BloatedGuppy said:
Saetha said:
When you made a faulty assumption based on that statement, I pointed out the flaw in that thinking.
It wasn't an assumption, it was an observation based on limited information. I actually appreciate you providing clarity on it in the form of additional statistics, which was all you needed to do. Where things go sideways is when you assume internet forum "You're with me or against me" mode and sneeringly imply I'm hand waving male rape victims because I questioned a statement you made.
...Okay, yes, I was being... reactionary and hostile with that statement. I apologize for making it and accusing you unjustly.
BloatedGuppy said:
Similarly, a lot of kids in juvy report being sexually victimized by women - 94% of victims abused by staff members reported a female attacker
I expect this mirrors prison assault, where the gender of the assaulter is primarily opposite gender. What is the ratio of male to female offenders in juvenile detention? For that matter, what is the ratio for male to female inmates in the US? Is this a "male rape" problem specifically, as you imply, or an institutional problem with prisons, where inmates are routinely abused by guards regardless of gender?
The source I cited addresses some of this - the first source (I'll put it here so you don't have to dig it up: http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/svpjri0809.pdf ) shows the rate of victimization of men compared to women - men have a higher rate in both jail and prison (First bullet point on the second column of page 4) For juvy, the rate of female victimization by a staff member's about 5%, compared to 11% for boys. (Source: http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/svjfry09.pdf Last two columns of the table on page 11)
As for breakdown of gender of the general prison population - women make up less than one-tenth (Source: http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/p10.pdf Table on page 2) The numbers for juvenile detention are a bit more equal - women make up about one-seventh (Source: http://www.ojjdp.gov/ojstatbb/ezacjrp/asp/display.asp )
All that being said... I'm not entirely comfortable with gendering this as a solely
male problem either. It can happen to anyone. As those sources I posted show, girls in juvy are more likely to be victimized by other students (Same table on page 11) And women in prison are twice as likely to report being victimized by another inmate than men are. (Again, page 4, but the last bullet point in the first column.) While the breakdown of general demographics means there's a lot fewer female victims than male ones, it's still a problem that needs fixing.
General rape shouldn't be gendered, but prison rape shouldn't be either.
BloatedGuppy said:
Several reports on sexual abuse in schools show that those investigated or disciplined for sexual misconduct are mostly men (80-90%)
Can you source this statistic? I don't even doubt it, I suspect it is correct, but you've been very diligent about sourcing statistics.
It was on the same table I posted for sexual abuse by educators. (Let dig that one up again, too: http://www2.ed.gov/rschstat/research/pubs/misconductreview/report.pdf ) The table page 33 shows seven studies. The five to the right - Corbett to Shakeshaft and Cohen - only looked at the records of which educators had been investigated and disciplined. All show a massive gender disparity, in the range of 80 to 95%, despite more direct studies showing more gender parity (Those are the two studies on the left of the column) The studies' and their methodologies are all explained on the bottom half of 32.
BloatedGuppy said:
The actual percentage is probably even bigger, considering how people speculate that men don't come forward with this stuff.
People also speculate that women don't "come forward with this stuff". Given the general respect shown to rape victims by the legal system or society at large, neither gender can really be blamed for being hesitant to come forward. Women are slut shamed or have their judgment questioned, and men are laughed at.
True... it just irks me when people say that the justice system is unfair to female rape victims, when many male victims can't, by the legal definition of rape, actually accuse their rapist. It's unfair to all victims, really.
BloatedGuppy said:
The number of reported male rape in prison is actually larger than the number of reported rape period for general society.
The rate of reported rape (sexual victimization, by those studies, I realize that "rape" can be employed as a blanket term in some lobbies and that you're probably doing the same here for effect) actually seems dramatically higher in prison than in "general society", possibly because it's institutionalized.
I bring all this up because no one cares.
Lots of people care. I know a great many people who have spoken on the issue passionately. Ironically, all of them women aside from myself, but I imagine a great many men I know would feel the same, because I know a lot of thoughtful, intelligent, liberal men. What I find unusual about your stance on this issue is how combative/accusatory it is. You seem to take a very zero sum attitude towards male/female rape.
No, I realize I was being overly hostile to you before. I try to keep calm and rational and understand that people respond far better to gentle reasoning than wild threats and accusations. I suppose at that moment... I dunno. I really, sincerely apologize.
And I also try to maintain that rape's a problem that effects everyone, and both men and women deserve attention and support for it. I just so rarely find those who would give it to the former, at least on the level that they need. People seeing it as a zero-sum game is precisely the issue I so often have. I don't mean to draw attention away from female victims. Just... point out that the issue isn't always as clear-cut as it's made to be, and that the attitudes many hold end up screwing over a lot of victims.