Arctish
Centimillionaire
And yet feminism is all about giving women special right, privileges and protections based on them being female.
No, it isn't. But feel free to link to widely accepted feminist treatises you have actually read and can accurately summarize to demonstrate your point. Quote mines don't count.
I have posted plenty of cases. For example the case at Occidental where a male and a female student had sex but the male student got expelled after a radical feminist professor convinced the female student she was raped. Or how about the Vassar case? Or the UND case? And plenty more.Hyperbole aside, do you have any evidence of a witch hunt? All I've seen you post are arguments that assume your conclusion: male students are being expelled from college for sexual misconduct therefore witch hunt. Your argument ignores the fact that all students at a school must adhere to the same Student Code of Conduct, and that most of them have no trouble doing so.
Or how about pronouncements by feminists in defense of Jackie Coakley the UVA false rape accuser?
You have cases in which males were punished, but you don't have evidence the outcome was the result of misandry.
Suppose a college has a first-past-the-post system for identifying victims and alleged perpetrators, where the student who first reports a mutual drunken sexual encounter gets the benefit of the doubt? That's a system that could be exploited to a person's advantage, but it's gender neutral. Men like Charlie reporting they were mounted without consent would get the same consideration as women.
If men are more likely than women to commit sexual assaults (which they are), and women are more likely than men to come forward when they are the victim of a sexual assault (which they are), then men are more likely than women to face a disciplinary board as an alleged assailant, and women are more likely than men to go before one as an alleged victim. Simply pointing out that women are usually considered victims and men assailants doesn't prove anything about misandry being a factor. You have to show that gender bias is influencing the outcomes.
Just because you don't like the rules doesn't mean the process of enforcing them is a witch hunt.
First, rules should make sense. The rules that deem any alcohol consumption (by a female) as inability to consent are stupid. Affirmative consent rules that put so many rules on consent that hardly anyone is following the letter of them are stupid.
Also rules should be applied consistently. When you have draconian rules and you only enforce them against male students than that is definitely a witch hunt against male students.
Where is the evidence these rules are only being enforced against males? That is the central part of your claim. It needs more support than a scattershot of cases in which the only unifying factors are the guy got expelled and you blame feminists.
The Occidental College case looks like gender bias. Both students were drunk, and both texted about their intent to have sex, they were equals in their rule breaking. But even though it looks that way at first glance, there are other factors that have to be ruled out before I can say with certainty "yeah, that's gender bias, which I oppose BTW because I'm a feminist". How much did her status as a minor affect the charges and the outcome? Did she get victim status because she claimed it, and he didn't because he never reported being victimized? Has something like this happened before? If so, what was the outcome? You have to consider those factors before you can say there's evidence of men being unfairly disadvantaged at Occidental. And then you have to show evidence of the same unfairness at other colleges before you can say there's a pattern of gender bias in these systems. And then you have to show how it derives from feminism before you can say the feminists are to blame.
I interpret the tongue as a tacit admission that it's about feminism after all.That has nothing to do with feminism.Don't tell me this has nothing to do with feminism especially when the false accuser was convinced by a feminist professor that she was "raped" when in reality it was a consensual drunken hookup![]()
You should interpret is as "You're not the boss of me" with the Malcolm in the Middle theme song playing in the background.
And yet only the male student was punished. Feminism at work.There is a more informative article on the Occidental College incident here. The facts of the case include
1) both students were below the legal age for alcohol consumption
She was "one month shy of her 18th birthday" according to Esquire. Obviously that makes the male student a rapist. Because feminism.2) the female student was still a minor
And yet only the male student got punished. Because of feminism.3) both students were falling-down drunk
Which clearly shows that the male student is a rapist and the female student a victim of rape according to feminism. After all, as Marilyn French, a prominent feminist, said "all men are rapists".4) they texted each other about their intentions to have sex, and had the presence of mind to use a condom![]()
You know that thing I said about reading and comprehending what feminists write? This is a prime example of what happens when you don't. It has been pointed out to you several times that this particular quote mine comes from a character in a work of fiction. Accusing Ms. French of misandry based on those lines of dialog is like accusing J.K.Rowling of racism because one of her characters once called another character a filthy mudblood.
rolleyes indeed!
According to feminism, a female is entitles to retroactively withdraw consent at any time after the encounter if she in any way feels bad about what had happened.5) the female student experienced stress and anxiety following the encounter and sought advice from multiple sources
And of course, one of the sources she sought advice from is a well known radical feminist professor (Danielle Dirks) who offered truly bizarre reasons why the male student is a rapist, including him having been a valedictorian.
Calling her "underage" is pretty ridiculous here. They were basically the same age. If he was just below 18 and she just above it, he'd still be the one expelled. Because feminism.6) the college was required by law to report the incident to authorities upon discovery of the sexual encounter due to the girl being underage
I think it is the feminists and college administrators are the idiots because their sexual encounter was consensual by any reasonable definition of the term.7) both students had attended a student orientation presentation that emphasized the importance of consent but the presentation may not have been clear enough that even drunk idiots could understand where the lines are drawn.
Okay, so I listed some of the facts of the case and you responded with quibbles and blaming everything on feminism. What is the point here? Are we going to argue whether the legal age for drinking should be lower or if schools should be required to report adults who have sex with minors on campus? That topic should have it's own thread. But if we're going to discuss unequal treatment of students then let's focus on that.
I agree that the treatment of both students was unequal despite their rule breaking behavior being pretty much the same. I would like to know why.
And the fact that he was the only one punished while she is treated like a "victim" doesn't strike you as the fault of feminism?So here's my opinion on the Occidental College incident: they both should have been cited for underage drinking, each faced the disciplinary board for having non-consensual sex with a fellow student, and both been subject to the same consequences for committing the same offenses. He probably didn't know she was underage and he was only slightly older, so I don't think the State should go after him for having sex with a minor. I think they both should have been suspended for the rest of the semester, but allowed to remain students and eligible for student loans, etc. provided they each wrote an essay demonstrating their understanding of what affirmative enthusiastic sober consent means, and how to know when they have it.
No it doesn't.
1) All you have shown are the results of apparently flawed systems. You haven't presented the means necessary to separate out the results of a flawed gender-neutral system from a flawed gender-biased system or a well functioning gender-biased system. Why was she treated as a victim? Is it because she is the one who reported being victimized, or because she was a minor and he was an adult? Did she get leniency in exchange for cooperating with the board as it investigated the alleged sexual misconduct? You haven't shown which, if any, of these possibilities affected her status in the eyes of the disciplinary board.
2) Saying something is the result of feminism without showing decent evidence that feminism affected the outcome is like saying "God did it". That's an explanation that only satisfies the believers.
3) What you are describing is misandry, not feminism.
I would add: her identity should be made public so other men are warned off. After all, you should not put your dick in crazy.
That sounds like a good reason to be sober when choosing your sex-buddies.
Except that there is no evidence that the male student used "force or coercion" in the OP (Amherst) case.However, if there is evidence one of them used force or coercion on the other before or during the encounter, as there is in the case presented in the OP, then the consequences for that student should be more severe. At the very least, the use of force merits expulsion.
If the stories are true, sure. Neither of them consented.Do you agree that Charlie was raped? Do you agree that Ben's consent was coerced?
Do you agree that in neither case was there affirmative enthusiastic sober consent, and therefore the sex was non-consensual?
According to the stories, there was no consent, period. I do not think we should be requirement for "sober consent" because many sexual encounters involve alcohol but that doesn't mean they are non-consensual (passed out or close to passed out people are a different case). I also do not think "enthusiastic consent" is a reasonable requirement. Should criminal justice system and university administrators really be given the power to judge whether a sexual encounter was entered into enthusiastically enough? Where is the cut-off?
No, the only requirement should be whether consent was given or not.
Can't I want both? Yes, gender equality is a huge factor here because the rules are applied in a very sexist fashion. But there is also a huge problem with draconian riles like this in the first place.Please answer these questions. I get the feeling you don't want to talk about Charlie and Ben because, while you've focused on gender equality in this thread, what you really want is for the requirement for affirmative enthusiastic sober consent to be abandoned.
Charlie and Ben didn't consent, period. Yet, let's say a third guy, Eric, actually consented. But he had a beer or two. Was he raped? Certainly he wasn't completely sober. Or let's say Eric consented but reluctantly. Was he raped because his consent wasn't "enthusiastic" enough? That's just silly!
You just agreed that Ben was raped because his consent was coerced but now you're saying reluctant consent counts as valid consent. So if Ben described what he was feeling as "reluctant" rather than "feeling coerced" , does that make the encounter okay in your book? The reason for his reluctance, in this case his fears for what might happen if he said no to the woman who slashed her legs before breaking into his home to demand sex, are no obstacle to the sex being considered consensual?
Suppose we use the term "unencumbered" to denote an agreement to have sex free from coercion, trickery, and manipulation. Ben did not actually want to have sex with his ex- but he feared a worse outcome if he didn't. His consent was affirmative but not unencumbered. Does that mean he really did consent, or that he really didn't?
Nonsense. A sleeping drunk can't consent. That has nothing to do with ridiculous requirements for "sober enthusiasm" and much less with applying such unrealistic rules to males only.I think you want guys to be able to mount sleeping drunks,
or to pressure girls into allowing sexual contact even though they've already declined and expressed a desire to leave, and have it be considered a sexual triumph, not a sexual transgression.
What kind of pressure? If a woman changes her mind and consents that is still consent. In the infamous Ms. Magazine "study" the radical feminist "researcher" Mary Koss included cases where a guy threatened to end the relationship if she didn't sleep with him as "rape". Do you agree with it? Should men be required to remain in sexless relationships lest they be deemed "rapists"?
She used that as an example of pressure tactics and coercion to force a non-consenting person into performing or allowing sex acts they don't want. If a couple must both contribute to pay the rent or cooperate to get themselves to work each day, a threat by one to end the relationship is a threat to make the other homeless or jobless or both. That's some serious leverage.
"Do what I want or else....." where the "or else" is a very unpleasant outcome is coercion.
Yes. Very much so.Am I wrong?
No, I think they are the very opposite of being sensible, for reasons I outlined above. But let me repeat the most obvious one: do you really want criminal justice system or college administrators to be in the business of judging whether a sexual encounter was "enthusiastic"I agree that the rules should be sensible. I think the requirement for affirmative enthusiastic sober consent is very sensible. It's certainly a lot more sensible than a standard based on "s/he didn't say no".
In the sense of it being gleeful and energetic? No.
In the sense of it being given without coercion, trickery, or other unethical behavior tainting the genuineness of the consent? Yes. I don't think it's an ideal situation to have having college administrators trying to decide where consent ends and non-consent begins, but I do think it's necessary. Administrators have to at least try to identify the sex offenders and get them off campus, and evaluating the quality of the consent they claim to have been given is part of the process.
You are forgetting that most colleges had a reasonable burden of proof ("clear and convincing proof") before Obama administration forced them to use "preponderance of evidence", which is not a reasonable burden of proof.I also agree that investigations should be handled fairly, and a reasonable burden of proof should be met. But I don't think it helps to conflate what government and courts do and what private businesses and institutions do. Due process has to do with the rights of a citizen facing criminal charges. But students facing a college disciplinary board for violating the Code of Conduct are not being charged as criminals, and what is being decided is not based on criminal law. So while rape is a crime, colleges do not prosecute students for rape. Instead, the enforce their Codes of Conduct. And that enforcement is based on the students agreeing in writing to abide by the Code of Conduct while they are students at that college, and affirming in writing that they understand that failure to abide by the Code may result in consequences up to and including expulsion.
Preponderance of evidence is the standard in civil actions, which the Obama Administration correctly pointed out. It's the same one used when an employer fires an employee for cause, or when the Boy Scouts kick out a scoutmaster for homosexuality.
It might not be the best standard. But if the standard is too low it should be raised for in all such cases, not just the ones affecting men attending college. That requires changing the laws that govern those parts of the civil code.
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