Now I am sure that the whole ‘safe person’ category is damaged goods.
On those facts one can’t be sure Steve is a safe person and while you don’t need (never did, anyway)
any sort of justification
whatsoever to just turn down his offer, certainty that he is unsafe would be an unwarranted as long as he didn’t actually start following you over your objections after you departed.** Had he simply tried reasoning with you, perhaps asking once or twice more (which no doubt must have felt tedious on the receiving end), then it would be a jumped conclusion and ultimately injustice to the guy**,
completely separately from the problem of turning down his offer (which is not a problem to begin with because nobody disputes the fact that you have no obligation to accept and shouldn’t be guilt-tripped or pity-tripped into accepting, which would be toxic behaviour for Steve in most situations).
The situation doubtless is complicated and not easy on you, but rash judgments do injustice to persons judged and are not exactly morally neutral either. Especially when it concerns a Steve who is concerned for your safety and not his chances of finding a girlfriend (and for all we know Steve may already have one and be happy with her, just not happy to see women walk alone and be assaulted).
I suppose as much, but if Steve actually was concerned for your safety and not his chances of finding a girlfriend, then he would have failed at that goal for having dropping the matter after the first round of declining, especially something to the tune of ‘wouldn’t like to be a burden’, which is admittedly a bit of a ‘damned if you do, damned if you don’t’ sort of situation.
You could very well run into a Steve that insisted in this way (a minute or two of arguing about it) out of concern for your safety or some notion of gallantry, but afterward didn’t seek your trust because of how the situation made him feel. A very likely scenario with a more traditional sort of guy, actually. A more traditional sort of guy, as opposed to more of a bully sort of guy, would still probably understand the sentiment due not to being blind to the statistics etc. but wouldn’t appreciate being treated like a criminal himself especially in a place and company where his reputation were somewhat known.
That’s actually what I do in those sort of situations anywy. Boringly reiterate the hazard and the importance of avoiding it, suggest a cab rather than actual company much of the time, pay for it if the money seems to be a problem like the bastard that I am, make sure the situation is safe. And since this is safety management and not comfort management, my comfort is the last thing that matters and if I get insulted in the process then I don’t really mind at all, but it obviously isn’t going to make seek the company of the person who did it, now is it. And I certainly have a good laugh at the sorts of things people may have thought. Oh well, enough with this silliness.
Yes, you could. But precautions are different from judgments. I don’t exactly blame you, of course, but I can’t say I think it’s fair on people.
For the record, in those facts he has not demonstrated that he is likely not to accept a no but rather that the likelihood may be larger than with the average person perhaps. And the cab issue didn’t pop up, so chances are he got no chance to give it a thought (a lot of decent people have rather uninspiring intelligence).