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#81
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06-19-2026, 04:53 AM
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Re: Female Kurdish Soldier Dragged Naked
Well, I had sex with a hooker without condom. I assure you I was not hoping to get AIDS. I left my car running while I was running to the gas station but I assure you that I didn’t want it to get stolen. Yea, it’s true that no woman dresses the way they do hoping to get raped but they put themselves in a higher risk by dressing in a certain way and placing themselves in a high risk location, then you get hit with reality. It’s not dress that causes rape. Ofc it’s deviant men who causes rape. Somebody could be wearing an Afghan style burkah and still get raped by some evil men. The point is, evil exists in this world and it always will. As society, we do our best to protect women but they need to protect themselves too. We can only do so much. We can punish the rapist but that will not undo the damage. You could be wearing the most revealing dress at home and likely that nothing will happen to you but you do the same at a shady club, then we might be left with a broken soul and bunch of poor taxpayers paying the cost of bringing somebody to justice. Just like I avoid walking late night at a big city (always take uber), I think women should not be wearing revealing dresses at high risk places. Just because I take uber at night, doesn’t mean that I am 100% safe but it is much safer alternative to walking at night at a high risk place!
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#82
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06-19-2026, 07:52 PM
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Re: Female Kurdish Soldier Dragged Naked
Are you telling me you have AIDS because you made a stupid decision to have sex with a hooker? I kid. You're describing risk reduction, which nobody is arguing against. Most people already take precautions. Women lock doors, avoid certain areas, travel in groups, carry phones, watch their drinks, and make countless calculations every day that most men never even notice. The disagreement comes when clothing gets inserted into the discussion as though it belongs in the same category. Taking an Uber instead of walking alone at 2 a.m. is a decision based on an identifiable risk. Wearing a revealing outfit is not the same thing. If revealing clothing were a major predictor of rape, we'd expect women dressed conservatively, elderly women, children, and women in cultures with strict dress codes to be largely protected. They aren't. The problem is that your examples all involve a direct relationship between the action and the risk. Unprotected sex increases the risk of contracting a sexually transmitted infection. Leaving a running car unattended increases the risk of theft. Those outcomes are directly connected to the behavior. The evidence simply doesn't show the same relationship with clothing and sexual assault. Nobody is claiming evil doesn't exist or that people shouldn't take reasonable precautions. The point is that when discussions about rape immediately turn to what a woman was wearing, the conversation often ends up examining the victim's wardrobe more closely than the rapist's decision-making. There's also a practical issue. If a woman is assaulted while wearing jeans and a hoodie, most people recognize the attacker is responsible. If she's assaulted while wearing a short skirt, suddenly we're debating whether she should have dressed differently. The crime hasn't changed. The perpetrator hasn't changed. Only the victim's outfit changed. That's why people push back on this line of reasoning. Not because risk reduction is controversial, but because clothing is frequently treated as if it carries far more predictive value than the evidence actually supports.
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#85
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06-21-2026, 03:02 AM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE Poster Rank:24457 Join Date: Aug 2023 Posts: 2 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 1 Post(s)
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Re: Female Kurdish Soldier Dragged Naked
Kurds don’t fight against Muslims, PKK Terrorists fight against Turkish government. Most of the Kurds around the world are also Muslim so your statement is extremely ignorant lol
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