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jlaw172364 wrote:Well, technically, we're supposed to have 2nd Amendment in the good old US of A, but there's all kinds of unconstitutional state and local ordinances that render the Amendment meaningless. If you pull a gun in a major metropolitan area, it has grave implications, unless you're part of a privileged caste that is duly licensed to carry said gun. The Supreme Court recently ruled these ordinances unconstitutional, but, it's not as simple as that.
I think that while the threats to women are very real, the media has terrorized women to the point where they tend to overreact in every situation and have no real way of gauging the threat level. I think that yelling "leave me alone" really loudly in a semi-deserted or deserted area has more justification than yelling it in a crowded public area.
I'm not saying that the woman was in the wrong, or a bad person. I'm merely saying that her tactics may bring about undesired outcomes given the psychology of the people involved. If she wants people to go away peaceably, she should try something different.
Also, why assume that the people wanted her to have sex with them imminently? Maybe they wanted to go out with her? She didn't write that anybody mentioned sex to her, merely that they'd interrupted her reading trying to talk to her and get to know her, but with an overtone of sexual interest. Clearly it would be crass and inappropriate to walk up to a stranger and say something equivalent to "Nice shoes, wanna fuck?"
Also, that they didn't know her is irrelevant. While many women subscribe to the paranoid insider sales model of dating, only going out with guys they know through friends over a period of months or years, other women are more open to go out with people they don't know. Along those lines, what about all the statistics about acquaintance rape? It's not like guys you "know" or "think you know" are automatically safer. Some of the best predators are well aware of these dynamics, and take their time getting close to their prey, earning their trust, etc.
Yes, it's almost as if you're planning how to misinterpret what was said. Nobody said anything about "letting" her hang out with older men. My concern was that my young friend's privacy and security were being violated by two little punks, on her property, who wouldn't leave when asked politely. Then it was that she be able to relate the incident to the appropriate humans without being blamed or dismissed.jlaw172364 wrote:A teen pregnancy is a possible outcome of letting an adolescent hang around with older men who might take advantage of her naivete. Did I misunderstand something with regard to that?
...1. Indianapolis, USA: In one of the first street harassment studies ever conducted, Carol Brooks Gardner, associate professor of sociology and women’s studies at Indiana University, Indianapolis, interviewed 293 women in Indianapolis, Indiana, over several years in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The women were from every race, age, class, and sexual orientation category of the general population in Indiana and the United States. Gardner found that every single woman (100 percent) could cite several examples of being harassed by unknown men in public and all but nine of the women classified those experiences as “troublesome.” (1)
2. Canada: Using a national sample of 12,300 Canadian women ages 18 and older from 1994, sociology professors Ross Macmillan, Annette Nierobisz, and Sandy Welsh studied the impact of street harassment on women’s perceived sense of safety in 2000. During their research, they found that over 80 percent of the women surveyed had experienced male stranger harassment in public and that those experiences had a large and detrimental impact on their perceived safety in public. (2)
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Dismissing sexual harassment – from unwanted comments on the street about appearance to groping – as "harmless fun" or complimentary was dangerous, she added.
"Sexual harassment has a real impact on women's lives, whether it is changing their behaviour or whether they feel safe on the streets," she said.
"It feeds into a fear of rape and sexual violence and has a harmful effect on broader issues of equality."
The poll also found 31% of women aged 18 to 24 experienced unwanted sexual attention on public transport and 21% of 25- to 34-year-olds. Overall, 5% of the women surveyed had experienced unwanted sexual contact on public transport.
Fiona Elvines, of South London Rape Crisis, said it was rare to meet a woman who had not suffered street harassment. "Women manage this harassment every day, in their routines and daily decisions – but it has an impact on their self-esteem and body image," she said. "Women are saying that there are consequences to this, and it's time to start listening to them."
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...1. Indianapolis, USA: In one of the first street harassment studies ever conducted, Carol Brooks Gardner, associate professor of sociology and women’s studies at Indiana University, Indianapolis, interviewed 293 women in Indianapolis, Indiana, over several years in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The women were from every race, age, class, and sexual orientation category of the general population in Indiana and the United States. Gardner found that every single woman (100 percent) could cite several examples of being harassed by unknown men in public and all but nine of the women classified those experiences as “troublesome.” (1)
2. Canada: Using a national sample of 12,300 Canadian women ages 18 and older from 1994, sociology professors Ross Macmillan, Annette Nierobisz, and Sandy Welsh studied the impact of street harassment on women’s perceived sense of safety in 2000. During their research, they found that over 80 percent of the women surveyed had experienced male stranger harassment in public and that those experiences had a large and detrimental impact on their perceived safety in public. (2)
...
...
Dismissing sexual harassment – from unwanted comments on the street about appearance to groping – as "harmless fun" or complimentary was dangerous, she added.
"Sexual harassment has a real impact on women's lives, whether it is changing their behaviour or whether they feel safe on the streets," she said.
"It feeds into a fear of rape and sexual violence and has a harmful effect on broader issues of equality."
The poll also found 31% of women aged 18 to 24 experienced unwanted sexual attention on public transport and 21% of 25- to 34-year-olds. Overall, 5% of the women surveyed had experienced unwanted sexual contact on public transport.
Fiona Elvines, of South London Rape Crisis, said it was rare to meet a woman who had not suffered street harassment. "Women manage this harassment every day, in their routines and daily decisions – but it has an impact on their self-esteem and body image," she said. "Women are saying that there are consequences to this, and it's time to start listening to them."
...
jlaw172364 wrote:@barracuda
Well, technically, we're supposed to have 2nd Amendment in the good old US of A, but there's all kinds of unconstitutional state and local ordinances that render the Amendment meaningless. If you pull a gun in a major metropolitan area, it has grave implications, unless you're part of a privileged caste that is duly licensed to carry said gun. The Supreme Court recently ruled these ordinances unconstitutional, but, it's not as simple as that.
Cities like Chicago and Washington D.C. have been getting away with this for decades.
BTW, in law school, not ONE word about the 2nd Amendment in any of my classes. Maybe it was because it was a Chicago law school?
This reminds me of a story my parents told me about their honeymoon. They pulled over at a deserted picnic area to eat lunch and a truck rolled up with several drunken locals. My dad, who had joined the military, and had dealt with rowdy drunken types, didn't see them as a threat, and he chatted amiably with them, and eventually they left. My mom had surrepticiously armed herself with a knife and was preparing to stab one or more of them if they got out of hand.
I think that while the threats to women are very real, the media has terrorized women to the point where they tend to overreact in every situation and have no real way of gauging the threat level. I think that yelling "leave me alone" really loudly in a semi-deserted or deserted area has more justification than yelling it in a crowded public area.
The woman on the train, who was there wrote:I assertively but calmly tell him to please leave me alone,
I'm not saying that the woman was in the wrong, or a bad person. I'm merely saying that her tactics may bring about undesired outcomes given the psychology of the people involved. If she wants people to go away peaceably, she should try something different.
Also, why assume that the people wanted her to have sex with them imminently? Maybe they wanted to go out with her? She didn't write that anybody mentioned sex to her, merely that they'd interrupted her reading trying to talk to her and get to know her, but with an overtone of sexual interest. Clearly it would be crass and inappropriate to walk up to a stranger and say something equivalent to "Nice shoes, wanna fuck?"
Also, that they didn't know her is irrelevant. While many women subscribe to the paranoid insider sales model of dating, only going out with guys they know through friends over a period of months or years, other women are more open to go out with people they don't know.
Along those lines, what about all the statistics about acquaintance rape? It's not like guys you "know" or "think you know" are automatically safer. Some of the best predators are well aware of these dynamics, and take their time getting close to their prey, earning their trust, etc.
jlaw172364 wrote:I think that yelling "leave me alone" really loudly in a semi-deserted or deserted area has more justification than yelling it in a crowded public area.
jlaw172364 wrote:@comparedtowhat
Maybe you should civiliansplain to me about my law school experience?
Virtually all the law schools in the USA are ABA-accredited. I think California allows you to sit for the bar if you go to a non-ABA accredited law school. In any case, ABA accreditation seems to me to be about ideological conformity.
I took Constitutional Law.
Not one word about the Second Amendment.
Chicago and surrounding suburbs have had unconstitutional anti-gun ordinances for decades. The Supreme Court finally overturned them last year.
Had I gone to law school in a gun-rights friendly state, like Texas, I'd wager that the 2nd Amendment might have been discussed in detail.
But not in Chicago, where people are routinely arrested, charged, and convicted of owning a gun while black.
That was an aside to illustrate the Establishment's dislike, or conflicted feelings about the Second Amendment.
I mean, wealthy people like to own guns. But they get nervous at the prospect of poor people having gun rights.
When I said waiving a gun has grave implications, someone replied with, "yeah, but so does harrassing women."
Really? No shit. Except, harrassment is much harder to prove, and the damage is psychological. And of course, you have to get a lawyer, and sue, and win, and enforce a judgment, and the creep that harrassed you actually has to have money to pay for your therapy.
Pulling a gun on someone risks a bloodbath where actual people, including you, the creep that harrassed you, bystanders, etc. may all die. If you pull a gun on someone, that person might think you're trying to kill them. They may pull a gun. Someone else with a concealed weapon might pull a gun. There might be a struggle over the gun. A lot of people could die. The cops don't like civilians with guns. Brandishing a gun in public may get the cops shooting you. You may get charged with municipal and state offenses you had no idea existed because you thought the 2nd Amendment gave you blanket protection.
People on here seem to be suggesting that we should live under a regime where women who think they're being harrassed have the right to unilaterally and summarily maim or execute their alleged harrasser with a deadly weapon as a means of deterring sexual harrassment.
This sounds like a classic (male) bullied kid's revenge fantasy.
Right and wrong has less to do with it, and more about what's an effective strategy and what isn't. She's not "in the wrong," she's just using an ineffective tactic.
What I said that prompted someone to say "Fuck you" to me . . . .
"Along those lines, what about all the statistics about acquaintance rape? It's not like guys you "know" or "think you know" are automatically safer. Some of the best predators are well aware of these dynamics, and take their time getting close to their prey, earning their trust, etc."
What was it that so upset you about those statements? Their veracity?
jlaw172364 wrote:People on here seem to be suggesting that we should live under a regime where women who think they're being harrassed have the right to unilaterally and summarily maim or execute their alleged harrasser with a deadly weapon as a means of deterring sexual harrassment.
What's my perspective? That people should use tactics that minimize their chances of getting a worse outcome such as a vicious beating, verbal abuse, or incarceration?
jlaw172364 wrote:My reading comprehension? Overstating Texan legal educations on gun rights? I merely speculated.
compared2what? wrote:jlaw172364 wrote:People on here seem to be suggesting that we should live under a regime where women who think they're being harrassed have the right to unilaterally and summarily maim or execute their alleged harrasser with a deadly weapon as a means of deterring sexual harrassment.
This sounds like a classic (male) bullied kid's revenge fantasy.
If people on here seem to you to be suggesting that, I humbly submit that your reading-comprehension strategy isn't effective.
jlaw172364 wrote:BTW, I approached a woman I've never met before last night while she was busy sifting through karaoke tunes with a group of her friends, clearly signaling her desire to be left alone, or else, how could she properly concentrate on which tune to select if I selfishly distract her by trying to engage in conversation with her, I being a mere stranger at a bar, a male, who as we all know, is only interested in one thing, and only starts conversations with women for one reason, and wouldn't you know it, we had a lovely conversation, she liked me and gave me her phone number before I even asked for it!
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