padaviya:

TRIGGER WARNING:

The following includes descriptions, photos, and video that may serve as a trigger for victims of sexual violence.
Please be advised. 

Someone asked me today, “What is ‘rape culture’ anyway? I’m tired of hearing about it.”

Yeah, I hear ya. I’m tired of talking about it. But I’m going to keep talking about it because people like you keep asking that question.

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and though there are dozens of witnesses, no one says, “Stop.”

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and though there are dozens of witnesses, they can’t get anyone to come forward.

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and adults are informed of it, but no consequences are doled out because the boys “said nothing happened.”

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and we later find out that their coaches were “joking about it” and “took care of it.” 

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and even though there is documentation of the coaching staff sweeping it under the rug, they get to keep their jobs.

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and one of the coaches involved in the cover-up threatens a reporter - saying, “You’re going to get yours. And if you don’t get yours, somebody close to you will.” – but the town is more worried about keeping their coaching talent than his integrity.

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, take pictures of the process, and it becomes a source of ridicule along social networks, whitewashing the crime with hashtags.

rapeinstagram

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and then joke about it on video – saying, ““She is so raped,” “They raped her quicker than Mike Tyson!”, “They raped her more than the Duke lacrosse team!”, and she was “deader than Trayvon Martin.” – while everyone else laughs.

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and the town is more concerned with preserving their football program than the fact that their children are attacking others without remorse.

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and the mainstream media laments the fact that their “promising futures” have been dashed by their crimes – as though THEY are the victims.

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and even though she’s been through enough, the 16 year old victim’s name is shared on national television.

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, but because it happens at a party where both sexes were drinking, complete strangers on the internet argue ferociously that she is to blame for being attacked.

Click to embiggen. Warning: it will make you sick.

Click to zoom. Warning: it will make you sick.

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and members of the community issue death threats against the victim.

death threats

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and it is documented across social media channels, and the media informs us that the takeaway is to be more careful about what we post to social media.

Rape culture is when a group of athletes rape a young girl, and when a cover-up is exposed by a group of hackers, we call them “terrorists” and the culpable “victims.” 

Yeah, I’m talking about Steubenville. Tired of hearing about it? Ok, let’s talk about something else.

Rape culture is when the Steubenville is far from the first instance of athletic clubs covering up sexual violence allegations. See: Sandusky, Michigan State 2010, Arizona State 2008, University of Colarado 2006, University of Iowa 2008, Lincoln High School 2012, University of Montana 2012, Marquette 2011, plus this research (and there’s more to find if you dig)

Rape culture is when universities across the country do not report rape to the police, but handle the matter via “honor boards” - ultimately shielding perpetrators from criminal consequences.

Rape culture is when universities threaten to expel a student for speaking out about her rape (without ever identifying her attacker) because it’s harassment to talk about her suffering.

Rape culture is when a comedian has a long history of making jokes about rape and sexual assault, is defended from backlash by the comic community, and doesn’t lose his fan base.

Rape culture is when a journalist says this ….

I think that the entire conversation is wrong. I don’t want anybody to be telling women anything. I don’t want men to be telling me what to wear and how to act, not to drink. And I don’t, honestly, want you to tell me that I needed a gun in order to prevent my rape. In my case, don’t tell me if I’d only had a gun, I wouldn’t have been raped. Don’t put it on me to prevent the rape.

… and the public responds with this….

rape

Rape culture is when politicians don’t understand how requiring a transvaginal ultrasound of a rape victim seeking an abortion is like raping her all over again.

Rape culture is when political candidates say that God sometimes intends rape, and that some girls just “rape easy,” and that “legitimate rape” does not result in pregnancy… and do not lose the backing of their party or party leaders.

Rape culture is when a speaker at a political convention makes a rape joke about a sexual violence victim advocate, and he brings the house down with laughter.

Rape culture is when we spend all our time telling women to avoid being raped by modifying their behavior, inferring blame back onto the victim.

Rape culture is when stunning displays of privilege and willful ignorance combine to create this:

voice for MEN

and this:

no rape culture

Rape culture is when a woman speaks out about rape culture, and gets subjected to this.

Rape culture is when we see ads like these on a far too frequent basis:

belvedere ad rape jumpgrossfriendzonedrinkdominos

Rape culture is when you’re tired of hearing about “rape culture” because it makes you uncomfortable, as your attempt to silence discourse on the subject means we never raise enough awareness to combat it – and that’s part of why it sticks around.

So yeah, I’m sorry you’re tired of hearing about it. But I wouldn’t expect us to shut up anytime soon. Nor should we.

UPDATE: I will no longer be publishing comments which caveat the discussion of rape culture with false rape accusation concerns. There is a reason for this, which you can read here.

(via catholicschoolprincess)

Judy Chicago - Dinner Party
Why is rape no longer a dirty word?

Rape titles the act and nothing else, and should only be used in the case of addressing the monstrosity that is happening to men, women and children everyday, yet people are still using it in so many differing contexts. 

It’s social networking, it’s ‘fraping’; it’s continual gratification to those who use and abuse the word, and each time they do so they are targeting those who have been raped.

The fact is people are uneducated towards what it truly is. It’s not a ‘struggle snuggle’ or ‘she was asking for it,’ no, it’s rape. It’s brutal and cruel and also it’s incredibly triggering to those who have been raped.

70% of women will be sexually assulted in their lifetime, but from the continual biased coverage of the East, we believe rape could only ever happen in those supposed rape-glorifying, sexist cultures. But it’s not. Rape can happen to anyone, because rapists believe that they can get away with it, and they continually do. 

70% of women. It could be your neighbour, the girl you see occasionally at school, that distant friend on Facebook, or god forbid your sister, mother, and possibly you. It could be anyone, but in most cases you’d never know, because from all that ‘fraping’ and ‘yawn raping’ you spout out in supposed fun, you’re making them feel insignificant, anxious and sadly accountable for an act they had forced upon them. 

You cannot ask for rape.  

The media, the justice and education systems; they all pacify it. They proclaim that she asked for it, that those men do not deserve to have their chances ruined because she was too drunk to say no. 

I’m not sure means No. 

Not now means No. 

Silence means No.

No does not mean ‘convince me’.

No means No.

Just as wearing a pair of high-heels, a short skirt, or even just showing your hair or looking in anyway feminine or non-feminine or anything clothing of your choosing is not asking for it. 

Having a few drinks, or walking home alone, or even having had sex before is not asking for it. 

Women are not meat, but sickeningly some men act like sharks.

Has it just become so intrinsically engrained in our society that anything goes? That crimes that happen to the individual can be brushed off and forgotten? Is it just because it doesn’t happen to you does it mean that it doesn’t matter, are we really all so selfish. 

Because it’s now engrained in us all to accept it and move on, that a forced kiss or a wayward glance is nothing to worry about. As women we’re expected to smile and demurely wave off cat calls and whistles and accept them as compliment and not an act of reducing us to just sexual objects. 

We’re taught as we grow up now that when a boy pulls your pigtails, it’s a sign that they like you. From a young age physical violence from boys is enforced as a sign of affection. No young girl should have to hear the phrase “boys will be boys” as an excuse as to why she is being harassed or bullied. And yet we grow up learning to shrug off physical violence from men as nothing, and they are in turn continually enforced that masculinity comes from degrading women and exerting their force upon them. 

And that’s exactly what I want to say in my illustrations. I believe that is incredibly important that people are reeducated, not through blunt force trauma or provocative extremist protesting, but through self-realisation. We have been brought up in a society that pacifies such a brutality, but we need to not just create awareness, but pure reeducation. It the human condition to defend our own beliefs to a point of self-destruction. I want quite simply to shock people by themselves. I want people to feel wrong about using the word rape, or for passively supporting a rapist. 

We live in a society where if you want to be heard you have to shout louder than the rest and it shouldn’t be that way. 

Rape is not a dirty word. It’s a brutal and despicable one. It’s a word for an act that shouldn’t exist. 

Louise Bourgeois, Femme Maison, 1947.
Women perform 66% of the world’s work, but receive only 11% of the world’s income, and own only 1% of the world’s land.
Women make up 66% of the world’s illiterate adults.
Women head 83% of single-parent families. The number of families nurtured by women alone doubled from 1970 to 1995 (from 5.6 million to 12.2 million).
Women account for 55% of all college students, but even when women have equal years of education it does not translate into economic opportunities or political power.
There are six million more women than men in the world.
Two-thirds of the world’s children who receive less than four years of education are girls. Girls represent nearly 60% of the children not in school.
Parents in countries such as China and India sometimes use sex determination tests to find out if their fetus is a girl. Of 8,000 fetuses aborted at a Bombay clinic, 7,999 were female.
Wars today affect civilians most, since they are civil wars, guerrilla actions and ethnic disputes over territory or government. 3 out of 4 fatalities of war are women and children.
Rape is consciously used as a tool of genocide and weapon of war. Tens of thousands of women and girls have been subjected to rape and other sexual violence since the crisis erupted in Darfur in 2003. There is no evidence of anyone being convicted in Darfur for these atrocities.
About 75% of the refugees and internally displaced in the world are women who have lost their families and their homes.
Gender-based violence kills one in three women across the world and is the biggest cause of injury and death to women worldwide, causing more deaths and disability among women aged 15 to 44 than cancer, malaria, traffic accident, and war.
[source]
  • Women perform 66% of the world’s work, but receive only 11% of the world’s income, and own only 1% of the world’s land.
  • Women make up 66% of the world’s illiterate adults.
  • Women head 83% of single-parent families. The number of families nurtured by women alone doubled from 1970 to 1995 (from 5.6 million to 12.2 million).
  • Women account for 55% of all college students, but even when women have equal years of education it does not translate into economic opportunities or political power.
  • There are six million more women than men in the world.
  • Two-thirds of the world’s children who receive less than four years of education are girls. Girls represent nearly 60% of the children not in school.
  • Parents in countries such as China and India sometimes use sex determination tests to find out if their fetus is a girl. Of 8,000 fetuses aborted at a Bombay clinic, 7,999 were female.
  • Wars today affect civilians most, since they are civil wars, guerrilla actions and ethnic disputes over territory or government. 3 out of 4 fatalities of war are women and children.
  • Rape is consciously used as a tool of genocide and weapon of war. Tens of thousands of women and girls have been subjected to rape and other sexual violence since the crisis erupted in Darfur in 2003. There is no evidence of anyone being convicted in Darfur for these atrocities.
  • About 75% of the refugees and internally displaced in the world are women who have lost their families and their homes.
  • Gender-based violence kills one in three women across the world and is the biggest cause of injury and death to women worldwide, causing more deaths and disability among women aged 15 to 44 than cancer, malaria, traffic accident, and war.

[source]

(Source: stfuconservatives, via yougofemale)

Poppy Picker by Orly Cogan
17-year-old Indian girl who was gang-raped killed herself today after police pressured her to drop the case and marry one of her attackers

“A survivor of rape is a survivor, not a criminal, and I don’t care if a woman was running down 5th Avenue in her birthday suit singing, “I Touch Myself” — if she didn’t want to have sex with someone, then it’s rape and the rapist’s fault, period!”

Couldn’t have said it better.

(Source: urbanthistle, via feminspire)