Mass shooting kills mother of three, wounds five others - Fox 2 News Headlines
Elliot Rodgers was but one example of the entitlement culture where if a man wants sex, he should just be able to get it. And if he doesn't get it, somehow somewhere it's a woman's fault for not thinking of ways to give it to him so he doesn't kill people.
Yet...many contrarians felt it necessary to denounce rape culture and misogyny - and protest against the very existence of misogyny - and say that it's all about mental illness and nothing more.
This is another example of a woman being a target, expected to be available, and when it's apparent she is not, becomes a target of violence.
Then here comes the naysayers:
- But what about the other people he shot? It isn't misogyny. It's just some dude who isn't mentally healthy.
- Why didn't she just give him a fake phone number?
Which stands paradoxically with the complaint about women "beating around the bush" about rejection. That women should just be straight about saying "no" to someone asking for a phone number. That women should just be honest. I hear it all the time in various situations, "Why don't you just come up to me and talk to me about it if you have a problem?"
That's a great question. Why don't women just come up to them and just be straight? What kind of hoops do women feel the need to jump through to avoid becoming a target? And in this instance, why don't women just be honest and just say "no" instead of smiling, "leading men on", lying about having a boyfriend even when in the story the fiancee was physically there?
It's because violence against women remains an epidemic. It's why women are given the kind of advice for staying safe walking down the street where men are not given the same advice. It's why women are given advice about predators at frat parties where men are not given advice in staying safe from predators at frat parties. And it's why women are told to give fake phone numbers to avoid the possibility of being a target by a potential stalker or killer. Men are not given this advice for avoiding being a target by a possible crazed ex-lover who will boil your kid's pet rabbit.
I remember a time when I was 15 years old, and I was at the movies with a couple of friends. I saw a group of skinheads approach me, and one recognized me from a parade we both were a part in. He started discussing how we both should get together for a date. With several of his friends around him looking at me waiting for an answer, and even though I was with 2 friends, I was nervous about what might happen if I rejected him. I began telling him how busy I was, and he continued pressing me by saying that if I was interested, that I would find a way to make time for him.
He told me to give him my phone number....that's right, he didn't ask, he told me to give it to him....and that's when I pulled the fake phone number tactic. It worked. He walked away with his friends saying he was going to give me a call. And for the moment, I felt safer. But I wound up not attending the movie theatre again for fear of being discovered that I lied to him and becoming a target.
I rearranged a part of my social life out of fear.
This is not a rare occurrence. This is part of the culture. This story, my story, and other women's stories are not a rare statistic cherry-picked for supporting a victim mentality. This is an epidemic of violence against women where the burden of responsibility is placed squarely on women to ward off predatory behavior, and where women are to be blamed for violence against them, at least considered for how she provoked it.
#yesallwomen
Elliot Rodgers was but one example of the entitlement culture where if a man wants sex, he should just be able to get it. And if he doesn't get it, somehow somewhere it's a woman's fault for not thinking of ways to give it to him so he doesn't kill people.
Yet...many contrarians felt it necessary to denounce rape culture and misogyny - and protest against the very existence of misogyny - and say that it's all about mental illness and nothing more.
This is another example of a woman being a target, expected to be available, and when it's apparent she is not, becomes a target of violence.
Then here comes the naysayers:
- But what about the other people he shot? It isn't misogyny. It's just some dude who isn't mentally healthy.
- Why didn't she just give him a fake phone number?
Which stands paradoxically with the complaint about women "beating around the bush" about rejection. That women should just be straight about saying "no" to someone asking for a phone number. That women should just be honest. I hear it all the time in various situations, "Why don't you just come up to me and talk to me about it if you have a problem?"
That's a great question. Why don't women just come up to them and just be straight? What kind of hoops do women feel the need to jump through to avoid becoming a target? And in this instance, why don't women just be honest and just say "no" instead of smiling, "leading men on", lying about having a boyfriend even when in the story the fiancee was physically there?
It's because violence against women remains an epidemic. It's why women are given the kind of advice for staying safe walking down the street where men are not given the same advice. It's why women are given advice about predators at frat parties where men are not given advice in staying safe from predators at frat parties. And it's why women are told to give fake phone numbers to avoid the possibility of being a target by a potential stalker or killer. Men are not given this advice for avoiding being a target by a possible crazed ex-lover who will boil your kid's pet rabbit.
I remember a time when I was 15 years old, and I was at the movies with a couple of friends. I saw a group of skinheads approach me, and one recognized me from a parade we both were a part in. He started discussing how we both should get together for a date. With several of his friends around him looking at me waiting for an answer, and even though I was with 2 friends, I was nervous about what might happen if I rejected him. I began telling him how busy I was, and he continued pressing me by saying that if I was interested, that I would find a way to make time for him.
He told me to give him my phone number....that's right, he didn't ask, he told me to give it to him....and that's when I pulled the fake phone number tactic. It worked. He walked away with his friends saying he was going to give me a call. And for the moment, I felt safer. But I wound up not attending the movie theatre again for fear of being discovered that I lied to him and becoming a target.
I rearranged a part of my social life out of fear.
This is not a rare occurrence. This is part of the culture. This story, my story, and other women's stories are not a rare statistic cherry-picked for supporting a victim mentality. This is an epidemic of violence against women where the burden of responsibility is placed squarely on women to ward off predatory behavior, and where women are to be blamed for violence against them, at least considered for how she provoked it.
#yesallwomen