thread for contemplating the serious issues raised by the Men's Rights movement

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Agreeing to be treated as a trophy and included in a social event DOES NOT INCLUDE IMPLICIT CONSENT TO SEX. You want to talk about GROSS? Shut up.

xp

Orson Wellies (in orbit), Monday, 18 August 2014 15:26 (nine years ago) link

Giving a woman a few cups of everclear-based punch is not that far from just using roofies, and interviews with these guys just confirms that they know what they're doing.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 15:29 (nine years ago) link

pinning it on fraternities (plz note i am not a frat dude nor have any love for frats in general) just continues the same 6% cycle though - ie these instances of rape must be mostly contained in terrible frat parties so maybe this nice hippie house handing out gravity bong rips to the ladies isnt so rapey after all, which is equally problematic.

Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, 18 August 2014 15:34 (nine years ago) link

agreed

Nhex, Monday, 18 August 2014 15:35 (nine years ago) link

Agreeing to be treated as a trophy and included in a social event DOES NOT INCLUDE IMPLICIT CONSENT TO SEX
neither does a real date! i'm with you on this

Nhex, Monday, 18 August 2014 15:36 (nine years ago) link

There's no doubt in my mind that this happens disproportionately in frat houses though, let's be real.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 15:36 (nine years ago) link

the culture of the frats was different from the co-ed houses though jjusten. for one thing, the latter weren't totally controlled by men. xp

Treeship, Monday, 18 August 2014 15:37 (nine years ago) link

I went to a lot of hippie house parties and a lot of fratty house parties. The hippie house parties did not tend to serve everclear punch.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 15:37 (nine years ago) link

There's probably a term for this phenom? Something rapists and racists have in common, believing that everyone secretly WANTS to do the horrible things they do, and they're just living the dream.

― Orson Wellies (in orbit), Monday, August 18, 2014 3:22 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Wasn't this sort of the premise behind the film The Purge? I haven't seen it, but it seems to be based on the idea that the only thing stopping people from going out and committing terrible murders is the fear of being arrested.

3kDk (dog latin), Monday, 18 August 2014 15:38 (nine years ago) link

was that movie good? it looked like a terrible film w/ a pretty compelling setting?

Mordy, Monday, 18 August 2014 15:39 (nine years ago) link

Not exactly - in world of The Purge, the super violent uprising already happened in the past, and the Purge itself is a form of bread and circuses to prevent another civil war and further unrest by containing it to one day

It is kind of terrible, but kind of entertaining (lol Ethan Hawke) in a B-movie with a half-clever sci-fi premise

Nhex, Monday, 18 August 2014 15:41 (nine years ago) link

i'm sure it's a pile of shit, that film.

anyway, i'd be interested to see figures comparing US vs UK w/r/t this discussion, there not being a frat culture in the UK.

3kDk (dog latin), Monday, 18 August 2014 15:47 (nine years ago) link

my grammar, it's interesting today.

3kDk (dog latin), Monday, 18 August 2014 15:48 (nine years ago) link

there is a similar, like, "lad culture" in england though, i think. it just doesn't have the same kind of institutional support from universities.

Treeship, Monday, 18 August 2014 15:50 (nine years ago) link

it has institutional support via student union culture

Merdeyeux, Monday, 18 August 2014 15:54 (nine years ago) link

I was in a frat that threw huge campus parties that like a quarter of the student body would attend & we served everclear punch alongside our kegs & people did say it was "for the ladies" but ime it meant that women chose free shitty boozy kool-aid over free shitty beer. as far as I know none of my frat brothers ever hooked up at our parties (except with their partners)(& I think I would have known, we weren't a very big group). I guess we were kinda geeky etc---hey, I was a member---but we were def a frat doing fratty things w/o, afaik, fostering sexual assault.

Euler, Monday, 18 August 2014 15:54 (nine years ago) link

There's no doubt in my mind that this happens disproportionately in frat houses though, let's be real.

― 'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, August 18, 2014 3:36 PM (1 minute ago)

dont buy it, at least not as an assumption. frat houses are (perhaps fairly) stereotyped as a danger area for rape which acts as a flashing warning sign to begin with in a way that equally treacherous house parties, off campus stoner apartments etc etc aren't. saying "fix it by tearing down the frats" is just once again distracting from the real issue and (not saying this about you all) creating an imaginary demographic for college aged rapists that makes the rest of us feel better about the situation.

Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:00 (nine years ago) link

^^^

Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:01 (nine years ago) link

there is a similar, like, "lad culture" in england though, i think. it just doesn't have the same kind of institutional support from universities.

― Treeship, Monday, August 18, 2014 4:50 PM (4 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

it has institutional support via student union culture

― Merdeyeux, Monday, August 18, 2014 4:54 PM (59 seconds ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

The existence of lad culture is definitely a thing but frat culture strikes me as a very shall-we-say 'organised' and matter-of-fact brand of institutionalised insidiousness - like an accepted and inescapable part of university culture in the US. I don't believe that lad culture is exacerbated by the NUS in the same way.

3kDk (dog latin), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:02 (nine years ago) link

all said, i agree with jjjusten's post. taking away frat houses would have a minimal impact on this.

3kDk (dog latin), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:03 (nine years ago) link

dont buy it, at least not as an assumption. frat houses are (perhaps fairly) stereotyped as a danger area for rape which acts as a flashing warning sign to begin with in a way that equally treacherous house parties, off campus stoner apartments etc etc aren't. saying "fix it by tearing down the frats" is just once again distracting from the real issue and (not saying this about you all) creating an imaginary demographic for college aged rapists that makes the rest of us feel better about the situation.

― Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, August 18, 2014 12:00 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Yeah but there are different "cultures" in different kinds of houses, and it seems like culture plays a strong role in this, at least that's what the article I posted suggests - did you read it? I mean it's not that no one living in my co-ed house made up of mostly ag school kids could have raped someone, but we definitely were not sitting around going "hey let's make some everclear punch and invite a bunch of freshman girls over." In fact we were markedly averse to doing stuff like that, in spite of throwing plenty of big parties. So I'm not saying it's in all frats or only in frats, I'm just saying that culture makes this kind of thing a lot more likely to happen.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:08 (nine years ago) link

i think you are extrapolating your house situation in a way that is maybe not terribly logically sound.

Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:10 (nine years ago) link

the purge was even more dogshit than you'd have think tbh

duff paddy (darraghmac), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:11 (nine years ago) link

why should male-dominated institutions who throw parties in order to lure girls to their houses to drink alcohol and, maybe, "hook up" receive support and recognition from institutions of higher learning?

Treeship, Monday, 18 August 2014 16:12 (nine years ago) link

like, they were all explicit about this idea of wanting "girls" at their houses. even the "good" ones. at my middle of the road east coast liberal arts college.

Treeship, Monday, 18 August 2014 16:13 (nine years ago) link

poster for the purge was intriguing but reading the wikipedia précis was more than enough for me xp

i was a downy lad, and twee (stevie), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:13 (nine years ago) link

thats to me the root problem here in general - we operate with an assumption that goes "i am not a rapist therefore those like me are not going to be rapists" which feels great but is a complete logical fallacy, and arguably leads to the problem at hand.

many xps

Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:15 (nine years ago) link

I don't believe that lad culture is exacerbated by the NUS in the same way.

Where does Uni Lad fit in?

Articles that have been reported on in the press include:
Sexual Mathematics – this article said that 75% of women aged 18–25 were "sluts" and advised readers that if a woman did not display any interest in having sex (which they described as "spread[ing] for your head"), "think about this mathematical statistic: 85 per cent of rape cases go unreported. That seems to be fairly good odds."[1][3] The article concluded with a mock disclaimer: "Uni Lad does not condone rape without saying ‘surprise’."[7]
The Zebra Abortion – this article described how, following sex, the writer told his sexual partner to take the morning-after pill. After responding by saying she wanted to keep the pregnancy, the writer considers "performing an elbow drop on her vagina right there and then", but decides instead to "look around the room for a chair or table I can smash onto her stomach".[8]
How To Pull a Fresher – Another article on the website gave advice on "How To Pull a Fresher", noting that fresher students were "especially vulnerable".[1]
The Angry Shag – This story described a man, during sex, smashing a woman's face into a wall "to knock some sense into her".[9]
The website also contained a 'shop' section that sold t-shirts with a variety of slogans, including a t-shirt fashioned in the style of the World War II-era Keep Calm and Carry On propaganda posters reading "Keep Calm – It Won't Take Long", a reference to rape.[10]

codycf, Monday, 18 August 2014 16:15 (nine years ago) link

the problem treeship is that that is the prime motivator or at least one of them in most if not all parties thrown by college aged men.

Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:16 (nine years ago) link

not allies house. that was men and women, queer and trans people, of all sexual orientations, throwing parties in order to socialize with their peers. there wasn't this hidden agenda to it.

Treeship, Monday, 18 August 2014 16:18 (nine years ago) link

thats to me the root problem here in general - we operate with an assumption that goes "i am not a rapist therefore those like me are not going to be rapists" which feels great but is a complete logical fallacy, and arguably leads to the problem at hand.

many xps

― Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, August 18, 2014 12:15 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I don't understand how in any way this kind of thinking leads to the problem at hand.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:18 (nine years ago) link

really?

Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:19 (nine years ago) link

justen did you read the article I posted? Because it suggests that actually there is a pattern to most campus sexual assaults, and that they mostly occur among a minority of guys who live in situations where they actively encourage it.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:19 (nine years ago) link

not just being a jerk here, but how is that not a clear antecedent of our total misunderstanding of rape in our culture (or racism, or violence, or whatever ill you choose)

im not talking about the article, nor have i read it, im talking about the disingenuous "people not like me" framing of the overall argument.

Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:21 (nine years ago) link

He surveyed about 1,800 men, asking them a wide range of questions about their sexual experiences. To learn about sexual assault, he asked things like, "Have you ever had sex with an adult when they didn't want to because you used physical force?" When the results came back, he was stunned.

All told, 120 men in the sample, or about 6 percent of the total, had raped women they knew. Two-thirds of those men were serial rapists, who had done this, on average, six times. Many of the serial rapists began offending before college, back in high school.

Other studies at colleges and in the military have since found similar numbers — usually somewhere around 10 percent of men admitting to either an attempted rape or a rape, with a significant proportion of them reporting a history of repeated offenses.

"I was forced, really, to accept that these are college students, but there is this small percentage of college students who are sex offenders," says Lisak. "They are behaving like sex offenders. They are sex offenders."

Together, the 120 men in Lisak's study were responsible for 439 rapes. None was ever reported.

But Lisak had no problem getting details about how the men carefully planned and executed their assaults. They'd often ask a girl to come to a party, saying it was invite-only, a big deal to a nervous freshman. Then they'd get her drunk to the point of incapacitation so they could have sex with her.

In an excerpt from one of Lisak's interview transcripts, a college student using the pseudonym Frank talks about how his friends would help him prep for an assault:

"We always had some kind of punch, you know, like our own home brew. We'd make it with a real sweet juice, and just pour in all kinds of alcohol. It was really powerful stuff. The girls wouldn't know what hit them."

Alcohol was the weapon of choice for these men, who typically saw themselves as college guys hooking up. They didn't think what they had done was a crime.

"Most of these men have an image or a myth about rape, that it's some guy in a ski mask wielding a knife," says Lisak. "They don't wear ski masks, they don't wield knives, so they don't see themselves as rapists."

In fact, they'd brag about what they had done afterwards to their friends. That implied endorsement from male friends — or at the very least, a lack of vocal objection — is a powerful force, perpetuating the idea that what these guys are doing is normal rather than criminal.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:22 (nine years ago) link

Like "we all have a monster inside us" is a good thing to remember, but there must be a reason a lot of guys AREN'T participating directly in that culture, and to me it seems pretty obvious that because I was raised to think that using pure grain alcohol to drug a woman in order to have sex with her is a fucked up thing to do, I never did it and ultimately never wanted to live with or hang out with people who thought it was an ok thing to do. And it also seems possible to me, at the same time, that if I had fallen in with the wrong people at an impressionable age, I might have thought differently, but that's just speculation.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:26 (nine years ago) link

and now that i have read it, nothing in that article pins this on frats, you guys are just reading "ply woman with alcohol" and "not get opposed by other men in the group" and deciding that that is code for frats, which im saying is a total misreading and a huge diversionary problem

Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:26 (nine years ago) link

in fact, the only frat member mentioned in that article is used as an example of someone countering this situation

Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:28 (nine years ago) link

Yeah I mean "frats" might be a red herring, but I would say there's a certain kind of all-male house where this tends to be the culture, whether or not it has greek letters on it. And sure, that house could be ostensibly "hippie" too. No, I don't think closing frats solves the problem -- the same guys can still have an off-campus house together where they do the exact same shit.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:28 (nine years ago) link

nothing in that article suggests that the "six percent" can identifiably be placed in one social group, and nothing in that research allows for respondents with different self-perceptions or willingness to confess sexually predatory behaviour

The aim of Rooney is spot correct (Daphnis Celesta), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:29 (nine years ago) link

The article makes it pretty clear that the guys did not even believe that they were "confessing" sexually predatory behavior, because they didn't see what they did as wrong.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:31 (nine years ago) link

It's possible that there are other guys out there who rape, yet are aware of the wrongfulness of it and feel so ashamed of it that they wouldn't even admit it in an anonymous study, but it's hard to believe that that's a huge contingent.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:32 (nine years ago) link

which leaves the possibility of many other men with an awareness that their behaviour is wrong who might misrepresent themselves in this kind of survey

The aim of Rooney is spot correct (Daphnis Celesta), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:33 (nine years ago) link

Again, just hard to believe that's a large number of men.

'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:34 (nine years ago) link

nobody claimed that shutting down frats would destroy this kind of collegiate rape culture once and for all. but i think it's weird that the most obvious exemplars of this culture on campus are like, official, recongized institutions who on many campuses have the nicest campuses. this, at least at my campus, seemed to give a ring of legitimacy to some really fucked up social environments, and i think this is less than ideal

Treeship, Monday, 18 August 2014 16:34 (nine years ago) link

i wdn't speculate on how sizeable that contingent is, obviously people as a rule like to present themselves in a flattering light

The aim of Rooney is spot correct (Daphnis Celesta), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:34 (nine years ago) link

*nicest houses, not campuses

Treeship, Monday, 18 August 2014 16:34 (nine years ago) link

The existence of lad culture is definitely a thing but frat culture strikes me as a very shall-we-say 'organised' and matter-of-fact brand of institutionalised insidiousness - like an accepted and inescapable part of university culture in the US. I don't believe that lad culture is exacerbated by the NUS in the same way.

I don't mean the NUS as such, rather the way that student unions are the centre of student social life through nights such as shagtag or pimps and hoes or golf pros vs tennis hoes and so on. The UniLAD spirit wouldn't exist to nearly the same extent if student social life wasn't its own little world held within the confines of the student union building

Merdeyeux, Monday, 18 August 2014 16:37 (nine years ago) link

yeah survey methodology is filled with examples of inaccurate self-reporting, esp in situations where the answers cast aspersions on the behavior of the person surveyed, i would guess the "oh no way i would never" contingent is unsettlingly large

Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:39 (nine years ago) link

I'm not familiar w the relationships that Greek orgs usually have with their colleges, but it seems to me that the point on which frats are problematic is the support they get from the university? Permission to have a house, permission to do whatever it is they do, and continue to have the permission of the university to do it. So in the event that a frat house IS the scene of a, or repeated, sexual assaults, it is in some sense with the backing of the school.

Orson Wellies (in orbit), Monday, 18 August 2014 16:39 (nine years ago) link


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