The Importance Of Rape

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Rape is a crime that most offenders get away with way too often. Impunity, or exemption from punishment is a common thing when it comes to this violation. Why? Is it because the victim would feel guilty about ruining their rapists life? Does the victim feel like they deserved to be raped? Does the rapist feel like the victim asked for it, or had it coming? Does the rapist feel like their social status would keep the court from finding them guilty? Is this the way that the victim avoids the chances of being called a whore or a tramp? Maybe the rapist’s friends got away with a similar crime, giving the rapist a glimmer of hope. I feel like all of these scenarios could be reasonable answers, depending on the situation.

Jon Krakauer’s book, …show more content…

Teenage girls are told to keep themselves and their body parts covered in school to keep them from distracting boys, when boys should just be taught that girls or women aren’t objects. Women are not objects. Nothing is said when the basketball coach has the boys scrimmage against each other shirts vs. skins. But a rule had to be made to prevent female soccer players from ripping off their shirts after scoring the winning goal, even though it’s a tradition for men. So many rapes go unreported because society has taught men and women that ladies are supposed to dress and act a certain way; and if they fail to follow these standards, they are asking to be raped, they are asking for the referee to give them a yellow card. They are asking for teenage boys to harass them when they show their shoulders. Too many cases of sexual assault have been ignored due to the fact that the victim was dressed the wrong …show more content…

Maybe they saw their friends get away with the same thing all because of their social status. In Missoula examples of university athletes getting away with sexual assault were revealed, “In December 2010, four of Beau Donaldson’s teammates on the UM football team allegedly gang-raped a female student when she was too drunk to resist, and because the football players claimed the sex was consensual, they were not charged with a crime” (Krakauer. 8). If these four men had a different skin color and were from a lower class neighborhood would they still get away with the crime? To add to that Missoula also shows exactly how fans refuse to believe that their favorite athlete is guilty of rape. In the book, Missoula, there is a page or to that shows what the fans of a football player had to think about the arrest of one of their beloved players. It’s a page full of online comments like “It cannot be true, he is from Montana!” (Krakauer,

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