Read The Douchebag Bible Online
Authors: TJ Kirk
say to me, “I shouldn't have to do those things! They
impinge on my freedom!” My response to that is that
I fully agree that women should not have to do these
things. They should be able to walk the streets alone
without the slightest fear that a rapist is stalking
them. They should be able to walk about unarmed
without concern. They should be able to conduct
themselves as they see fit without having to consider
who might be plotting to rape them.
The world, however, does not give a fuck about
how you or I think it should be. I don’t think I should
have to buy an alarm for my home—people should
just respect my personal property and not attempt
to steal from me! However, that’s not how the world
works. I have to take scumbags, liars and thieves
into account everyday and adjust my conduct
accordingly. Why should rape be exempt from
taking precautions against?
Now, if I get robbed, beaten or swindled, is it
my fault if I didn’t take the proper precautions? No.
However, if you let me off the hook completely,
where is the lesson? Am I to be excused entirely for
my lack of preparedness simply because it was
ultimately up to the burglar or attacker to act against
me? Is it really so wrong to simply make note of what
a victim could have done better? Is it really so
heinous to simply suggest that victims should be
aware of risks and take reasonable precautions?
A rape victim, of course, suffers more trauma
than a victim of robbery. Having your house violated
can be chilling, but having your body violated is
several orders of magnitude beyond that. However,
the emotional pain caused by rape is immaterial
when it comes to assessing the responsibilities of
potential victims to safeguard themselves. If
anything, the severity of the trauma involved is all
the more reason why stressing the importance of
rape prevention is paramount.
Of course, personal preventative measures are
a small part of rape prevention. Far more important
is changing societies attitude towards rapists from
evil to impaired and setting up a net to identify the
character traits of rapists before they rape and
urging them into treatment.
No one on this planet should have to suffer
rape. And I believe that rape can largely be stopped,
but only if we accept it for what it is and work from
there, rather than basing policies on moral outrage
and politically correct indignation.
Many feminists say that our society shouldn't
teach women not to get raped, but should teach men
not to rape. I don't think that we should teach either
sex anything like that.
We won't eliminate rape by making girls and
women so afraid that they're going to get raped that
they become neurotic worrywarts who can barely
function because they're so frightened that men are
nothing but a gaggle of rape-hungry fiends.
Nor will we eliminate rape by merely
proscribing it and admonishing those who commit
it. Rapists are already hated, shunned, castigated,
imprisoned and looked down upon by the whole of
society. There are movies out there where the
protagonists are hitmen, mafiosos and even serial
killers—but when is the last time you saw a movie or
TV show where a rapist was the hero? When is the
last time you read a flattering news article about a
rapist? When is the last time you heard a friend say,
“Yeah. That's my buddy, Charles. He's a rapist, but
he's still pretty cool.” Despite feminist cries about
how we live in a “rape culture” there is actually
nothing about our culture that sends the message to
anyone that it’s okay to be a rapist.
The way that we can eliminate rape is by
treating the underlying causes of rape. We need to
fund a lot of research into understanding the
mentality of rapists and what causes them to act out
so that we can identify at risk behaviors and
attitudes before they offend. We can prevent victims
with higher awareness and rational compassion.
A popular feminist argument is to say that the
opinions of people like me need not be taken
seriously or addressed because I have a number of
“privileges”. I have what they would label “male
privilege” and “white privilege.”
Privilege, as it is used by feminists, is an
entirely meaningless term. It's a mantra that they
spout like dolls with broken draw strings: MALE
PRIVILEGE!
MALE
PRIVILEGE!
MALE
PRIVILEGE! YOUR OPINION IS INVALID
BECAUSE YOU HAVE MALE PRIVILEGE!
I think the reason that they're so fond of citing
male privilege is because they have no argument
beyond acting persecuted.
The term doesn’t even make sense. What does
it mean to have male privilege? What exactly is my
privilege? Peeing standing up?
And what of female privilege? What of the fact
that men disproportionately lose custody battles for