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No such thing as Rape Culture redux

Derec, you are aware that Title IX was enacted in 1972, right?
Are you aware that most schools were applying the "clear and convincing proof" standard to sexual assault claims (same standard used for other types of hearings) until the 2011 Obama administration directive?

We have yet another very likely innocent male student railroaded and expelled. Do you (and other feminists and Leftists) not care about that at all? Is justice only relevant when it is denied to members of minorities or women?

I thought this was a thread about rape and not about false rape allegations.

The idea that no means no and that an individual who is incapacitated due to alcohol or drugs or other condition is unable to give consent is hardly outside of the mainstream.

True, but Derec is bringing up "If both parties are equally drunk, are they both rapists?" It's a tough question for some.

If they are both rapists, then they both should be punished, including the female.

If only he is, that is a double standard. Feminism theoretically is about equality.

Feminism is about equality of the sexes.

Derec actually keeps bringing up cases where he alleges that there is a false accusation of rape. In the Yu case, there are witnesses which say that the woman was drunk. I may have missed it, but I didn't see such claims about Yu. Of course the level of inebriation is important. Witnesses say that at a distance, she appeared to be drunk. Usually, that means she was stumbling, not walking straight, needed to lean on someone to walk, etc. Now, if those claims were made about Yu's state, I would say that he was likely a victim of rape. As far as I know, there are no such claims.

Derec agreed that differing levels of inebriation would bring about differing abilities to know what was happening, to make decisions, etc. Do you agree? So if one person is somewhat inebriated: tipsy/buzzed/a bit happy but still able to know what was going on and to be rational and the other person was having trouble walking, slurring words, vomiting, perhaps passing out: would you assign the same level of responsibility to each of them? Surely one has greater control than the other, with the second person pretty clearly being unable to give consent.
 
"Planning to have sex" is not the same as "consenting to have sex."

For all we know she could have planned to have sex with him at the time of the texts and then changed her mind when penetration was imminent. If she changed her mind and he went ahead and penetrated anyway then that's rape.

Did she claim to have changed her mind at the last minute???


I see nothing to that effect. Rather, I see a woman who regretted her choice the next day and decided it must have been rape--forgetting about the incriminating texts.
 
"Planning to have sex" is not the same as "consenting to have sex."

For all we know she could have planned to have sex with him at the time of the texts and then changed her mind when penetration was imminent. If she changed her mind and he went ahead and penetrated anyway then that's rape.

Did she claim to have changed her mind at the last minute???


I see nothing to that effect. Rather, I see a woman who regretted her choice the next day and decided it must have been rape--forgetting about the incriminating texts.

She was drunk when she sent those texts and therefore did not consent to sending them. Stop blaming the victim here and trying to use them against her. :mad:
 
"Studies" about false allegation rates are close to useless, since what they lack any direct measure of false allegations and just "estimate" rates based upon a large set of such questionable assumptions that the true rate is guaranteed to differ notably from the estimate and its largely a crapshoot whether its higher or lower than the estimate.

You can low-bound the rate by looking at the cases where her claims are found to be contrary to fact. This will only catch the ones that aren't careful, though. (I suspect this will be many of them as the general pattern seems to be a drunken hookup that's later regretted.)
 
"Planning to have sex" is not the same as "consenting to have sex."

For all we know she could have planned to have sex with him at the time of the texts and then changed her mind when penetration was imminent. If she changed her mind and he went ahead and penetrated anyway then that's rape.

Did she claim to have changed her mind at the last minute???


I see nothing to that effect. Rather, I see a woman who regretted her choice the next day and decided it must have been rape--forgetting about the incriminating texts.

According to Yu's room mate, she regretted the act in the middle of the act. Whether or not it was rape hinges on two things:

1. Was she too impaired to consent? Witnesses say she appeared to be drunk.
2. If she expressed a desire to stop, was she allowed to stop and leave or was she forced to continue?

Either of those two scenarios would constitute rape.

- - - Updated - - -

"Studies" about false allegation rates are close to useless, since what they lack any direct measure of false allegations and just "estimate" rates based upon a large set of such questionable assumptions that the true rate is guaranteed to differ notably from the estimate and its largely a crapshoot whether its higher or lower than the estimate.

You can low-bound the rate by looking at the cases where her claims are found to be contrary to fact. This will only catch the ones that aren't careful, though. (I suspect this will be many of them as the general pattern seems to be a drunken hookup that's later regretted.)

In fact, more than one published study has demonstrated that in most cases, the rapist is not drunk, although the victim frequently was. In fact, the rapist tends to target vulnerable (i.e. drunk) victims.

So much for regretted drunken hook ups.
 
"Planning to have sex" is not the same as "consenting to have sex."

For all we know she could have planned to have sex with him at the time of the texts and then changed her mind when penetration was imminent. If she changed her mind and he went ahead and penetrated anyway then that's rape.
So are you saying that if there is any doubt whatsoever that she might not have consented the guy must be found guilty and expelled?
The fact is that this case fails even the very low "preponderance of evidence" threshold as it is far more likely, based on all the evidence, that she consented and was able to do so than that she didn't.
I think he should win this lawsuit handily.

Suppose a man is stopped by a policeman because his car swerved across the centerline. A breathalyzer test indicates he is slightly over the legal limit. His driving performance shows his judgment is impaired. His defense is as follows, "I did not realize I had too much to drink. I never would have gotten in my car, if I knew I was drunk. I didn't do any harm."

Would any judge consider this a valid defense against a DUI charge and find him not guilty?

The cop still has to prove DUI beyond a reasonable doubt. Not realizing you drank too much is not a defense against DUI anyway, you are expected to know. (Note, though, that being truly unknowingly drunk {you didn't know you were consuming alcohol in the first place--this usually involves the alcohol-naive and things like a spiked punch bowl} is a defense against DUI.)

(And in your scenario I'm probably going to vote not guilty. The breathalyzer isn't accurate enough to call someone just over the limit, I don't see your scenario providing the requisite level of proof.)

Instead of whining about women who change their mind in mid penetration, why don't you write a definition of rape which would cover this situation in the criminal code. Your definition must distinguish between consensual sex and sex with a woman who is impaired and unable to make an informed decision, even though to another impaired person, she may seem willing. This will solve a lot more problems than expecting any woman too drunk to drive to be the victim of any man too drunk to drive.

Got that?

They planned to meet up for sex. If she can plan it I think she's aware enough to decide if she's going to do it.
 
I thought this was a thread about rape and not about false rape allegations.
It's technically a thread about so-called "rape culture" which includes false rape allegations and dismissive attitude toward them coming from many feminists.

The idea that no means no and that an individual who is incapacitated due to alcohol or drugs or other condition is unable to give consent is hardly outside of the mainstream.
In general yes, but there are caveats. In our culture "playing hard to get" is a thing so not every no means no. If she persists in the "no" then obviously but viewing a sort of play-demurring as evidence for rape is ridiculous. Same thing with "too drunk to consent". There is a level of drunkenness beyond which an individual is unable to consent but that is pretty high. Closer to "passed out" than "DUI" level for sure. In both these issues there needs to be common sense and ability to see things with common sense, not absolutist rules that don't work in the real world.

BTW, I have no problems with being termed a feminist or a leftist, although the second is not entirely true. It's not an insult, Derec, nor is it a position which automatically negates the validity of my points of view. Nice try, though.
But it correlates nicely with certain positions on these issues - like lack of concern for men falsely accused and punished.
 
Derec agreed that differing levels of inebriation would bring about differing abilities to know what was happening, to make decisions, etc. Do you agree? So if one person is somewhat inebriated: tipsy/buzzed/a bit happy but still able to know what was going on and to be rational and the other person was having trouble walking, slurring words, vomiting, perhaps passing out: would you assign the same level of responsibility to each of them? Surely one has greater control than the other, with the second person pretty clearly being unable to give consent.

I'm interested in addressing the situation he keeps bringing up. The two are both equally drunk. The two are equally consenting at the time, although one can argue that they are both unable to give consent due to alcohol. Everything is equal except one of the two has a Y chromosome.

So, who is guilty of rape in that situation?
 
Derec agreed that differing levels of inebriation would bring about differing abilities to know what was happening, to make decisions, etc. Do you agree? So if one person is somewhat inebriated: tipsy/buzzed/a bit happy but still able to know what was going on and to be rational and the other person was having trouble walking, slurring words, vomiting, perhaps passing out: would you assign the same level of responsibility to each of them? Surely one has greater control than the other, with the second person pretty clearly being unable to give consent.

I'm interested in addressing the situation he keeps bringing up. The two are both equally drunk. The two are equally consenting at the time, although one can argue that they are both unable to give consent due to alcohol. Everything is equal except one of the two has a Y chromosome.

So, who is guilty of rape in that situation?
Right. Derec brings that up once someone has used the drunkenness of the girl as prima facie evidence of non-consent. Then Derec will point out that the guy was drunk as well, and thus this would mean that the girl is guilty of rape by that same standard. Of course, that is ignored and this is usually around the time someone accuses him of wanting to justify having sex with women who are passed out.
 
Bronzeage, you are mixing apples and oranges. The issue is that if that man instead of driving had sex instead, would he be a "rape victim"? Obviously not, but change the genders (or even have both of them equally drunk) and he becomes a "rapist" and she becomes a "victim" by feminist fiat.
That the more powerful person happens to be drunk (or drunk-er than the other) doesn't magically and automatically change the power dynamic.
In other words - it's always the man's fault. :rolleyes:
No. If there is fault, it is generally the fault of the more powerful person who contravenes the desires of the less powerful person. Where power may or may not be physical strength, and the specific desire thwarted is to not be involved in a sex act with the other person.

There is nothing definitional that prevents women from being the perps for rape, but you have to look pretty far and wide to find cases of them actually doing it.
 
Derec agreed that differing levels of inebriation would bring about differing abilities to know what was happening, to make decisions, etc. Do you agree? So if one person is somewhat inebriated: tipsy/buzzed/a bit happy but still able to know what was going on and to be rational and the other person was having trouble walking, slurring words, vomiting, perhaps passing out: would you assign the same level of responsibility to each of them? Surely one has greater control than the other, with the second person pretty clearly being unable to give consent.

I'm interested in addressing the situation he keeps bringing up. The two are both equally drunk. The two are equally consenting at the time, although one can argue that they are both unable to give consent due to alcohol. Everything is equal except one of the two has a Y chromosome.

So, who is guilty of rape in that situation?
Right. Derec brings that up once someone has used the drunkenness of the girl as prima facie evidence of non-consent. Then Derec will point out that the guy was drunk as well, and thus this would mean that the girl is guilty of rape by that same standard. Of course, that is ignored and this is usually around the time someone accuses him of wanting to justify having sex with women who are passed out.

Indeed. Now given that I explicitly said that they are equally drunk, if she is so drunk she can't respond then he is so drunk he can't take advantage of her being that drunk Everything is equal except their DNA, so he is equally drunk. I'm eliminating all wiggle room to avoid answering.
 
As previously stated, you often bring up case after case of supposedly false rape claims in every single thread about rape and frequently talk about both being drunk so it was mutual rape.
Well many cases are like that. This case in particular is such a case where witnesses said they were both drunk and both willing participants. I say that it was most likely just a consensual hookup but if you insist it must have been some sort of sexual assault because they were drunk, then they are surely equally guilty.
In fact, actual studies have demonstrated that rapists are most often sober and not under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
What studies? Also, that is probably true for actual rapists. But there are also many consensual, mutually drunken hookups that are being called "rapes" because the girl regrets the sex the next day (or year) and cries rape. The cases I bring up are usually such mutually drunken hookups. As you said, "rapists are most often sober" and these guys weren't.

Again: different levels of inebriation would lead to differing levels of capacity to consent, as you have admitted.
Nothing to admit here, as it is pretty non-controversial in the abstract. The problem arises from proving just how drunk they both were at a later date. In the Vassar case we have alleged witnesses (probably Walker's friends though) say that she "appeared drunk". Her appearing drunk is in no way evidence that she was "too drunk to consent" and Yu should not have been punished over that incident.
Similarly in the Occidental case the witnesses say they were both drunk but also both willing. How one can construe the girl's victimhood and the guy's culpability from that requires some serious gender bias!

I know of no feminist nor any individual who claims that the responsibility is 'always on the man.' Certainly I have never made such a claim.
It's what the feminist opinions in these cases boil down to. If they are both drunk, the guy is punished and the girl declared a "victim". Without exception.

Except for the witnesses.
No witnesses said she told him to stop and he didn't. None whatsoever!

Later, Walker put a condom on Yu and they got down until his roommate unexpectedly showed up, after which Walker “began to lament about her ex-boyfriend and stated that she was not ready to jump into ‘anything new,’ ” then got dressed and left after noting how she “took Peter Yu’s virginity,” the suit says.
Seems like post-coital regrets and in is in no way evidence of non-consent. In fact, the language, that she "took" his virginity, implies active participation on her part. Look at the last three words - that is part of the lawsuit and is used as evidence for the plaintiff (Yu)!
Let's look at something else from the article:
she sent him a Facebook e-mail the day after their one-night stand saying she “had a wonderful time.”
This exculpatory evidence and should be enough to seal the lawsuit for Yu.
Sounds as though she wanted to stop.
At that point she had already stopped.
The article is told entirely from Yu's perspective and it isn't clear whether he attempted to stop her from leaving or forced her to continue to have sex, which would have been rape, just as if he wanted to stop and she did not, it would have been rape.
I don't see that possibility from the language used at all. She didn't tell him to stop, in fact it is pretty clear they were already finished when the roommate walked in.


Which directly goes to whether she was too drunk to consent. I haven't read any witness testimony that they were equally drunk.
"Appeared to be drunk" is very vague and does not go at all into whether she was too drunk to consent. It does not say that she could barely walk, or unable to speak coherently etc. which would be indicative of extreme intoxication. She even managed to put a condom on him which requires the level of hand-eye coordination and fine motor skills lacking in severely intoxicated.

We actually don't know what the entire body of evidence or testimony was presented against Yu. We have only his side of the story and even that does not make it clear that it was not rape: his room mate indicates she didn't want to start anything new (and the quote makes her sound pretty sloppy drunk) and other witnesses report her appearing to be drunk. You may be correct: he could have been treated unfairly but it is not possible for us to know given the very slim details in online articles told entirely from Yu's perspective.
The "not wanting to start anything new" was said after they had sex, not before. She can't retroactively withdraw consent. And there are plenty of red flags about this case - it being decided solely by her father's colleagues (she didn't want a student representative), him being not allowed to question witnesses, the case being brought a year after the fact.

Derec, it's actually a very serious issue, and one where much education needs to be done. Many of the childhood victims of sexual abuse by priests did not term what happened to them as 'rape' because they didn't believe that it could happen to a boy (in the case of male victims. Although they are not prominently featured in news articles, there are plenty of female victims as well) or that whatever a priest (or coach, or teacher or favorite uncle, etc.) did was ok. Even Mary Kay Letourneau's victim, aka her now husband, does not see that a 35 year old woman having sex with a 12 year old as rape but clearly, it is.
At the same time college girls are adults and thus merely having sex with them is not rape which makes it unlike these cases where we basically have adolescents being taken advantage of. I assume college girls would know if they were being raped or sexually assaulted, no matter what Ms. magazine or this article says.

In many cultures, both men and women believe that a woman (or child) must submit to a man, regardless. And if the two are unmarried, it is her fault, even if she is a child. She is often severely punished.
Relevance to US college campuses?
In the U.S., the fact that men can be rape victims is just now gaining popular acceptance. Until about 20-30 years ago, in most states, a husband could legally force his wife to have sex and it was not deemed rape. I've known people who did not count beatings which resulted in black eyes, broken bones, etc. to be 'abuse.' He just lost his temper. I provoked it. And of course, male victims have an even harder time coming to grips with the fact that they are being abused.
The problem with marital rape is being able to prove it and possibility of false claims being used to punish the husband if the marriage is on the rocks.
Too many people still believe that if you dress a certain way, or drink too much or flirted with someone or if he bought you dinner or if you've had sex with him before or if you are married, then it cannot be rape.
It can be rape, but just because she was drinking does not make consensual sex into rape.

A handsome athlete cannot be a rapist: don't all women want to sleep with him?
It certainly is a valid question. Not that he cannot be a rapist but that needs to be proven, not assumed. On the other hand, successful athletes are good targets for extortion.

Even if she was passed out at the time, she surely wanted it.
Another thing that would need to be proven, not merely assumed. Do you have a case in mind?
 
It is the standard for civil cases.
It's a standard for tort cases, not all civil cases. Particularly, colleges that used "clear and convincing proof" for sexual claims still use if for all other internal cases. They are however not allowed to use that standard for sexual cases courtesy of the Obama administration.
Since this is not a criminal case, but a private disciplinary actions where the consequences are much less severe (as in civil cases), the concern about "false positives" is not as great.
I already explained that they are greater and more lopsided that tort cases in some detail. Instead of responding to my argument you repeat your mantra. And yes, they are not criminal cases which is why this type of case usually uses the "clear and convincing proof" standard which is not quite as strict as "beyond a reasonable doubt" but still preserves the feature of giving the benefit of the doubt to the accused, as it should be.
I realize that bothers rape apologists, radical misogynists and others, but that is the reality.
And I realize that innocent men being wrongfully expelled and their lives ruined doesn't bother the false rape accusation apologists, radical misandrists and others. And of course, anyone who is concerned about wrongful punishment of college students must be a "radical misogynist" and "rape apologist". :rolleyes:

I did not reply to the post on a specific case. Frankly, I am not interested in a specific cherry-picked case because policy should not be based on anecdotes.
You replied to my post in which I referenced this particular case. And it's pretty obvious you refuse to address it because it is an obvious travesty of justice and goes against your agenda to downplay wrongfully punished students.
Since I was not responding to a specific case, your answer was literally non-responsive to my point.
In other words, you don't have a point and refuse to address any of my points.
Thank you for proving my point that I have not seen you ever promote or propose improving these rates.
Propose a way to improve reducing false negatives without at the same time increasing false positives and then I'll promote it. But all I see is attempts to increase punishment rate by making it more difficult for the accused students to defend themselves.

Yet another hyperbolic statement consistent with a rape culture.
Not at all. To radical feminists male students being allowed to adequately defend themselves from rape accusations is an example of "rape culture".

Do you have a source that corrobates your claim? Because in my experience, your claim is false.
Google it. I will not present it for you on a platter, at least not until you address my points which you keep avoiding because they do not fit into your skewed world view.

No, that you engage in comments consistent with promoting a rape culture.
Presenting examples of radical feminists going "full retard" on "rape culture" is promoting "rape culture"? :banghead:
 
No. If there is fault, it is generally the fault of the more powerful person who contravenes the desires of the less powerful person.
We are not talking about anyone contravening anybody's desires. They both desired it, they did it, but the female is considered a rape victim because a) she was drunk and b) she regretted her decision to have sex and some point in the future.
 
No. If there is fault, it is generally the fault of the more powerful person who contravenes the desires of the less powerful person.
We are not talking about anyone contravening anybody's desires. They both desired it, they did it, but the female is considered a rape victim because a) she was drunk and b) she regretted her decision to have sex and some point in the future.

That's just your imagination talking, Derec.

The reality is that only a small portion cases of date or acquaintance rape are brought to trial precisely because most prosecutors realize that it is difficult to convince the jury that if the female was drinking, she wasn't a willing participant. Regardless of the relative levels of sobriety.

I have seen nothing that suggests that Yu was drunk or too drunk. Witnesses thought she was too drunk and were concerned enough to call police.
 
That's just your imagination talking, Derec.
There is no claim that the guy forced himself on the girl in either case.

The reality is that only a small portion cases of date or acquaintance rape are brought to trial precisely because most prosecutors realize that it is difficult to convince the jury that if the female was drinking, she wasn't a willing participant. Regardless of the relative levels of sobriety.
Which is why colleges have been forced to dispense with the pesky requirement of having to prove stuff. :rolleyes:

I have seen nothing that suggests that Yu was drunk or too drunk. Witnesses thought she was too drunk and were concerned enough to call police.
They didn't say she was "too drunk" they said she "appeared drunk". Her planning to have sex with Yu and her putting on a condom indicate that she wasn't "too drunk to consent". As far as police, the article says campus security, not police. In any case, there should be records if they actually contacted security and are not misremembering or outright lying. These witnesses appear to be her friends after all and are thus hardly disinterested. Furthermore Yu wasn't allowed to question them casting doubt on their claims because they have gone unchallenged. They are also a year old - how well can they remember things from a particular night a year ago?
 
Another bullshit expulsion of a very likely innocent male student. :mad:
Sexual Assault Injustice at Occidental: College Railroads Accused Student
It fits the pattern we see more and more (UND, Vassar, UGA etc.), no evidence for guilt (other than the allegation itself), plenty of evidence of innocence, police understandably doesn't prosecute because of lack of evidence, but the university expels after a kangaroo court trial where the male student's rights are not respected and where the guilt is de facto presumed.

The biggest WTF moment in the article is a statement by Danielle Dirks, a professor at Occidental that the accused "fit the profile of other rapists on campus in that he had a high GPA in high school, was his class valedictorian, was on [a sports] team, and was ‘from a good family.’"
You can't make that shit up! Being a good student now apparently makes you a likely rapist. :banghead:

The Obama-Biden decree on persecuting male students accused of rape is proving more and more disastrous and needs to be scrapped and replaced with a more just standard using
- higher evidentiary standard, at least "clear and convincing proof".
- colleges should not, in most cases, take any action if civil authorities find no cause to prosecute.
- mutual drunkenness means either both are capable to consent or neither is. Presuming the girl is a "victim" because alcohol renders her incapable of consent but renders the guy fully responsible for his actions is prima facie sexist and unjust.
- restore due process rights including right to question his accuser and all the witnesses against him.

Actually, the statement by Dirks is according to the guy bringing the suit. I can't find a direct quote by Dirks in this matter.
 
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