I posted a bit more in-depth in a post above, I just wanted to respond to you specifically.LostGryphon said:And we can both agree that those are some fucked up ways of approaching this.BubbleBurst said:snip snip snipR0guy said:snipNetrigan said:snip
BUT. And, god do I hate that I have to say this, BUT the second one doesn't seem to be advocating for the defense or blaming the girl for being raped.
I'll admit that she's dipping into blame territory, though I think it's blaming her for making the decision to drink rather than being raped, and it's not exactly the best way to put it overall, but I think she's just harping on responsibility...which seems to be interpreted as 'rape apology' way, way, way, way, way too often. Her language is ultimately too vague though...and suspect in parts (What's with the virgin thing? What does that matter, Serena? And 'she's lucky'? How is she lucky!?), which can lead to an obvious misunderstanding...and she specifically points out the "slipped her something" thing too, which I'd argue leads back into the overarching "there are a lot of grey areas" conversation."Do you think it was fair, what they got?
They did something stupid, but I don't know. I'm not blaming the girl, but if you're a 16-year-old and you're drunk like that, your parents should teach you: Don't take drinks from other people," Williams said to Rodrick. "She's 16, why was she that drunk where she doesn't remember? It could have been much worse. She's lucky. Obviously, I don't know, maybe she wasn't a virgin, but she shouldn't have put herself in that position, unless they slipped her something, then that's different."
Then again, maybe I'm just misinterpreting and she's a rape apologist. I dunno.
The other two? Right there with ya. Fuck those guys.
I think you're right, the second one is the least egregious by far. I don't think she's a rape apologist, I don't think she was intentionally blaming the victim, I'm pretty sure she didn't even realize it. But at its core, victim blaming is about what we decide to talk about. It means, instead of focusing on the men who saw a passed out woman and decided to rape her (and film it), we talk about the victim, and what we think she might have done better, or what she did wrong.
We can all do that if we're not thinking or careful; I've certainly caught myself thinking that way. It's kind of natural to think "well I would never be that stupid" or "God, I will make sure to teach my children not to drink that much, because look what happened to her." That's natural, and it's not necessarily wrong. But if we voice those thoughts in a certain way, it reshapes the story so that it's about the victim rather than the rapist, and that is wrong.