What I said was ambiguous. What I am trying to say is that if a rape victim was dressing and behaving immodestly, people bring that up and that kind of comment is called blaming the victim.
I suggest that since people can’t bring it up in other contexts, it ends up never being discussed. They bring it up in the context of rape because altho most people have an intuitive feeling that it is wrong for young women to behave this way, they are not allowed to say so. When someone is raped, it becomes a type of cautionary tale.
I think your experiences are the polar opposites of most others posting here, when you say that the only socially acceptable time to bring up immodest dress is in the context of rape. Who exactly are these all-powerful censors who have “not allowed” people to discuss the topic of immodest dress or behavior? They certainly aren’t around on THIS forum last I checked.
Indeed, most posters are stating the exact opposite as you, that the topic of modesty is appropriate in certain contexts, but NOT in the highly sensitive topic of rape.
It is not done so much to blame the victim but to point out in a certain context that perhaps dressing and behaving provocatively is, in the pragmatic sense Amercians in general accept, not a good idea.
You are also assuming that it is an established fact, that “dressing and behaving provocatively” puts one at increased risk for rape. Not catcalls, not obscene comments, not even groping, which I would agree with, but that actual forced sexual intercourse against the will of another, a felony.
You also seem to be assuming that there are a whole bunch of potential male rapists out there who a “provocative” woman would run across, or perhaps even that the majority of men will actually be tempted to not just lust after the woman and want to have sex with her, but actually be tempted to FORCE her to have sex. This seems really insulting to the average man.
Maybe you also believe that rapists are motivated chiefly by lust, which I know is the “traditional” view of rape. Now, I won’t go as far as some other posters and state that lust is not involved at all. But even if this is the case, do you actually think rapists choose their targets solely based on the perception that the victim is the most physically attractive option, as opposed to the perception that the victim is a good target for crime due to, say, being physically disabled, or not paying attention to her surroundings, or fast asleep in bed, or drunk, or elderly? We are not talking about average men, we are talking about criminal rapists.
Or, if you do not actually believe that, you seem to think that it is legitimate to use the scare tactics of “if you dress that way, you’ll get raped” to convince women to change their behavior. Well, many people would disagree with that, just as I think most people would disagree with someone claiming “if you masturbate, you will go blind” to try to convince people not to commit that sin.
Maybe you still don’t understand why so many posters were offended by your comments, but those are reasons I can easily think of.