Re: What's the definition of racism? What's the definition of creep? -
11-18-2019, 06:40 PM
There's another thread on "rape culture" that could be merged with this one. I can't find it.
Anyway, generations ago people used to use the word "seduction" to describe 90% of the situations which are called "rape" today. That is, if you enticed someone into sex knowing they'll regret it afterwards, you were guilty of "seduction". Men who did this were hit with status-destroying labels like "cad", "rake", "scoundrel", "rascal", and so on - words that today have not been used seriously for generations, and now sound like quaint historical footnotes. (I checked a thesaurus which listed "creep", but today only failures are called "creeps", successes are "studs", "playas" and of course "pimps" which is now a compliment. Women who guilty of this were called things which are today considered compliments. "Seduction" itself is not a negative word at all today.
But of course, the main victims seduction are men. We treat it like a joke when it happens to men - "coyote arm" and so on.
Also the main victims of marital rape (having sex with your spouse when you don't want to) are probably men also. So in the leftist victimhood hierarchy, they best way to demote men is to erase the concepts that make their victimhood describable.
Of course, there are also those of us who are not interested in jockeying for status within a victimhood-aristocracy, we only want to solve the problem. The first way to solve a problem is to understand it, and the first thing that you do while trying to understand, and communicate about about a problem is developing a precise vocabulary.
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