Friday, October 25, 2013

Two Off-Duty Cops Prove What Young Women Know About Who"s Really to Blame For Rape

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Judging from what you’ve read in the media lately, you’d think there’s a direct correlation between a woman’s drunk slutty drinking and her propensity to get sexually assaulted, but as it turns out there are more ways of preventing rape that don’t include making half the population stay indoors past midnight and holding them responsible for the illegal actions of others!


What if … men … (stay with me) … didn’t … (stay with me) … rape? Moreover, what if people … (stay with me) … stopped … men from raping? I know it sounds bonkers to put the burden of responsibility on anyone but the victim in the case of sexual assault, but ABC wanted to see what happened when we do. As it turns out, it can be pretty effective.


In a popular ABC segment called “What Would You Do?”, two actors stage a scene that should send massive alarm bells in the head of any human-being: a woman who is visibly intoxicated, being dragged away by a man who’s clearly intending to rape her in his hotel room. Yes, I said rape, not sex. Look it up. If we want to stop minimizing rape, we need to stop calling it sex. I’m talking to you, Kansas City Star.


The first half of the video is pretty faith-restoring, because it shows women and men standing up against a man who appears to be intentionally taking her away so that he can rape her, although no one mentions the word rape, only that he’s “taking advantage of her.” The video takes a petrifying turn at 6:40 when two married men come in. The fact that they encourage the man to rape the woman is bad, but the fact that we later learn ( at the 8 minute mark) that they are both off-duty cops is horrifying. Take a look.


The rapist in this video is not only allowed to rape, he’s encouraged to do it. This is what happens when police officers, the media, or female journalists tell women to stop getting drunk/dressing like sluts to prevent sexual assault. It would be sensible advice if it didn’t reinforce the very structures that make sexual assault not only possible, but probable.


One in five women will be a victim of rape at some point in her life. Women who are between the ages of 16-24, are four times for likely to get raped than any other population group. It doesn’t keep happening because alcohol exists, it keeps happening because men who rape get to joke about it with off-duty cops. If the people who are supposed to be protecting women, buy into rape culture, it’s not surprising that rape remains the most unreported crime.


Even if alcohol was prohibited for every woman tomorrow, rape would still happen. Booze and short skirts don’t cause rape; rapists do. The more we focus on the victims, the less we focus on the rapists. Until perpetrators are held accountable, they will have no reason to change. Let’s make it harder to rape, not easier to blame the victim.


What do you think? Is there inherent harm in telling women not to get drunk? Let me know on Twitter and Facebook.



Elizabeth Plank
Elizabeth Plank

Viral Content & Social Justice Editor at PolicyMic. Masters degree from the London School of Economics. Behavioral science consultant by training and feminist crusader by passion.





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Two Off-Duty Cops Prove What Young Women Know About Who"s Really to Blame For Rape

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