Saturday, June 23, 2012

tw: discussion of rape and sexual assault

zed-azrael:

zed-azrael:

The conversation above took place on the wall of the facebook group, Questioning Slutwalk, which describes itself as a page focussed on analysing the motives and impacts of the Slutwalk Campaign.  Slutwalk, which originated in Toronto, Canada, is a worldwide civilian-run campaign that targets rape culture and asserts that a person’s dress, occupation, state of intoxication, etc. never makes sex without consent permissible.  Please note that this statement is not exclusive to the sexual assault of women by men — it covers the whole spectrum of genders because the issue here is not the gender of the victim: the bottom line is simply that rape is wrong and that we live in a rape culture that affects everyone regardless of gender.

However, instead of creating an open dialogue on the topic it claims to be centred on, the administrator and the group members of Questioning Slutwalk only post articles and commentary of an unforgivable misogynist, rape-apologist, and slut shaming ideology.  Questioning Slutwalk has created a rhetoric that (inaccurately) paints the Slutwalk Campaign as a movement that encourages and perpetuates the sexual abuse of men.  

Group members outright reject the reasoned opinions of others who try to explain the purpose of Slutwalk, proclaiming them to be female supremacists, misandrists, rape apologists, and deniers of male rape by women.  The group members despise women and think little of the notion of female consent, while simultaneously complaining about the oppression of men by women, rape culture as a creation of female supremacists, and the sexual objectification and abuse of men by women.

Now, I will never deny that men get sexually assaulted and raped by women.  It is a true piece of information and it is horrific.  It is also just as true and horrific a fact as the reality of the sexual assaults and rapes of women by men, or of men by men, or of any other imaginable gender combination.  I will never say that the sexual assault of men is not a huge problem; it is extremely underreported and it is traumatising to the victims. That said, I have a serious issue with the way this group conducts itself.  The administrator states that the page is supposed to be a safe place for male survivors, but the administrator completely disregards the hostility directed at both women and female survivors (genders that are outside of the binary are completely unaddressed).  Male survivors should and need to have a support group, but this is not the group they need.  This group simultaneously accuses the entire female population of being predators and attacks female survivors, viciously stating that they deserve sexual assault because of their actions, dress, etc.

This is completely unacceptable.

One cannot claim that the sexual assaults suffered by one specific group is any more traumatic or serious than another’s.  While the scale may vary, rape is still rape, and it is a horrible crime that should never be treated with such disrespect.

EDIT:  As of this morning, the conversation above has been deleted from Questioning Slutwalk’s page, which, according to Questioning Questioning Slutwalk, is a common occurrence.  Additionally, Chandrapal S Bhasker has blocked Sara and left another charming post.

 

Tuesday, June 12, 2012
timecodereading:

“I didn’t come from your rib, you came from my uterus”
Slutwalk São Paulo, 26 May 2012 (see gallery at the link, article in Portuguese)

timecodereading:

“I didn’t come from your rib, you came from my uterus”

Slutwalk São Paulo, 26 May 2012 (see gallery at the link, article in Portuguese)

Wednesday, October 19, 2011
[n*****] belongs to some of us, but it does not belong to me. It has 250 years of the whip in it, and the slaughter of children, and the destruction of families, and the constant assault on an entire people’s very humanity.

Emily Hauser, “John Lennon, Rick Perry, and words that are not ours” (via livingartist)

“The minute I saw the picture in the context of the Twitter conversation, I also saw the problem of the song, the problem the appropriation of that word by a white man, and the problem of this young woman appropriating it more. But over at Racialious, I was frankly taken aback by this:

Now, my question is why did it take a Black woman organizer to ask her to take it down. What about ALL of the White women captured in this photograph. They didn’t find this sign offensive?

Taken aback because I could have very easily been one of the white women standing there, doing nothing. Even in the midst of the Week of N****rhead, I’m pretty sure it wouldn’t have crossed my mind — in no small part because it never did before. Not until other people brought it up on Twitter.”

(via darkjez)

Monday, October 17, 2011
ddeennaaa:

Corey at SlutWalkNYC and the sign that we made (right); we were able to catch a shot with our favorite protester. I think these were the two best signs of the whole day.

ddeennaaa:

Corey at SlutWalkNYC and the sign that we made (right); we were able to catch a shot with our favorite protester. I think these were the two best signs of the whole day.

(Source: reason596)

Sunday, October 16, 2011

(Source: queencait)

Monday, October 3, 2011
kneecapdisplay:

[tw: mention of rape]
if this is you, let me know. i’ll credit your tumblr.

kneecapdisplay:

[tw: mention of rape]

if this is you, let me know. i’ll credit your tumblr.

Friday, September 30, 2011 Saturday, September 17, 2011 Friday, September 9, 2011