JonnWood said:
maninahat said:
JonnWood said:
Except for the statistics that state that women who are raped because of their clothing are the overwhelming minority. Dressing soberly is, statistically, more likely to end up with the victim raped.
Good of you to mention the word "statistically". The majority of rape victims are familiar with the rapist, and as such, are already a target regardless of what they are wearing. They are more likely to be attacked in their own home, rather than out on the town. For that reason, it would be incorrect to infer that it is the conservative dress that increases the chances of rape.
My post was meant to rhetorically imply a false causality between dressing soberly and being raped, by way of "reduction to the absurd" with your logic. There is a
statistical correlation, but most rapists say they don't actually care what the woman was wearing.
Well my argument did actually conform to your statistics about the majority of rapists attacking women regard to what the woman is wearing, however:
In the minority of instances where a woman is targeted by a stranger, it doesn't take a huge leap of logic to assume the rapist would be most attracted to the one with the revealing outfit who already appears to be "asking for it".
The operative word here being "assume". An assumption is, by definition, a leap of logic. You don't have anything to back you up.
I like how you moved goalposts from 'women' to 'women who are targeted by strangers'.
Someone's been reading their logical fallacy handbook a bit too much.
I didn't move the "goalposts"; Despite the fact that I was talking about the minority of cases regarding women being raped by strangers, taht doesn't change the original point that women in general are at greater risk when dressed slutty, as it increases the chances of them being targeted.
As for assumptions, you might notice I said a "it doesn't take a
HUGE leap of logic", meaning it is not much of an assumption to think the following: that a rapist, in say a nightclub or a bar, is likely to target a woman he finds the most sexually attractive, which will probably the one dressed loosely. He may also target her on the assumption that the girl may already be up for sex, simply judging from the provocative way she was dressed. Seeing as how issues like sexual attraction and a rapist's thought processes are largely subjective, I can't really back any of that up. It does however seem fairly intuitive for the criminal: like a burglar who targets a house with the windows left open, a rapist may target a stranger who puts her attributes on display.
I'm not entirely sure what you are even arguing towards.