Just because something is difficult to prove doesn't mean we should do away with requiring it. First degree murder requires that we prove premeditation, which is incredibly difficult to prove, but we still try.evilthecat said:Firstly, to prove that someone committed rape you actually have to prove that they knew their victim did not consent at the time the offence occurred. The only difference in recent years is that many countries have inserted the extra caveat that this belief must be reasonable.
The forensic evidence is only to prove there has been sexual contact. That doesn't, in and of itself, prove rape. It can contribute to a rape case, particularly if the defendant has denied having sex with (or even knowing) the victim. But no one seriously believes such forensic evidence alone is proof of rape.Secondly, the burden of proof you're describing is almost impossible to reach. There is no forensic test which can tell the difference between injuries sustained during violent consensual sex and rape.
Actually, it means we must assume exactly that. If someone is found "not guilty," and yet we can treat them all as though they're guilty, we're clearly not interested in justice at all. We might claim that it's "easy" to tell the ones who were actually innocent from the ones that got off on technicalities, but who is ever going to publicly defend the "dirty rapist?"So actually, there's a flip-side to what you're saying, which is that we cannot possibly assume that a verdict of not-guilty in a rape trial means that the victim has not been raped or that the accused was not responsible. Not-guilty does not mean innocent, it means that there is insufficient evidence to convict. That's another distinction which certain members of the public routinely seem to forget.
The fact is that, in such cases, we feel better assuming guilt. The legal system might appear more likely to release the guilty, but the public is far more likely to condemn the innocent. For one, it allows us to close the matter -- the offender was caught, so we're done. Additionally, it prevents us from having to express doubt in the victim's judgment (or honesty, if it seems there's lying afoot).
I'm not seeing that anywhere. Rape is awful, and rape should draw very harsh punishments. I don't hear anyone arguing that. I do, however, hear a lot of people reminding us that rape trials are about establishing whether or not there was a rape and whether or not it was perpetrated by the defendant.Frankly, a lot of men who take this position are defending rapists, not directly of course, but by seeking to minimize the crime and to suggest that it's somehow not as big an issue as all these nasty irrational women are claiming.
All it takes for a guy is to see one case in which a woman maliciously accused, or even just mistakenly accuse a man and ruin his life very publicly -- that's enough to make a guy wary of such things, lest someone should ever try it on him. Why? Because the guy knows a) that he's not a rapist, and b) that he's unlikely to get raped, so those aren't on his list of concerns... which means he's more apt to focus on the only potential threat left on that list.The hysterical focus on a very, very small number of "malicious" allegations, and the consequent fear of them in the courts system and particularly among the police, is a good example. I'm not saying that these things don't happen, just that many people seem to have got the impression that they happen a lot.
I don't worry about ovarian cancer half as much as I worry about prostate cancer, because the latter is more likely to actually happen to me.
But you're ascribing malicious intent to these guys. They're not threatened that people are taking rape seriously. Find me one person who honestly believes rape is no big deal. The idea that an accusation is as good to the public as a conviction -- that's the perceived problem, I think.For the first time in decades, allegations of a very serious crime which is unfortunately very common in our society are now relatively close to being taken seriously. I really have no sympathy for anyone who finds that threatening or scary.