
SuckyCuckyDuck
NEET
- Jan 21, 2025
- 335
This post here is gonna be a hell of a read, so bear with me only if you desire to. Posting this elsewhere might've got me banned or worse, but thankfully enough have somewhat of freedom to express my thoughts here.
Ever since I first heard of "rape" or "sexual harassment" during my early teens, I couldn't help but wonder what sin could exist so heinous that you see entire sloths of people willing to torch you to death for simply being accused of it. I remember asking my teacher about it(within context of course) and then being screamed at. I knew something was up. A couple months later, I found out through internet that the crime which the entire world detests is... having sex "without consent". Okay, and? Having sex forcefully might be a little annoying, but it's nearly nowhere close to the limit of human suffering. To my dismay people always seem to treat it as such.
I remember as a 13 year old when a girl would stare at me and ask me "what I would do for her"(this was nearly the time I had started despising women), but people around me were happy for me rather than calling that "romantic harassment". If women do it/if the individual doesn't have any sexual interests in you(yet men are still in the disadvantage, more so the sub-5 males), it's not a crime anymore. This thought really sounded unfair to me, at an age when I was oblivious to the real unfairness of human nature.
I started digging deep as to why "rape" is considered as sinister as it is. The word's origin is from the roman word "raptus", where kidnapping a woman with romantic interests was deemed as a crime. It took me a little digging to find out, the real reasons forceful sex is considered a sin, is because women were meant to only have a sexual relationship with the man they were married to(therefore no such thing as "martial rape" ever existed prior to us). It was never about consent, it was about loyalty. And historically, people actually took consideration of far more notorious crimes over forceful sex. It ultimately is a matter of cultural tribalism and subjective vs objective ethics. The very few skeptical people are too scared to speak out against the fact that forceful sex is not nearly as evil as people deem it out to be.
Human nature is, indeed, absurd.
Ever since I first heard of "rape" or "sexual harassment" during my early teens, I couldn't help but wonder what sin could exist so heinous that you see entire sloths of people willing to torch you to death for simply being accused of it. I remember asking my teacher about it(within context of course) and then being screamed at. I knew something was up. A couple months later, I found out through internet that the crime which the entire world detests is... having sex "without consent". Okay, and? Having sex forcefully might be a little annoying, but it's nearly nowhere close to the limit of human suffering. To my dismay people always seem to treat it as such.
I remember as a 13 year old when a girl would stare at me and ask me "what I would do for her"(this was nearly the time I had started despising women), but people around me were happy for me rather than calling that "romantic harassment". If women do it/if the individual doesn't have any sexual interests in you(yet men are still in the disadvantage, more so the sub-5 males), it's not a crime anymore. This thought really sounded unfair to me, at an age when I was oblivious to the real unfairness of human nature.
I started digging deep as to why "rape" is considered as sinister as it is. The word's origin is from the roman word "raptus", where kidnapping a woman with romantic interests was deemed as a crime. It took me a little digging to find out, the real reasons forceful sex is considered a sin, is because women were meant to only have a sexual relationship with the man they were married to(therefore no such thing as "martial rape" ever existed prior to us). It was never about consent, it was about loyalty. And historically, people actually took consideration of far more notorious crimes over forceful sex. It ultimately is a matter of cultural tribalism and subjective vs objective ethics. The very few skeptical people are too scared to speak out against the fact that forceful sex is not nearly as evil as people deem it out to be.
Human nature is, indeed, absurd.
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