While there is great contest
between the government and parents in the province of Ontario over the newly
proposed sex education curriculum, in Halifax Nova Scotia, the young man who
texted a photo that showed him penetrating a 15 year-old girl while she vomited
won’t see any jail time. He pleaded
guilty and received 12 months’ probation to this heinous crime. The boy in this photo giving a thumbs up sign
obviously displayed no respect for the young girl he was abusing.
You can read Ms. Beaumont’s
article here: http://www.vice.com/en_ca/read/no-jail-time-for-man-who-texted-photo-of-himself-penetrating-rehtaeh-parsons-while-she-vomited-273?utm_source=vicefbca
Additionally, the past
months contained a great deal of controversy in the media about 13 male dentistry students at Dalhousie
University posting vile comments that degraded their female dentistry peers.
Comments about how they were going to “sexually assault women until they’re
unconscious”…among other things.
Anne Kingston of MacLeans
recently reported comments made by columnist Margaret Wente of the Globe and
Mail which I believe to be unrealistic, and very dismissive of the abuse of
women that is taking place.
“Wente acknowledges the students’ comments were
“serious” and “cannot be condoned,” then waves them off as “asinine locker room
jokes,” a “boys will be boys” comparison….”
Facebook posts “are not rape,” Wente writes,
which is true. Nor are they “in the same universe as rape,” she writes, which
is false. Rape culture isn’t rape itself, but rather, the ecosystem that allows
it to be normalized. Rendering a woman unconscious to have sex with her is a
textbook definition of rape, and a sizeable group of men joking about it
together suggests a thriving rape culture.”
You can read Ms. Kingston’s article here: http://www.macleans.ca/society/thank-you-margaret-wente-for-exposing-rape-culture/
Not only do Ms. Wente’s comments minimize what rape
culture is in today’s society, her comments diminish the seriousness and
general attitude displayed by some men, both minors and young adults, toward
women.
Are we, as a society, so accepting that we all
sit back while we wait for others to create change? I am not seeing enough outrage in both of
these situations?
The end results in both Nova Scotia situations
sends a clear message. The lack of
consequences attached only lets some young boys know that they can abuse a
young girl and get away with it, whether pleading guilty or not. And grown men in a university setting can
target and threaten their female peers who are just supposed to suck it up.
We haven’t progressed at all as a society when it
comes to rape culture, and every female young or old should be taking a
stand. Power and control is not
acceptable.
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