we would know we are 'aware' enough to begin implementing solutions.)
@Snake: I was just asking for basic information on the study in order to understand what it is talking about precisely. Although IHMN stated my point about it precisely, because I'm not just saying the numbers might be off, I'm saying that this isn't actually giving a accurate description of whether people would argue this at all. But alright, since we've reached the point where the contention is that I believe the amount of people that believe a given thing matters, and you do not believe the amount of people that believe a given thing matters as long as it is above 0, we've reached the point upon wherein we can't progress the discussion further. So what would you prefer to talk about? |
08-01-2012, 02:17 PM | #300 |
GHOST BOTTOMED DICK FACE
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I wanted to apologize for my sarcasm earlier but I walked into this discussion going on. I'd participate but I have practically nothing to contribute beyond agreeing that there is a serious problem with rape and rape culture, in so far as I fear for my girlfriend's safety frequently and I hate that the reason for this is "some guy could rape her."
I'm not even sure if it's wrong to feel that way. I certainly dont think rape is an uncommon occurrence, nor do I feel that she dresses in a way that screams "Rape me!" So whatever the statistics, whatever the arguments, its a thing that needs to stop. Because I don't want her to be one of those statistics. And I don't want the guy thinking he'll get away with it anywhere near her. I can't afford to go to jail for manslaughter, and we can't afford to get sued for medical bills when she castrates him for trying. Last edited by Ecks; 08-01-2012 at 02:21 PM. Reason: Typos can eat a dick |
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