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Originally Posted by 2pacalypse
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This is going to be the topic until it gets a serious reply. Come on guys, think about it I know you have an opinion.
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Well if you insist ...
Quote:
Originally Posted by JurisDictum
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Too me, it seems overblown to call the entire USA a rape culture. Most people agree with me. There might be pockets of rape culture, like prison, parts of the catholic church, and certain sports sub-cultures; but rape isn't generally accepted by the public, or denied to be a problem. Not in 2015 at any rate. Maybe its because I live in Oregon, where you become a registered sex offender and get up to 5 years for grabbing someones ass uninvited. I don't really know -- but one thing is for sure, feminist scholars have not really provided good empirical data to support the claim.
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Obviously different sub-cultures are different, but there's a real pan-American trend. Consider this survey that was just done at the University of North Dakota:
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According to the survey, which analyzed responses from 73 men in college, 31.7 percent of participants said they would act on “intentions to force a woman to sexual intercourse” if they were confident they could get away with it. When asked whether they would act on “intentions to rape a woman” with the same assurances they wouldn’t face consequences, just 13.6 percent of participants agreed….“The No. 1 point is there are people that will say they would force a woman to have sex but would deny they would rape a woman,” Sarah R. Edwards, an assistant professor of counseling psychology at the University of North Dakota and the lead researcher for the study, told Newsweek.
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Granted that's just college students from one college, but we're talking about a third of them! And this isn't some old survey from the 50's, it just happened!
It's hard to argue there's not
some "rape culture" in America when a third of a college student body are ok with rape when if they don't get caught.
Quote:
Originally Posted by JurisDictum
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There is never going to be zero rape. Ever. There will never be zero murder either. Men will always have to worry about getting their ass kicked by stronger men (or groups of men) as well. All this sucks, but is really beside the point.
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K ...
Quote:
Originally Posted by JurisDictum
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As for whole professions being discriminated against, there's something to it -- but its overstated. The main reason engineers get paid more than teachers is because engineering is less popular. If far less people were willing to work as teachers for the current pay offered, their salaries would go up. Women choose not to go into engineering -- despite being actively being pressured by academic and career advisors. It's not as if there's a guy on top of a building twisting his mustache and figuring out ways to pay women less. It's the same with computer science. There are simply less women interested than men. Its not the market or the business being sexist. The reason for women being less inclined to computer science (at least in modern times), has to do with social pressure outside of school and potential employers. Girls friends, family, etc. But people prefer to blame some dark figure in a board room instead.
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You may remember that earlier in the thread I quoted
this wikipedia page:
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Using Current Population Survey (CPS) data for 1979 and 1995 and controlling for education, experience, personal characteristics, parental status, city and region, occupation, industry, government employment, and part-time status, Yale University economics professor Joseph G. Altonji and the United States Secretary of Commerce Rebecca M. Blank found that only about 27% of the gender wage gap in each year is explained by differences in such characteristics.
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That means it's not about teachers vs. engineers, because when the study controlled for a whole slew of factors,
including occupation, they found that something
other than all those factors accounted for 73% of the pay disparity.
Quote:
Originally Posted by JurisDictum
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Evidence is available for anyone with google and shred of intellectual honesty.
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So, the wikipedia article I linked must have been like the first or second result when you googled right?