Thursday, October 1, 2009

The Rape Myth

Sometimes it’s hard to believe that it’s 2009, not because I don’t feel old enough to yet be this old, or because we are still living in a future woefully devoid of hover crafts, but because of the appalling discussions that take place by so-called intelligent forward thinking people whenever there’s a public case of rape or domestic abuse.

From the common cry of faking or “asking for it” or trying to make money whenever someone notable is accused of rape or assault, to the disgusting initial defense of Chris Brown, to most recently the concept of rape the doesn’t “count” as rape.

In the last week alone there have been two more cases of not calling a spade a spade, or in the case of John Phillips and Roman Polanski, calling a rapist a rapist.

An adult having sex with a 13-year-old is rape. An adult having sex with a drugged and drunk 13-year-old is rape. Period. End of Story. There should be no discussion over who was in the house, what was said by whom, and certainly none over what a great director they are. Even Whoopi (say it ain’t so!) is using made up terms like “rape-rape”, and Debra Tate saying “it was rape, but it wasn’t rape.” The fact that Polanski has still been able to make movies and live in relative freedom for the past 30 plus years, is upsurd, the fact that so many people agreed to work with him, defend him.

The judicial system already puts the burden of proof on the victim too many times and lets the rapists and abusers get off with small or often nonexistent sentences. What’s rarely considered is how damaging something like rape and abuse is to a person, how it’s something that can ruin a life, even after years, even after you “get over it.” Adding on a chorus of voices saying “oh, well it wasn’t really rape” is damaging not only to those who have lived through it, but those in the future who will question themselves if they are so unfortunate as to have something like this happen to them.

1 comment:

Anthony Regina said...

Hey, you wrote this a while ago, but I was just reading it now, and I agree 100% with what you said. Over the past week I've heard so many people I know defend both of these situations. I will say, it's one thing to make a joke about something you're not directly related to. It's another thing to honestly believe sexual abuse or rape doesn't damage a person for a lifetime. It's not something a person can "get over". It takes away a part of person's ability to feel free and they spend their life struggling with their sexuality.

It hurts and angers me when I hear that someone's movies can outweigh something as horrible as that. Look, I love, love movies. Hell, I love Chinatown, but that doesn't mean Polanski shouldn't face some kind of judgment for what he did. I don't know. I just felt moved to say something in a kind of anonymous forum.

And the other day "California Dreamin'" came on Pandora. I seriously couldn't listen to it. Blargh.

I wrote too much.