Last weekend, the angry lesbian coalition staged another "slut walk." This was headlined by Amber Rose, aka Amber Levonchuck. A slut walk is a bunch of activists stripped down to their underwear, regurgitating obnoxious slogans in a determined effort to crush rape culture and the patriarchy.
Down the street they walked, chanting, "my pussy, my choice." They bore placards announcing that, no matter how scantily clad, they are "still not asking for it."
Amber Rose started stripping when she was fifteen. Her choice, indeed, but what choice would she have without the male gaze?
The slogan "still not asking for it," is a classic false equivalence. It asks the listener to excuse any and all behavior by a sexual assault victim. If an investigator asks her whether she was walking alone after dark, the investigator is guilty of blaming the victim. If a prosecutor asks whether she willingly went to a man's house alone and dressed in revealing clothes, he is guilty of "slut-shaming."
And victims of even alleged sexual assaults are now branded "survivors."
This is all done to elevate the moral authority of women above men. Women are to be believed, always, and in the case of rape, the severity of the allegation justifies suspending due process for the accused.
Rape activists want to convince people that we live in a culture that condones rape, and conditions men to expect to be entitled to sex. If anything, the opposite is true. Popular culture has been conditioning men to be sensitive, and understanding, and to sit still in class. Boys who fall out of line are punished or medicated until they learn to act like girls.
Boys aren't being taught how to be men by their fathers, since half of households are single-parent today. Which begs the question, then, of how exactly boys are being taught to exhibit dominance behaviors to attract women.
Women are teaching boys that they desire dominant partners by pairing off with them, and ignoring beta cuckolds.
The problem, then, is that women want all the rights of sexual liberation, without any of the responsibilities.
I have a simple solution. End the female exemption for selective service registration. If women really want equality, they should understand that freedom is not a luxury, it is a responsibility. I don't mean for the military to start drafting millions of women. But make them register.
If nothing else, asking a feminist if she favors ending the selective service exemption for women will reveal her policy preferences.
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