another man accused of rape completely blows it. note how he doesn't even acknowledge the victim'saccuser's anti-rape culture warrior's trauma or how many women this story might have triggered in the last few months. he sure seems happy to be off the hook for a felony though
Late last year, Conor Oberst was accused of raping a woman after a Bright Eyes show in 2003. In February, he sued his accuser, Joanie Faircloth, for libel, claiming his reputation had been damaged by her accusations. Earlier this week, Faircloth, whose real name is Joan Elizabeth Harris, recanted her statements in a public apology.
Now, Oberst has issued a statement: "I have accepted Joanie Faircloth’s apology and retraction to clear my name. This has been extremely difficult and stressful for me personally and for those I love. I’m appreciative of the family, friends, fans, and business partners who supported me throughout this and look forward to happier times as we all move forward with our lives."
"Considering that Faircloth has a long, public record of being a super-fan of Oberst and Bright Eyes, this feels a little bit closer to a story about an unstable fan than a warning tale about false rape accusations. Oberst’s dilemma is closer to that of other celebrities, like Madonna or David Letterman, who have had to deal with stalking and harassment from mentally ill people developing obsessions with them."
it's great that on the same day one story is posted that basically says falsely accusing someone of rape if you have other mental issues lets you off the hook and makes a discussion about false rape accusations irrelevant, and another story is posted saying that if you're falsely accused of rape you'd better deny it a certain way because society demands it.
btw, it really hurts me to bring up the guy from Bright Eyes in an even remotely positive way.
Spooky Apparition wrote:another man accused of rape completely blows it. note how he doesn't even acknowledge the victim'saccuser's anti-rape culture warrior's trauma or how many women this story might have triggered in the last few months. he sure seems happy to be off the hook for a felony though
Late last year, Conor Oberst was accused of raping a woman after a Bright Eyes show in 2003. In February, he sued his accuser, Joanie Faircloth, for libel, claiming his reputation had been damaged by her accusations. Earlier this week, Faircloth, whose real name is Joan Elizabeth Harris, recanted her statements in a public apology.
Now, Oberst has issued a statement: "I have accepted Joanie Faircloth’s apology and retraction to clear my name. This has been extremely difficult and stressful for me personally and for those I love. I’m appreciative of the family, friends, fans, and business partners who supported me throughout this and look forward to happier times as we all move forward with our lives."
Not enough sore winners in the world. He should have ended it with "P.S. Now that the bitch cried wolf, I hope she does get raped, and now no one will believe her."
Spooky Apparition wrote:it's great that on the same day one story is posted that basically says falsely accusing someone of rape if you have other mental issues lets you off the hook and makes a discussion about false rape accusations irrelevant, and another story is posted saying that if you're falsely accused of rape you'd better deny it a certain way because society demands it.
you can't expect everyone on earth to think the same ways about all things every day, right? unless the same person wrote these two articles
the false rape accusation thing is a goddamned disaster for feminists so of course they'll be on full alert for any funny business. rape is constantly minimized and swept under the rug, then some horrible story hits the news and is a PR windfall, but then it's negated because of whatever the fuck that duke lacrosse woman was thinking? of course people will turn a critical eye to this CAH's dude's blog
good thing I'll be dead soon, cause I'm tired of liars winning
spacehamster wrote:What's funny is that anyone thinks this is a gender topic.
I didn't understand what this one was about - cross-dressing seems gender-y to me
I guess maybe I just see a story about a fucking two-year old kid here and not another theater in the Gender Wars. The kid is two. He barely has an identity at all, much less a socially/culturally coded gender identity that includes the notion that skirts are inappropriate attire for men. My guess is he a) thinks they're more comfortable than pants and b) he looks up to his older sibling and wants to dress like her because she's his big sister and he thinks she's cool. Except for the parents' idiotic reaction, there's absolutely nothing out of the ordinary going on here. This is about two millimeters removed from parents having to teach kids that it's not okay to wear sweatpants 24/7, no matter how comfortable they are.
storm shadow wrote:This is what happens when people use the internet to get through adolescence, instead of drugs and heavy metal.
I hear ya. Article about non-problem by guy trying to demonstrate how open-minded he is. That dad is definitely the target of The Onion's mockery with shit like this: http://www.clickhole.com/blogpost/im-no ... would--226
good thing I'll be dead soon, cause I'm tired of liars winning
Necrometer wrote:rape is constantly minimized and swept under the rug, then some horrible story hits the news and is a PR windfall, but then it's negated because of whatever the fuck that duke lacrosse woman was thinking?
What bothers me is exactly that, when incidents like these are viewed in terms of how they might affect the broader 'mission' behind feminism rather than the specifics of the situation. whether or not rape is constantly minimized and swept under the rug (a debatable point) has nothing to do with the merits of THESE accusations of rape. it's like every case has to be viewed in the context of the totality of interactions between men and women throughout human history. no one accomplishes anything.
you see that sort of thinking at work in that one guy's denial and the responsibility foisted upon him to shift societal mindsets instead of just trying to clear his name, or when a writer is afraid to condemn a woman who tried to ruin a man's career with a terrible accusation because it will "hurt the cause" or some vague shit. it makes it impossible to have an honest discussion when these arguments are less about the specifics of a situation and more about a preconceived notion of what has to happen in order to right past wrongs, change society at large, etc.
you're making sense; my post was intended more as explanation than excuse
Spooky Apparition wrote:whether or not rape is constantly minimized and swept under the rug (a debatable point)
a lot of this stuff is really fuzzy and susceptible to whichever lens, but I don't feel like there's any question or reasonable debate about whether or not the extent/frequency/reality of sexual assault/abuse is largely hidden from society. maybe up for debate is why this happens: the shame and stigma victims face is probably the main thing, along with additional systemic/practical shit
good thing I'll be dead soon, cause I'm tired of liars winning
antinatalism wrote:The punishment for a false rape accusation should be actual rape.
Would there be a designated person that performs these actions? Like a state executioner? There'd have to be some new term invented like "nonconsensualation"
It would be a lottery that foxnews viewers would litterly get into brawls standing on line to play. I'm sure they dripple a tad merely saying the phrase "bitch.. in her... placce"
Whatevers going on, the idea that CYBERFEMINISTS are not doing enough in the real world rings sort of false when the primary goal of that is to shift social attitudes themselves.
i don't know, "i'm too healthy and can only move my upper body a few inches" is a pretty good line.
if there's anybody in the world who'd be fucking unobservant enough to actually damage themselves with trap-soap I guess it'd be the guy with dialup in 2007