charity wrote:Moniker wrote:
Actually Charity, if a woman is incapacitated and someone had sex with her that is rape. That is NOT a false rape charge. I was clearly illustrating times when consent was not available to women. I never spoke of women that at first gave consent and later retracted consent. YOU were the one to do that! YOU were the one to first bring up false rape charges with this quote (my "story time" started after yours):
Oops. I have to make a small caveat on that. I had a student in one of my human sexuality classes come in to talk to me in my office after the topic of rape was discussed in class. She said, "I think maybe I was raped once. There was this guy and we were just kind of fooling around. I thought he really liked me, but he had another girl friend. If I had known he had a girl friend, I never would have done that. So I think I was raped."
You then go on to insinuate something about women that have multiple sex partners -- are you saying they are raped? I say they are not and yet I am wondering since you label them mentally ill you believe these young woman are raped? How very, very confusing!
Charity, none of my scenarios are in anyway false rape charges. You are the one that brings that in. Please quote me ONCE where I mention a false rape charge, unless of course you consider women that are not able to give consent as people that were not really raped.
Moniker, it might help you if you read one paragraph at a time. You are really confused about what I said.
Please settle down and listen. If a woman is intoxicated to the point of unconsciousness, then she falls into the medically compromised category. No consent is possible. If she is drunk, but conscious, she is still capable of making a decision. If a person gets drunk and drives, they aren't let off the hook because they couldn't make a good decision not to drive. As long as a woman is conscious, if she aquieses to sex, that isn't rape. Got it?
Then another idea: Since you believe that mentally challenged people cannot give consent, and are therefore raped, how is that different from a neurotic woman who has multiple sex partners? Can a really neurotic person give consent? And I answered you specifically that it wasn't the fact of having muiltiple sex partners, but the reason WHY.
Charity, I also said that if the woman did NOT consent she was raped. I never said that if she did consent that she was still raped. Never. I said this, and I've bolded the consent part:
What do you mean by that? I have no idea what you are attempting to say. If a woman is unsure if she was raped (she was intoxicated --as is indicated in the stats for some cases) and yet did not give consent she was still raped. It matters not what she defines it as. Of course if she is traumatized by the experience it matters what she thinks as for her healing process and ability to cope with the assault. Yet, no matter how she is traumatized by the experience, or thinks of the experience, it does not change the fact that if she was sexually assaulted without consent she was raped -- it's that simple.
This was in direct reply to you talking about how women, themselves, define rape. Do you get that I ALWAYS recognized that consent was the determining factor as well as understanding that a woman does not define the rape herself as to whether or not she was raped. It was YOU that said a woman is not raped if she doesn't consider herself raped. GET IT?
Charity, plenty of people are neurotic and last time I checked that encompasses a wide range of personality disorders that include depression -- it does not effect rational thought, as far as I was aware (and I just googled it and confirmed my initial thoughts on that). So, yes, a neurotic person can give consent for sex.
I would still like to see a study that says that women that are abandoned by their fathers that then go on to have multiple sex partners are doing so because of neurosis -- and how this is rape. Thanks.