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Another victim has come forward http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ized-James-Deen-camera-attack-wrap-party.html
I disagree with this. On Stoya's end: her career has an actress was already behind her, her future was never there in the first place, her future is her being a producer. No doors will close for her, au contraire, she is a woman, supported by feminists and the industry (who wants desperately to appear clean and respecting models), she has maintained an excellent reputation. The only risks for her is bad money investments.If it comes to light that this did not happen than Deen will be able to continue his life and continue his work, because porn is inherently male-centric, there will be no issue. Fuck, there's plenty of producers who will still work with him despite him being a potential rapist. Stoya, on the other hand, no matter what the outcome, will most likely have more limited job opportunities, etc. because she is a woman in a male-centric industry and unfortunately society is light years away from not chastising those of us who go public with this kind of shit. If everyone kept their mouth shut I 99% guarantee that more and more people would get away with rape and the numbers would rise, because no one would be talking about it.
No http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/SOO.PDFUnfortunately, even if everyone who has been raped publicly outed their rapist, statistics err on the side of that not preventing anyone from being raped in the future. Most rapists will most likely not go to prison (it's about 2 out of 100 for rapes reported to authorities that spend even a day in prison, once those 2 are out then they are free to rape again).
You're posting stats for alleged rapists that actually get arrested. She's talking about rapes that are reported to the police. Completely different pools.No http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/SOO.PDF
For 100 arrested for rape:
48 % of the people are convicted
36% are acquitted.
40% convicted for felony, with an average sentence of 14 years
6% end up with a misdemeanour.
Why count the average of prison time for people who have not been convicted? It's just manipulating data, it makes it seems that rapists are not being locked up when convicted.You're posting stats for alleged rapists that actually get arrested. She's talking about rapes that are reported to the police. Completely different pools.
you're missing the point...MOST rapists aren't convicted. smh.Why count the average of prison time for people who have not been convicted? It's just manipulating data, it makes it seems that rapists are not being locked up when convicted.
I disagree with this. On Stoya's end: her career has an actress was already behind her, her future was never there in the first place, her future is her being a producer. No doors will close for her, au contraire, she is a woman, supported by feminists and the industry (who wants desperately to appear clean and respecting models), she has maintained an excellent reputation. The only risks for her is bad money investments.
I'm not sure what you're asking, and your bold text definitely doesn't make it any clearer. You attempted to correct what she said, and you compared data that wasn't relevant to what she said. If you want to talk about the data you've posted, cool. Don't include her like she's said something you're disproving when you are not though.Why count the average of prison time for people who have not been convicted? It's just manipulating data, it makes it seems that rapists are not being locked up when convicted.
All right then, according to doj,Exactly. Most rapists are never even arrested to begin with let alone brought to trial to face those charges. Thats not manipulating data. That IS the data that was being discussed.
Except she has the power, she is the producer of her own porn, she is associated with other feminists producers like Joanna Angel iirc, she is the one making the decisions and writing the checks. Also she has heavy popular support with incredible Twitter presence, and reputation is the most important thing for good business. If anyone ever try to blacklist her, she will just need a Tweet to bring suspicion to their company. She is not a no-name 6months-into-the-biz pornstar.This is also completely naive if you think she will just walk along just fine and have no issues by outing herself as a victim when it comes to work and future opportunities. Either naive or ignorant. Either way educate yourself on it cause that's not how it works and exactly one of the many reasons women DO NOT speak out. Cause it does effect them both in personal relationships AND professional.
idk where the bold came from. That's still better than a number presented without source and which will discourage more victims to come forward.I'm not sure what you're asking, and your bold text definitely doesn't make it any clearer. You attempted to correct what she said, and you compared data that wasn't relevant to what she said. If you want to talk about the data you've posted, cool. Don't include her like she's said something you're disproving when you are not though.
Except she has the power, she is the producer of her own porn, she is associated with other feminists producers like Joanna Angel iirc, she is the one making the decisions and writing the checks. Also she has heavy popular support with incredible Twitter presence, and reputation is the most important thing for good business. If anyone ever try to blacklist her, she will just need a Tweet to bring suspicion to their company. She is not a no-name 6months-into-the-biz pornstar.
To be fair, it's not all that much better. Even if we accept that the often cited 2% figure is misleading, and put complete faith in the source you quoted, that's still 87 rapists out of every 100 escaping jail time. However you wish to frame that number, it's not at all comforting.37% of reported case are prosecuted, 0.37×0.46.×0.76 still make 13% of rapists in jail, this is far from 2% will spend time in jail.
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Rape Culture is very real. Just look @ this ad that Bloomingdale's (owned by Macy's) put in a holiday catalog last montha man walks in to a room with only 100 women and he is excited. a woman walks in to a room of only 100 men and she will be nervous. this is pretty true and this is why as a guy I am feminist and believe there is a rape culture. james is a rapist that is my belief. his victim MO is woman that challenges him for dominance and his Machismo..
It's interesting how numbers kind of feed into perspectives differently. I didn't find those numbers encouraging at all. I took them to mean that even in cases where a victim has enough evidence for police to arrest the suspect in hopes of convicting in a trial, it's a less than 50/50 shot. Seems like a lot of work for bad odds to me. Kudos to the victims who even try to go that route. It's obviously not an easy win.That's still better than a number presented without source and which will discourage more victims to come forward.
“In the last few years, there has been an unfortunate trend towards blaming “rape culture” for the extensive problem of sexual violence on campuses. While it is helpful to point out the systemic barriers to addressing the problem, it is important to not lose sight of a simple fact: Rape is caused not by cultural factors but by the conscious decisions, of a small percentage of the community, to commit a violent crime,” said the letter to the task force from RAINN’s president, Scott Berkowitz, and vice president for public policy, Rebecca O’Connor.
From RAINN.ORG
It reinforces statistics that the majority of rapes are committed by a small minority, meaning serial rapists/repeat offenders. Seeking criminal justice becomes of vital importance to prevent repeat offenses, and makes it easier for perpetrators to serve jail time.
America according to RAINN and the DOJ the rate of rape has decreased by more than half since 1993. Calling America a rape culture demeans women living in places like Afghanistan (being arrested for being raped,murdered for men's honor, being forced into unwanted marriages etc = rape culture)
If anyone is interested This is a moving speech by a woman with experience and statistical facts. She points out the inaccuracy in studies that pertain to rape while calling to improve them, the danger terms like "rape culture" cause for victims, and the importance in having constructive conversations that lead to prosecution of rapists.
Calling America a rape culture demeans women living in places like Afghanistan (being arrested for being raped,murdered for men's honor, being forced into unwanted marriages etc = rape culture)
Same response. Recognizing we live in a rape culture doesnt make the problem worse. Its still here whether we name it, acknowledge it, or pretend it doesnt exist. It's there. What makes it worse is ignoring it's there and not taking steps to stop it. And it starts with exactly what Jicky is doing. Teaching the next gen of children what is and is not okay to do to someone else. I feel like that along with not judging victims like we do and reporting crimes when we can and are able to are some of the things we can do to help.
Its not a self fulfilling prophecy when you recognize something exists and name it. Self fulfilling prophecy happens when you know it's there and deny it or do nothing about it. You can ignore the elephant in the corner all you want but it's still there and whether you look at it or not it's still gonna be there. What you do about rape though matters and continuing on like we are in society about it is rape culture. It's not like it's making the problem worse, it's just acknowledging there is one.