General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: A bit about "potential rapists". [View all]justiceischeap
(14,040 posts)Such as being in our apartments alone, walking from our workplace to our cars? Young girls at their uncle's/father's/brother's/cousin's/priest's/neighbor's mercy?
I don't generally walk around looking at men, considering their potential for being rapists. I'm not paranoid or irrational in my caution. I think most women can tell when a guy seems sketchy or just a jerk (though some rapists don't give off those vibes and some women wake up with their husbands on top of them--you don't necessarily know when or where it's coming from). Several years ago I was mugged by two young men at gun point... my first thought wasn't "I hope I don't get shot," it was "I hope they don't decide to rape me." Because for women, there are some things worse than being shot or beaten. Again, it has nothing to do with paranoia or rationality but everything to do with control. No one, male or female, wants to lose control of the situation they're in. And being raped is the ultimate loss of control.
So, it's intelligent for women and girls to be aware that men (and some women) can be potential rapists. Because as so many have stated in these threads of late, telling a rapist not to rape isn't going to work. That doesn't mean we shouldn't educate young men and boys that getting a woman drunk at a frat party (or elsewhere) or slipping something into her drink to make her more "pliable" is nothing more than raping her. Even if a drunk woman consents, men should still be cautioned that legally she cannot give that consent and therefore, she could wake in the morning and accuse the partner of rape.