While insisting that it shouldn’t be alarming for women to be approached by strangers, or for men to continue to pursue after being told no, and that women are wrong for being scared in these situations…when, as a 5’2, 125 lbs, woman should I be concerned? Virtually every man I encounter is bigger than me, and even the very few who aren’t are still likely stronger.
Even a man a couple inches shorter is likely to have a better respiratory system than I do and is quite likely to have been in more fights and/or more recently, especially any random street thug. Somehow, I don’t really see danger all around me. Even if I did, I would simply grab something for protection rather than seeing everybody around me as a criminal until proven otherwise.
I have absolutely no way of knowing who means me harm, but anyone could. All I can do is judge behavior. If you’re trying to flirt at an inappropriate time or place, or saying gross, inappropriate things, I can’t assume you have proper boundaries when it comes to my physical safety.
Oh yes, and if I voted Trump you could assume I was an anti-Semite by the some logic. The very suggestion is insulting, and the moment you made it any prospect of friendship, acquaintanceship or decent working relationship of any sort would be decidedly over.
It takes about 20 years of exposure to constant fear rhetoric and one’s own willing collaboration with it to be able to conclude, from ill-chosen time for something like a flirty comment, that one’s fellow human being would be willing to commit sexual assault or plain physical assault/battery.
Likewise, if you have problems with the word ‘no’. If you act like someone with no regard limits, that’s how you’ll be treated. You can’t tell women not to be afraid of this behavior, because it is objectively scary.
Rather, what you’re saying is an objective hyperbole. If you want to live in fear, that’s your choice, not mine.
And the suggestion that someone who says ‘still not interested in having a date?’ is somehow close to a rapist, mentally or otherwise, is one of the most insulting, uncharitable and completely unjust and unwarranted things one could say. Again, you’re inflicting that mindset on yourself, it’s not of my doing, nor anyone else’s.
I’m really sick of hearing that men are all treated as rapists.
Perhaps because there’s a good reason for it to bother you. Some such thing as conscience, for example.
Taking precautions against crime is never seen as a bad thing, until it’s rape.
Taking precautions is one thing, theft, or battery, or especially rape, but making sweeping conclusions about individual people and judging them, that’s something completely different. And slander or libel is actually still a crime too in many jurisdictions in the world.
No one is offended by locked doors, clubs on car steering wheels, shredding personal documents before throwing them away, or looking over your shoulder before punching in your pin.
And for good reason. Nobody who waits until you fishing passing by or turning away calls you a probable rapist in your face. Simply walking away or not engaging in conversation would be similar. But thinking of a man as a probable rapist simply because he told you a compliment you didn’t particularly appreciate at a timing you didn’t find the most fitting, that’s rash judgment. It’s also slander when it is actually said out loud.
No one is entitled to niceties from anyone
Wrong. Charity and even justice requires if not some basic politeness (it already does), then at least not going about insulting random people, or specific people with random suggestions, for that matter.
at the expense of that person’s safety or security.
Giving someone very obvious criminal treatment on a theoretical notion of some very tentative remote danger is excessive. It no longer is protection of one’s own safety. It’s an obsession that leads one to mistreat others, treat them uncharitably and to them injustice.
I’m totally the girl who crosses the road if I’m walking at night and someone is up ahead. No apologies for that.
Nobody talked about having to apologize for that. But if you can’t see the difference between crossing the road at night and saying the things you’ve just said (and felt fully justified in saying), then I can’t help you.
Oddly enough, we agree. I am currently helping several female relatives to obtain their ccw permits. Apparently they are worried about the influx of Islamic 'refugees " after what happened in Europe. Sure, they are not all terrorist fanatics who want Sharia Law and rape any woman dressed “inappropriately” but it only takes one to ruin your day.
Which is good enough for concealed carry (like any reason is needed) but not good enough for announcing to people you’ve got a gun and are ready to use it the moment you start not liking something about their face or voice or whatever.