R
Rozellelily
Guest
I live in Australia and sadly,recently a girl was raped and killed when walking home through a park after her work/comedy gig.
For some reason I went on twitter (which is strange as I literally hardly hardly ever go on it) and came across people having a public discussion about it.
A lot of feminists were suggesting things like that the police were victim blaming by making statements warning women to have situational awareness when walking alone at night and that people shouldn’t blame the victim and women should be able to walk safety in the park.
This to me seemed like wrong reasoning so I said:
Me:
"noone should EVER blame her.We SHOULD be able to walk the streets at night/we should be able to reclaim our streets backs.In REALITY though,there are some very dangerous individuals out there,so women,don’t live in fear but I caution against walking alone at night."
Her(twitter responder 1):
Albert Einstein had said, one of the most important questions we can ever ask, is whether the universe is a friendly place.
Well, i kind of like mister Einstein and believe our world and people are mostly good.
Me:
They are but most good people don’t casually hang around at night in secluded parks.The 95% good might not be present to help when the 5% bad attempt an attack.
Her(twitter responder 2):
You don’t know me. Why do you presume to know my reality better than I do? Who are you to caution me? A woman just died in horrifying circumstances. If women choose to walk alone they may do so out of necessity, hardship, reason or defiance but they do not do so out of ignorance.
It’s common sense not to. So when we do it, there’s almost always a very good reason for it. Why are you aggressively telling us what we already know? As you say, it’s common sense. Do you think women don’t have common sense? Do you think that’s why women get murdered?
Me:
Actually,I’m a woman too.People & police caution simply because they care about each other.If you choose to walk alone at night because of defiance,be aware that defiance won’t save you from a rapist.Its a risk I won’t be taking.
Did I say something uncharitable?
If yes how should I have responded in a way that gets my point across but while still being charitable?
It’s hard for me to understand the reasoning behind these countless “twitter women” who equate police warning to be cautious as being victim blaming.
Me personally,if a police officer was to say to me be careful when walking in xyz park because a woman was raped there earlier I would be greatful that they warned me!
In no way would I confuse their concern with them blaming me.
They also seem to not understand that realistic warnings to be cautious/situational awareness are not exclusive of making other more important changes such as how men perceive women,better lighting in parks etc…
For some reason I went on twitter (which is strange as I literally hardly hardly ever go on it) and came across people having a public discussion about it.
A lot of feminists were suggesting things like that the police were victim blaming by making statements warning women to have situational awareness when walking alone at night and that people shouldn’t blame the victim and women should be able to walk safety in the park.
This to me seemed like wrong reasoning so I said:
Me:
"noone should EVER blame her.We SHOULD be able to walk the streets at night/we should be able to reclaim our streets backs.In REALITY though,there are some very dangerous individuals out there,so women,don’t live in fear but I caution against walking alone at night."
Her(twitter responder 1):
Albert Einstein had said, one of the most important questions we can ever ask, is whether the universe is a friendly place.
Well, i kind of like mister Einstein and believe our world and people are mostly good.
Me:
They are but most good people don’t casually hang around at night in secluded parks.The 95% good might not be present to help when the 5% bad attempt an attack.
Her(twitter responder 2):
You don’t know me. Why do you presume to know my reality better than I do? Who are you to caution me? A woman just died in horrifying circumstances. If women choose to walk alone they may do so out of necessity, hardship, reason or defiance but they do not do so out of ignorance.
It’s common sense not to. So when we do it, there’s almost always a very good reason for it. Why are you aggressively telling us what we already know? As you say, it’s common sense. Do you think women don’t have common sense? Do you think that’s why women get murdered?
Me:
Actually,I’m a woman too.People & police caution simply because they care about each other.If you choose to walk alone at night because of defiance,be aware that defiance won’t save you from a rapist.Its a risk I won’t be taking.
Did I say something uncharitable?
If yes how should I have responded in a way that gets my point across but while still being charitable?
It’s hard for me to understand the reasoning behind these countless “twitter women” who equate police warning to be cautious as being victim blaming.
Me personally,if a police officer was to say to me be careful when walking in xyz park because a woman was raped there earlier I would be greatful that they warned me!
In no way would I confuse their concern with them blaming me.
They also seem to not understand that realistic warnings to be cautious/situational awareness are not exclusive of making other more important changes such as how men perceive women,better lighting in parks etc…
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