Originally posted by FlyattractorNobody gets anesthetized in the field 😆 .
[b]Its not actually "TALKING TO THEM" when they are anesthetized.You dirty rapist you.
Oh and this story....
NYT Guy , Thomas Friedman compares Russian Face Book Meddlig to Pearl Harbor.
Truly Leftists are horrible, HORRIBLE People. [/B]
Originally posted by MythLord
I'm sorry, but if 97% of accused rapists get to roam free, then there's a serious problem, and it's not neccessarily in the justice system as it is in the social views of a lot of law-enforcers.
Rape cases have been dismissed for unfounded reasons.
And "eroding the due process" is hardly what I had in mind; my point is Kurk goes beserk at the thought of a guy getting called a rapist, and still not even getting a slap on the wrist(statistically), but ignores the much, much larger problem of women actually constantly being sexually abused.Well, there's a lot of reasons, but statistics include the most common is:
- fear of the justice system not acting accordingly
- fear of reprisal
- fear the issue is "not great/relevant enough"(despite repeated physical and sexual abuse)
Well it comes down to this Myth (and I'm sorry that your opinion of me will be drastically lowered after):
- I'm a man. I don't give a rat's ass about the issue of women statistically being more abused than men and the majority of cases going unreported. I care about myself and potential risks associated with hooking up with women on the short-term in today's environment. That's not the same as me not acknowledging the issue though; which I do.
- I do care about the majority of actual rapists walking free but not anymore than I would care for any other petty criminal doing so.
So why do the majority of cases go unreported? Could it have something to do with the majority of rape cases also being committed by close friends, acquaintances, family members, etc as your sources say? After all, isn't there a reason why a woman would be less likely to report say their extended family member than a complete stranger they've never met before? Maybe they didn't deem the potential consequences of a friend's prosecution to be worth the negative effects on the social relationship between herself and those close to the perpetrator.
Isn't this a social problem then? What control does the legal system have over women choosing not to report these crimes? Ultimately it's their problem for choosing not to, not mine.