Vector, why and when would you say sexism is played to by woman? It's fairly obvious it happens, but I'd like to know more on why, and how they're perceived by women. I find it strange how at least in the youth they appear to be seen as idols rather then as subjects of pity. Is there a break off point between the perception of this in teens/20's and adults?
Wait, people who are raped are seen as
idols? Since when?
I think some young women like to lie and make a messy drama of things for fun, and don't think through all the consequences; some of these women
have experienced horrible crap, and no longer know how to acquire attention the normal way. I have a friend like this, who is kind of... mixed up and messed up. Like, really, really fucked up, and we had to have a conversation about why convincing me that her current boyfriend is hitting her isn't okay (because she has friends who will act on that information and make him as miserable as possible, and because it's muddying the waters).
I think women generally see these folks with disgust. They make things a lot harder for actual victims, and give the folks who go "hurr hurr it's a 50% chance she's lying" a leg to stand on. And honestly, I imagine that many of these people ARE folks who are just trying to get money or whatever. They're evil criminals. But some of them, maybe a small number, I think are just kind of fucked up.
But Max, how does him not realising she was no longer consenting make it not-rape? Like I said above, according to what we've been told, rape happened. Him not understanding that the situation had then doesn't change what she was experiencing at the time. We could be arguing about whether or not him not having the full picture makes it "his fault", but you must realise that this is a separate question from "was it rape?". Hence the why I said that "is he a rapist in every sense of the word?" might be a more fitting question above.
Rape is sex you do not consent to, not sex you do not enjoy. Currently all given evidence beyond speculation is that she consented.
And it is very important that we keep to this definition, otherwise "She enjoyed it!" is an actual argument, and that is morally grotesque.
She says she changed her mind in the middle. No one is talking about enjoyment. I'm not exactly sure why you're making this argument.