Toni said:
I disagree that it is dramatically more unjust to impose a curfew on men, who commit the vast overwhelming portion of violent crime compared with expecting women to monitor absolutely everything about their behavior....because of men who might assault or murder them.
First, when you say "impose a curfew on men, who commit the vast overwhelming portion of violent crime", that sentence entails that the people on whom the curfew is imposed are the same people who commit the overwhelming proportion of violent crime. That is false. The curfew would be imposed on many people who do not commit any violent crimes alongside a minority who do.
Second, it is dramatically more unjust because it deliberately takes away the freedom of people who did nothing wrong, whereas the expectations that you mention are just expectations: the people having those expectations are not deliberately trying to reduce the freedom of women.
Third, I'm not sure what "absolutely everything" means here. But while I would not expect people to act always rationally, it would be of course irrational of a person (whether a man or a woman) not to monitor their own behavior in response to significant threats coming from violent bad men, or for that matter any other significant threat: people who live in areas where leopards or worse tigers walk around and attack humans should adjust their behavior accordingly, if they want to avoid being hunted and eaten - which humans clearly want to avoid.
It is also morally obligatory under usual circumstances, though not under all of them.
Toni said:
Again, I do not suggest imposing a curfew on men, although more than one person has offered the opinion that there might be a sharp drop in some kinds of crime if we did so.
Yes, I have read it. And I disagree, as explained. I would like to know more about the details about who would be, in that counterfactual scenario, impossing the curfew (e.g., who makes the law, how do they justify it in the eyes of the public, how they attempt to enforce it, etc.), but pretty much all of the scenarios with present-day tech I come up with lead to riots until the curfew is lifted, or eventually civil war if it is not. I would need more information about their scenarios to see whether the curfew would have chances of working in those cases.
Toni said:
There is absolutely no way that women can dress, no way that they can make themselves small enough, inoffensive enough to avoid being attacked by men.
One can mirror that for both men and women: There is absolutely no way that humans can dress, no way human can make themselves small enough, inoffensive enough to avoid being attacked by robbers, etc., who would often beat them and sometimes kill them in order to take their money ( and the muggers are at least an adequate category, because they are the ones who commit those crimes, whereas "men" are not - just a minority of men).
In reality, one can actually reduce the risk of attacks by adjusting one's behavior, even though it's not a guarantee of not being attacked.
Toni said:
Infants are raped and murdered. Young children, pre-teens, teenagers, college aged young women, young mothers, nuns, soldiers, police officers, doctors, lawyers, old women lying in their beds at night in their own home and even lying in their beds in a nursing home are raped, assaulted and even murdered, usually by men.
More precisely, they're attacked by rapists, and robbers, etc., who are a minority of men - and in many cases, they are attacked by criminals they do know, but then that's not what the curfew is about: it's for strangers.
Toni said:
It is not women who need to alter their behavior to protect themselves.
Both women and men, if they live alongside dangerous criminals (or leopards, etc.), who need to alter their behavior if they aren't taking the reasonable precautions already, in order to reduce the risk of being attacked.
How much do they need to alter their behavior? It depends on the circumstances, which specific risks there are, etc.
Toni said:
Indeed, nothing that women can do in the way of how they dress or where they walk at night or in the daytime or whether or not they smile or wear high heels or short skirts or low cut shirts makes a damn bit of difference.
Actually, some of the things that one does makes a difference. For example, if I do not go for a walk at night, I reduce the chances that someone will mug me and perhaps kill me. If I stay away from dangerous neighborhoods during the day and at night, the same happens, etc. Of course, that does not make me immune to attack. I might get mugged or murdered anyway. But I can definitely reduce the risks. The same applies to women and to everyone else.
Toni said:
It doesn't. It might spark male rape fantasies but that's it--and it is not the responsibility of women to avoid men's fantasies, especially considering that such fantasies can involve anything and everything from infants to elderly nuns in habits and nursing homes.
Whether it's a moral obligation to protect oneself depends on the circumstances. For example, if one has children or other people in charge, there is such an obligation; if one has loved ones, then also, even if to a lesser extent. If one is a lone hermit, there is no obligation. And so on. But sometimes it's not immoral to take some risk, but it's still irrational to take it.
Toni said:
I agree that we all have a responsibility to do our best to look out for our own welfare (and the welfare of others) but society should place no greater burden on girls and women than it does on men to maintain personal safety.
But the actual burden is not imposed by "society". Whether one has a moral obligation depends on the circumstances, not "society". And the circumstances are created in part by pretty bad violent people - most of whom are men, but for that matter, they can be created by tigers or leopards, and sometimes they are.
Toni said:
Do you have any children? Boys? Girls? If you have a daughter, how do you explain to her that she must curtail her freedoms in ways that her brothers do not?
I do not have any children. But if the risks are a lot higher for women, the explanation if she asked would be just that: you are at a greater risk, so you have to limit your activities more in order to reduce the risks to a similar extent. It's the same reason I have to curtail my freedoms more than a bigger, younger and much stronger man, all other things equal: the risk for me is higher. And I have to curtail my freedom to go out at night much more than someone who lives in a place where there is no violent street crime.