I’ll concede that if a girl is being fingered against her will, then crime committed, creeps identified, protest justified.
I just doubt that’s what was going on on.
No cite for the singer doing this spiel many times before, just what I’ve heard. So dismiss it if you like. Even if it were the first time, the point remains.
You know, if the guy does this at many shows, there are actually a couple of potential reasons. ‘He’s faking it and wants to look like a hero’ is only one of them.
Sure it does, but we’re getting really far afield from what happens in that video. Have girls been molested or assaulted at concerts? Oh yes, I’m sure there’s plenty of evidence for that. But it sounds like we’re ready to launch a witch hunt for all the molesters in concert crowds. A huge leap from what I still contend is a pompous singer grandstanding.
When you don’t realize that groping is not the accidental brushing or touching of a body part, you should probably thank your lucky stars. This is precisely the kind of disconnect that #yesallwomen was trying to illustrate.
I know almost nothing about Aaron Lewis or Staind, but Wikipedia tells me the band has been performing for 20 years. Lewis has had the chance to observe audience behavior at a whole lot of rock concerts. The only reason we know about this incident is because he – not the girl – spoke out about it. We don’t know what the crowd-surfing girl was thinking, but we do know that whatever happened looked bad enough that it upset a man who must have a good idea of what is and isn’t typical behavior in that environment.
Now, for all I know Lewis is the kind of person who gets upset over nothing, but if that’s the case then it’s his attitude you should be criticizing.
It’s certainly possible that Lewis was putting on an act for reasons of his own. But if you think he was exaggerating or lying about what he saw, why did you bother to write a long post criticizing what you imagine to have been the behavior and attitude of a girl who might not even exist? Within a single post you went from saying that the girl was immature to expect men to refrain from sexually assaulting her:
To saying that she was probably a slut who wanted it anyway:
I realize that some people really like playing blame the victim, but you seem unusually eager to do so given that all we know about this girl is that a witness said she was being molested. And the witness was not an “innocent young nun” himself, but rather a 40-something rock musician. I don’t know enough about Lewis to know if he’s credible, but whether you believe him or not it’s pretty sick to blame the girl for this incident.
I was surprised that a performer in stage could tell that a crowd surfer was being molested from that distance.
And if there was molestation going on, wouldn’t it be just as bad as if it had happened to an adult? What does her age have to do with it?
Other than that, if someone sees sexual assault going on then if course he or she should take action to stop it. Threatening to have a mob beat someone, though, seems unwise for more than one reason.
When you don’t realize that a lot of this has come off as possibly confusing accidental brushing or touching of a body part with groping, you should prolly thank your lucky stars. This is precisely the kind of disconnected communication that not only isn’t helpful to a discussion, it’s downright harmful.
No. Let’s pay attention when we read. I said it is immature for one to expect or demand that there be no contact with privates parts while crowd surfing. As has been pointed out repeatedly by others, contact does not equal sexual assault.
“You’re blaming the victim” is the easy refrain for those who want to presume guilt and not weigh credibility or any mitigating or contributory factors. You’re the one who said “slut.” Don’t try to stick me with that.
No one is trying to “blame the girl for this incident.” Key here is that we don’t know what “this incident” was. Must I repeat my agreement with the obvious, that actual sexual assault is a crime, wrong, and should be called out even if the girl threw herself on the crowd? I’m merely pointing out that we don’t know that happened and there’s reason for doubt. For all we know, the girl was not underage, was perfectly happy with whatever was happening in the crowd, and bummed out when the singer stopped it. You admit that you don’t know if Lewis is credible, but I’m still sick for ‘blaming the girl?’ Where’s the logic in that? If person A says person B is being molested, and I have reason to doubt the veracity of person A, that’s blaming the victim? Treating women as automatic victims is a form of infantilization.
Girls who would like strangers in a mob to squeeze their breasts and reach under their clothes are vanishingly rare.
I was a punk rock teen, and I did my share of crowd surfing. Punk rock shows were always a safe space for me. They were my community, full of my friends and artists I admired. The music I listened to moved seamlessly between the joys and angst of teenage life to social justice. From age 15 or so on, on weekend nights I could be found at the local punk rock club.
I definitely would not expect to get groped at such an event. Elbowed in the mosh pit, sure. Toe stomped and beer spilled on me? Yeah. But not sexually attacked.