I've snipped a ton, for brevity's sake.LostGryphon said:*nod* Gotcha, sir/madam. I can certainly understand "victim blaming" as taking a less direct form, but I'd caution against knee-jerk reactions that slap such a weighty term on events/stances/statements/ideas/etc that may not necessarily be indicative of it occurring.BubbleBurst said:snipLostGryphon said:snipBubbleBurst said:snip
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Making it entirely about the victim or, indeed, blaming them for what happened (if they didn't directly impact what happened, mind...which leads back into my previous personal responsibility not-quite-diatribe) is unacceptable, however, I do not see the harm in digging into what happened in an effort to better understand the circumstances of the case and, hopefully, find something positive that can potentially help someone else in a similar situation.
I fear that attributing all such criticism/investigation to malice or victim blaming and shutting it down entirely would cause more harm than good, since it effectively cuts exploration of certain subjects off at the knees. Perhaps people need to get better, a lot better, at framing these sorts of discussions in such a way as to not cause undue stress for a victim.
And I didn't mean to give the appearance of excusing the thought, I was just trying to figure out a reason for the, seemingly, endemic nature of it when such things come up.
You're right, knee-jerk reactions are another easy trap to fall into. I imagine one person's idea of what qualifies can differ from another person's, with neither side being objectively wrong. There does need to be reasonable discussion, I agree.
You didn't come away as excusing to me, at all. And I appreciate having a reasoned discussion on this with someone who doesn't entirely agree, it helps me keep myself honest.
I do apologize if I jumped into saying you were victim-blaming, at first. I'm not sure I was wrong...