trinityvixen (
trinityvixen) wrote2007-07-26 04:59 pm
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And before I forget
A little bit of feminism for your day, and let this be a lesson for the future:
When someone breaks into another person's apartment, anything they do in there is a crime. It is not a joke, it is not funny, and it's not some misunderstanding or merely "inappropriate" behavior. If they touch any one living in that home, it could be perceived as assault, and, under some circumstances, excuse for the invaded to react with deadly force.
So, when a man breaks into an apartment through the fire escape's access to a window and gets into bed with the female occupant and starts touching her that is not "inappropriate touching." That is molesation. She has been molested. Fortunately, that was the worst that happened, but that is still sexual assault, given the nature of the attack, the target, and the place where it occurred (you can't tell me a criminal got into bed with a potential victim with no intention of launching any kind of sexual assault).
Please, kindly refer to such incidents correctly in the future. Columbia, I'm looking at you. I don't care how much you stress that this wasn't in one of you buildings. Morons.
When someone breaks into another person's apartment, anything they do in there is a crime. It is not a joke, it is not funny, and it's not some misunderstanding or merely "inappropriate" behavior. If they touch any one living in that home, it could be perceived as assault, and, under some circumstances, excuse for the invaded to react with deadly force.
So, when a man breaks into an apartment through the fire escape's access to a window and gets into bed with the female occupant and starts touching her that is not "inappropriate touching." That is molesation. She has been molested. Fortunately, that was the worst that happened, but that is still sexual assault, given the nature of the attack, the target, and the place where it occurred (you can't tell me a criminal got into bed with a potential victim with no intention of launching any kind of sexual assault).
Please, kindly refer to such incidents correctly in the future. Columbia, I'm looking at you. I don't care how much you stress that this wasn't in one of you buildings. Morons.
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I'd also love to see one of those writers do a story in which a male character gets put through a horrible ordeal and has emotional consequences other than rage/thirst for revenge. (Actually, Willingham's been doing that quite well in Fables.)
The other option, of course, is to make rape (as it once was) verboten in superhero comics. Kinda like the way Archie lives in a world where sex simply does not exist.
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I'd like that, too, if only to prove two things. One: you don't have to go on revenge/rage quests to fix the thing. Two: that such incidents of abuse neither call into question masculinity nor necessarily depend upon homosexual abusers to occur. That would be big of them.
No, I don't want comics censorship. I want comics to have some level of imagination that doesn't rely on the quick and easy no-one-will-be-able-to-question-us-if-we-say-they're-just-unsympathetic-to-victims-of-abuse angle.