Active Users:1156 Time:22/11/2024 07:49:11 PM
It's worth reading the BBC and Telegraph articles your article links to. Legolas Send a noteboard - 03/03/2015 06:23:32 PM

This and this do put things in perspective a bit more, and makes Ms Saunders sound a lot more reasonable. And let's be serious - we are nowhere near the point where we can say that most rapes are successfully prosecuted and that innocents being unjustly accused of rape is a bigger issue than real rapists getting away with it. Or, to quote from the Telegraph article:

Around 85,000 women per year are victims of rape in the UK, of whom 90 per cent know the perpetrator.
The most recent figures showed that just 15,670 women reported rapes to the police, often because they thought it would be impossible to prove the offence, or because they did not have any confidence in the police’s ability to help them, with only 1,070 convictions resulting from the 2,910 cases that got to court.

View original postI found this article interesting simply for how blunt he is about the issue. Being too drunk to realize what is going on is rape, being to drunk too make good decisions is a bad decision you have to live with. The really bad part is that warning girls to not go out and get stumbling drunk and to only party with friends you can trust has gone from simple common sense to victim blaming. The sad truth is there were always be men looking for young drunk women to have sex with and trying to equate that to guys who drag girls into vans or even to the pathetic fucks who refuse to stop when they are told no is doomed to fail. To many men have had sex with drunk women and they will reject being labeled rapist. There will even be some women out there who got drunk and slept with someone they shouldn't have who will object to being labeled rape victims.

I think the main problem with your article is that he talks constantly about situations where both parties involved are drunk. The police guidelines in question, especially if you look at them in context, are more concerned with cases like what you describe, men who aren't drunk, or much less drunk anyway, who purposefully look for drunk girls who are more likely to consent, or in any case not refuse. Which honestly is a much less grey area. It's not so much about drunk sex as it is about soberly taking advantage of drunk girls.

No doubt there are cases of accused rape where both parties were drunk out of their skulls, and in such cases I do think that the alleged rapist's own drunkenness should to some extent shield him from the accusation of not having obtained proper consent. But those are just a drop in the bucket next to all the cases of real rape - most of them not related to alcohol I'm sure - which continue to go unreported, or which are reported but still end with the rapist walking free. Nobody except tabloid journalists is talking about absurd scenarios where men need a woman's signature on a contract before engaging in sex - this is about more successfully increasing the conviction rate of all those rape cases that fail or aren't even started at all now.

This message last edited by Legolas on 03/03/2015 at 06:23:54 PM
Reply to message
Drunk Sex - 03/03/2015 03:32:30 PM 1217 Views
Shouldn't the manner of getting hammered factor in ? - 03/03/2015 05:31:48 PM 765 Views
It's worth reading the BBC and Telegraph articles your article links to. - 03/03/2015 06:23:32 PM 889 Views
I am more interested in the trend in general and not this specific law - 03/03/2015 07:10:20 PM 706 Views
A lot of those studies are based on adjusting the goalposts for rape - 04/03/2015 12:58:06 AM 558 Views
[citation needed] - 04/03/2015 10:13:38 PM 531 Views
They'd better enforce it equally *NM* - 03/03/2015 06:28:38 PM 266 Views
Just like hate crime is enforced equally? *NM* - 03/03/2015 07:10:45 PM 278 Views
Exactly. I don't have high hopes *NM* - 03/03/2015 09:10:40 PM 369 Views
it's pretty simple actually: don't take advantage of someone who isn't in their right state of mind - 03/03/2015 11:21:54 PM 499 Views
But they are making it complicated - 04/03/2015 12:12:27 AM 546 Views
no, it's actually turning the burden of proof onto the accused as it should be - 04/03/2015 10:09:59 PM 696 Views
Re: no, it's actually turning the burden of proof onto the accused as it should be - 04/03/2015 11:29:00 PM 569 Views
Yes - 05/03/2015 09:21:41 PM 739 Views
Why are women having sex the only people immune from bad decisions while intoxicate? - 04/03/2015 03:59:31 PM 566 Views
who are you to decide what is rape and what is not? - 04/03/2015 09:55:35 PM 613 Views
The only rational one the in this conversation by all appearances. - 05/03/2015 02:39:56 AM 597 Views
So you're guilty until proven innocent?? - 06/03/2015 01:52:47 AM 796 Views
They get around all that proof stuff by keeping it out of the courts - 09/03/2015 04:34:21 PM 523 Views
And that shit is happening ALL THE TIME. - 09/03/2015 04:57:53 PM 616 Views
i think you may be pushing your personal bias on the author. - 06/03/2015 06:42:15 PM 715 Views

Reply to Message