Ummm, no.
*Plenty *of people - men and women - are horrified at the notion that females “ask for it”.
mmm
Ummm, no.
*Plenty *of people - men and women - are horrified at the notion that females “ask for it”.
mmm
Maybe now. But historically rape has been an underreported, underprosecuted, and totally blamed on the victim occurance. Like I posted, any excuse would do.
She was walking alone after dark.
She was wearing tight clothes.
She was walking in a bad neighborhood.
It’s not like she was a virgin.
So she was raped. It’s not like she was physically hurt
Hey, boys will be boys.
For decades newspapers would not even print stories of rape.
I tend to wonder if it’s a bit more common than we think. My daughter’s elementary school (K-8) just had a teacher kicked out for inappropriate behavior with one of her male students, and in high school, my friend’s younger brothers was having an affair with his teacher (which he was in high school; I think about 16-17 at the time). I admit, mine is probably somewhat an anomalous experience, but male high school students having “relations” with their teachers did not seem to be that uncommon a thing from my perspective. Heck, my own French teacher at this high school was rather “handsy” with the boys. She’d come up and massage my shoulders during class (not that I was special, but I’m relating that as a personal experience anecdote.) Now, whether she had sex with one of them, I don’t know, but, in retrospect, I see how completely inappropriate her behavior was. (If it matters, I went to an all-boys school.)
How could you possibly have known which women had higher estrogen levels?
Actually, it often depended on who it was that got raped, who the rapist was, and under what circumstances.
You think it’s just female teachers and young men? I know two women who married their male teachers.
Reread the OP. The OP specifically acknowledges male teachers but dismisses that from the discussion as males are only predatory – (Males with younger females makes sense because almost all of the time they’re predatory and looking for somebody they can easily exploit) – where with female teachers, it’s “actual genuine love they fall into.”
As others have pointed out, this is stereotyping. There are male teachers who are not simply looking for someone to exploit and there are female teachers who do look for victims.
Looking online, I found an OpEd at Washington Post from 2015 which claims that in two-thirds of cases, it’s male perpetrators and in one-third it’s females. The author also claims the cases are increasing and blames social media as one factor.
It’s all about the music.