25
   

1 in 5 women get raped?

 
 
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 04:00 am
@nononono,
You're the one with all the sock puppets. wmwcjr is a poster of long standing, far longer than you in fact. He's just pointing out that most normal people are disgusted by sick nonces like you.

Never mind you can always do what you do best and have a good cry.
nononono
 
  0  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 04:08 am
http://www.cookingchanneltv.com/recipes/hotdish-tater-tot-casserole.html
nononono
 
  0  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 04:10 am
@nononono,
...so you are voting down tater tot casserole now, are ye?

Well that's fair.
0 Replies
 
nononono
 
  1  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 04:38 am
One thing is for certain; firefly, wmwcjr, hawkeye, Robert Gentel, gingerbitch, and nononono are the same person.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 04:50 am
Sorry, are you talking to me? All I can hear is.
http://rack.0.mshcdn.com/media/ZgkyMDEzLzA3LzEyL2VmL0NyeWluZ0JhYnlpLmY1NDE3LmpwZwpwCXRodW1iCTk1MHg1MzQjCmUJanBn/34f75214/077/Crying-Baby-iStock.jpg
0 Replies
 
nononono
 
  -1  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 04:54 am
http://curiosidadesnanet.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/ftdivaniv08.jpg
0 Replies
 
firefly
 
  2  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 01:47 pm
Quote:

UVA Bans Fraternities Until January In Wake Of Campus Rape Article
November 22, 2014
by Bill Chappell

Saying she is acting out of ""great sorrow, great rage," University of Virginia President Teresa Sullivan, seen here in April, is suspending all the school's fraternities until January.

Citing "great sorrow, great rage" and "great determination," University of Virginia President Teresa A. Sullivan says she's suspending all the school's fraternities until Jan. 9. The move comes days after a Rolling Stone article in which a woman described being gang-raped when she was a freshman in 2012.

The magazine's story revolves around the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, which sits in a prestigious spot on campus, at the other end of an athletic field behind the university president's office.

In the article, a student named Jackie describes how her initial excitement of being invited to a party at the fraternity was suddenly replaced by fear and violence, as a group of men trapped her in a room and attacked her.

The article says Jackie was pressured by peers to keep her story quiet, and that administrators who knew about Jackie's story took no action — even after she reported allegations from two other girls who said they had been assaulted in a similar way at the same fraternity.

In a letter to the school's students Saturday, Sullivan said she has asked the Charlottesville police to investigate the incident. Her decision to place a temporary ban on fraternities follows a voluntary move by all UVA fraternities to suspend their social activities for this weekend.

Sullivan said that didn't go far enough:

"I write you today in solidarity. I write you in great sorrow, great rage, but most importantly, with great determination. Meaningful change is necessary, and we can lead that change for all universities. We can demand that incidents like those described in Rolling Stone never happen and that if they do, the responsible are held accountable to the law. This will require institutional change, cultural change, and legislative change, and it will not be easy. We are making those changes."

The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity was the target of an immediate backlash after the article was published. On Wednesday, its house was vandalized; on Thursday, the chapter said it had voluntarily surrendered its fraternal agreement with UVA.

"Make no mistake, the acts depicted in the article are beyond unacceptable — they are vile and intolerable in our brotherhood, our university community and our society," the group said in a letter to the school newspaper. "We remain ready and willing to assist with the fair and swift pursuit of justice, wherever that may lead."

Sullivan has been criticized this week for leaving the campus, and the country, on Wednesday to attend a conference in the Netherlands — a trip the school says was planned back in June.

In her absence, one of the university's first attempts to respond to the story backfired, when it hired former U.S. Deputy Attorney General Mark Filip to investigate the matter. After it was revealed that Filip had himself been a Phi Kappa Psi member at an Illinois college, he was taken off the job, local newspaper the Daily Progress reports.

Yesterday, Rolling Stone published a follow-up article titled "Rape at UVA: Readers Say Jackie Wasn't Alone," in which people wrote in to describe their own experiences with sexual assault at the university.

Similar stories have emerged in comments on the university's Facebook page this week.

One comment came from Helen Drogas, who sits on the university's board. She asked that people share their stories in an alumni forum. And she added that she'd only this week learned of a friend's story.

"I learned that a college friend of mine had the exact same thing happen to her in a fraternity house," she wrote. "I never knew it, and I was really shaken that women were being victimized then, and still are more than thirty years later."

On the UVA campus, a university faculty group has organized a protest for Saturday night over what it calls "a social culture that puts our female students at unacceptable risk," as local NBC News 29 reports.

The harrowing story told in Sabrina Rubin Erdely's original article for Rolling Stone suggests how deeply the University of Virginia community might have to dig to find the roots of that culture, as the student says it influences both students and school officials:

"Lots of people have discouraged her from sharing her story, Jackie tells me with a pained look, including the trusted UVA dean to whom Jackie reported her gang-rape allegations more than a year ago. On this deeply loyal campus, even some of Jackie's closest friends see her going public as tantamount to betrayal."

As the UPI news service notes, "UVA is one of 12 schools undergoing 'compliance reviews' by the federal Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights because of 'serious concerns' about several issues, including accusations of sex assaults."
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2014/11/22/365970415/uva-bans-fraternities-until-january-in-wake-of-campus-rape-article
0 Replies
 
hawkeye10
 
  2  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 03:31 pm
@izzythepush,
Quote:
u're the one with all the sock puppets. wmwcjr is a poster of long standing, far longer than you in fact. He's just pointing out that most normal people are disgusted by sick nonces like you.

Normal people have quietly tolerated the demise of the Constitution, the corruption of this government, the theft by the capitalist robber baron's, and the destruction of the justice system which is supposed to be about justice but which has become just another tool of the state to control and abuse the citizens.

Being called normal is most definitely not a complement, and the opinion of the normal may or may not be worth consideration.
izzythepush
 
  2  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 04:48 pm
@hawkeye10,
None of your crappy conspiracy bollocks is remotely relevant.
hawkeye10
 
  2  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 04:53 pm
@izzythepush,
izzythepush wrote:

None of your crappy conspiracy bollocks is remotely relevant.

You are pretty much the last person I would ask for an evaluation of relevance, or for any other question that requires judgment.
izzythepush
 
  2  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 05:22 pm
@hawkeye10,
Which is probably why you're such a ******* idiot.
0 Replies
 
wmwcjr
 
  2  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 05:43 pm
"MRA" stands for "Men's Rape Apologists."
nononono
 
  1  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 06:23 pm
@wmwcjr,
Quote:
"MRA" stands for "Men's Rape Apologists."


True. We actually print that on t-shirts.

We also have rape parties.
hawkeye10
 
  3  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 06:37 pm
@nononono,
Quote:
We also have rape parties.


Those are a blast....all retro and everything. It is so fun when a girl comes and sits on your lap, making eyes and pouting, to reach around and cup a tit in your hand. Or put your hands on the ass of a girl when you dance with her.

I love rape parties. Those girls who like to be raped are sooo much fun!
nononono
 
  0  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 07:19 pm
@hawkeye10,
Quote:
I love rape parties. Those girls who like to be raped are sooo much fun!


But, don't all women enjoy being raped? I mean that's what all men are thinking right hawkeye?

That's why men should all be castrated, at birth of course...
0 Replies
 
firefly
 
  1  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 07:29 pm
@hawkeye10,
Quote:
Those are a blast....all retro and everything. It is so fun when a girl comes and sits on your lap, making eyes and pouting, to reach around and cup a tit in your hand. Or put your hands on the ass of a girl when you dance with her.

I love rape parties. Those girls who like to be raped are sooo much fun!


I'm sure they make you long for the days when you could actually get it up without needing to down a handful of Viagra first. Laughing

Now those girls look at you and just see another pathetic old guy.



nononono
 
  1  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 07:32 pm
@firefly,
Quote:
I'm sure they make you long for the days when you could actually get it up without needing to down a handful of Viagra first.


^That statement raped me.
0 Replies
 
firefly
 
  1  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 07:45 pm
Quote:
The rise of rape, the demise of manhood
Men's shameful silence on campus sex assaults

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS/
November 24, 2014
By Richard Cohen

Where are the men?

I am talking about men who live by a certain code, who know that rape is repugnant, that gang rape is vile and that so-called men who do these things are criminals. I am talking at the moment of the frat boys at the University of Virginia who are accused of raping a young woman.

But I am also talking of all those who knew what was happening — at the time or afterward. They are not men, either.

The Virginia incident, first reported in Rolling Stone by Sabrina Rubin Erdely, allegedly took place at the Phi Kappa Psi house in 2012. The victim was an 18-year-old freshman. Rolling Stone gave her the name of Jackie. A fraternity member approached her with what we are told is a standard line: “Want to go upstairs, where it’s quieter?”

She did.

Seven men allegedly raped her.

We are told, in a really instructive Washington Post article based on the Rolling Stone piece, that there is a pattern to such incidents. The line — the bait — is usually a variation of the one used on Jackie: “Want to see my fish tank?” “Let’s go upstairs so we can talk.” Something like that.

Once the woman is isolated, again there is a pattern. The boy doing the luring, whom Rolling Stone called Drew, urges the others on. He tells the others what to do and, apparently, how to do it. He is the necessary leader for such an incident, according to social scientists who have studied such things. A “Drew” appears to be essential. Apparently, there is no shortage of Drews.

The Post story said that two psychologists, David Lisak of the University of Massachusetts-Boston and Paul M. Miller of Brown University, had studied more than 1,800 college men to determine the prevalence of rapists. They found that about 90% of college rapes were committed by serial rapists. On average, they had each committed six rapes.

So just a small percentage of college men participate in rape and they are responsible for a large number of sexual assaults. But the low percentage of actual sexual thugs is not necessarily good news. Whatever the percentage of actual rapists must be — let’s just say 5% — many others must know what’s happening. Some of the other guys at the Phi Kappa Psi house that night probably knew something was going on.

And then, how many learned about the rape afterward? How many heard about it that night or the next day or the next week? How many knew the names of the rapists and turned them in? How many mocked them as cowards, as unmanly types who actually fear women, or sex, or something? Where in God’s name were the men on the University of Virginia campus?

I have been a columnist for many years now. I write on a variety of topics, some of them requiring prodigious amounts of research. But I have been a man all my life and I don’t have to Google anything about that. And yet I don't understand what I read about what’s happening on the campuses.

How can rape thrive? How can a rapist walk to class the next day without other men confronting him? How is the rapist or the witness allowed to feel he has exercised some masculine privilege when, in fact, he has just violated the cardinal rule of masculinity? Be Respectful of Women.

Is this old-fashioned? Am I going to hear from the gaggle of bloggers circling, like vultures, for the one errant phrase? Will I be told that I just don’t get it ? Well, I don’t. When I read that one out of five college women is a victim of attempted or actual sexual assault, I just don’t get it. Who are these creeps? Why do other men put up with such behavior?

I know, I know. John Wayne is dead and Cary Grant, too. Men dress like boys and often act it, too. I was a college kid once myself, but some aspects of campus culture I do not quite understand (why would anyone binge-drink to get sick?). But I do know with dead certainty that a rapist is not really a man — and neither is anyone who lets it happen.
http://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/rise-rape-death-men-article-1.2022349
nononono
 
  0  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 07:48 pm
@firefly,
I'm planning on raping a turkey on Thursday.

Right in the butt. With stuffing.

http://thenotsosupermama.files.wordpress.com/2012/11/img_9213.jpg
nononono
 
  1  
Reply Mon 24 Nov, 2014 09:33 pm
@nononono,
Quote:
I'm planning on raping a turkey on Thursday.


I'm gonna rape that fuckin' turkey good.
 

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