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Fact or Fiction? Rolling Stone's UVA Gang Rape Story (2 Viewers)

DOJ report released today states that .03/5 female college students are victims of sexual assault, not 1/5 as claimed by many in the media and politics.

Right wing version:http://thefederalist.com/2014/12/11/new-doj-data-on-sexual-assaults-college-students-are-actually-less-likely-to-be-victimized/

CBS version:http://www.cbsnews.com/news/doj-releases-report-on-college-age-rape-and-sexual-assault/

BJS site:http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=5176
Wow. 20% and .61% aren't even in the same universe. Those numbers absolutely destroy the claims of rape culture.

Maybe it's time for us to stop portraying all men as monsters.
You sure your numbers are right?

edit: yeah, I see I did the same thing as fatguy.

And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
Definitely agreed that these things are hard to measure. But those numbers aren't even in the same universe either. One of them is almost certainly way off. Both are probably off to some degree, but one is likely to be much more wrong.

My worldview and my personal knowledge of those around me definitely lead me to believe that the much more outrageous number seems to probably be the one that is the most off.

 
DOJ report released today states that .03/5 female college students are victims of sexual assault, not 1/5 as claimed by many in the media and politics.

Right wing version:http://thefederalist.com/2014/12/11/new-doj-data-on-sexual-assaults-college-students-are-actually-less-likely-to-be-victimized/

CBS version:http://www.cbsnews.com/news/doj-releases-report-on-college-age-rape-and-sexual-assault/

BJS site:http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=5176
Wow. 20% and .61% aren't even in the same universe. Those numbers absolutely destroy the claims of rape culture.

Maybe it's time for us to stop portraying all men as monsters.
You sure your numbers are right?

edit: yeah, I see I did the same thing as fatguy.

And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
Definitely agreed that these things are hard to measure. But those numbers aren't even in the same universe either. One of them is almost certainly way off. Both are probably off to some degree, but one is likely to be much more wrong.

My worldview and my personal knowledge of those around me definitely lead me to believe that the much more outrageous number seems to probably be the one that is the most off.
I think most people would be shocked to know the number of women in their lives who have been a victim of sexual assault or rape at some part of their lives. Mothers, aunts, grandmothers, sisters, co-workers, friends. I happen to think the 20% number is more correct (side-note: this doesn't have to implicate a "rape-culture," which I don't really undertand that term). But I think many more woman are victims than men truly understand.

But reasonable people can disagree, I guess.

 
Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.

 
And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
I'm highly skeptical of any number attached to something like this, if for no other reason than you can drive the statistics by how you define "sexual assault." The one-in-five number that people sometimes throw around has an extremely broad definition of sexual assault that includes things like "unwanted kissing," which might technically be assault in a hyper-literal legal sense but, it's not the something that anyone really cares about either. Likewise, I'm sure you could get engineer a low number by defining your terms very narrowly. No idea if that's what the DOJ did, but I could see a researcher doing that if they had an agenda.

 
I think Lena Dunham considers anyone outside of her liberal/hippie/artsy bubble to be a Republican.
Maybe the most unbelievable story is that she went on a date with, got loaded, did coke with, and willingly shagged a college Republican (albeit under the false presumption that he would wear protection).

Was she like a totally different girl back then?
It's weird how obsessed people are with this one twenty-something writer/actress. Seems like every conservative-leaning poster on this message board believes they have some deep insight into her persona and dating habits.

Also, have you all never been to college or done coke? I was so horny and indiscriminate during either of those phases of my life I would have nailed Bea Arthur.
I can only speak for myself: I'm not obsessed with her nor pretend to know that which she hasn't already explicitly stated in overtly political terms. It just happens that she's a very vocal critic of anything to the right and people on the right see her as a non-traitorous Jane Fonda, really. Her activism is part of her notoriety and her fame. It's inextricable.

And on the contrary about college: She also plays exactly to collegiate liberal "type," and those of us -- ahem -- lucky enough to have experienced that special sort of feminist/leftist hate reserved for even somewhat outspoken critics of various campus political fads have our skin crawl just at the thought of her. It's actually the converse of your statement. It's having actually been to college from which some of my problems with her stem. Liberal arts colleges are, in some cultural critics and in my estimation, a hostile place to be for a man who likes masculine things. I never should have gone to a small liberal arts school (and we were considered conservative!) and I wouldn't do it again. I made great friends, but I dislike the institution.

I don't think anybody here is judging her for screwing and using cocaine. I'm certainly not.
I think there's a bit of a chicken and egg problem here. She wouldn't be famous for being an activist were it not for conservatives holding her up as an easy target because she fits their stereotype of a hated feminist so perfectly- wealthy background, well-educated, NYC resident and kinda chubby. If you think they'd treat her like this if she was a feminist who occasionally said some antagonizing things but was also smoking hot you're out of your mind- here's exhibit A.

If they didn't obsess about her she'd just be that woman with that weird HBO show. I stopped watching the show early in Season 2 so I could be wrong on this, but I don't believe there is anything political/strongly feminist in it at all. If anything, parts of it made women look kinda weak and needy.
I haven't watched the show, but her celebrity is socio-political. The New York Times was covering her liberal, debutante-esque parties in the social pages when she was sixteen, which is a long time before she'd made a name for herself in any way but being from that wealthy background with those liberal views. That's…pretty early. She's also been a willing participant in the culture wars as a spokesperson for the left, and receives nothing but positive media coverage in mainstream media. This drives right-wingers apoplectic. I can go into reasons for this, but then this post gets long as the day. Let's say that her political activism appeals to a particular voter that conservatives are losing in droves as the years increase -- single, unmarried, white women in their twenties who then form lifelong bonds with cultural leftism and the political parties that represent these views.
Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.

 
My biggest complaint about Dunham isn't her politics but the fact that I'm constantly exposed to her naked body on the show while we have yet to see Allison Williams ####

 
I think Lena Dunham considers anyone outside of her liberal/hippie/artsy bubble to be a Republican.
Maybe the most unbelievable story is that she went on a date with, got loaded, did coke with, and willingly shagged a college Republican (albeit under the false presumption that he would wear protection).

Was she like a totally different girl back then?
It's weird how obsessed people are with this one twenty-something writer/actress. Seems like every conservative-leaning poster on this message board believes they have some deep insight into her persona and dating habits.

Also, have you all never been to college or done coke? I was so horny and indiscriminate during either of those phases of my life I would have nailed Bea Arthur.
I can only speak for myself: I'm not obsessed with her nor pretend to know that which she hasn't already explicitly stated in overtly political terms. It just happens that she's a very vocal critic of anything to the right and people on the right see her as a non-traitorous Jane Fonda, really. Her activism is part of her notoriety and her fame. It's inextricable.

And on the contrary about college: She also plays exactly to collegiate liberal "type," and those of us -- ahem -- lucky enough to have experienced that special sort of feminist/leftist hate reserved for even somewhat outspoken critics of various campus political fads have our skin crawl just at the thought of her. It's actually the converse of your statement. It's having actually been to college from which some of my problems with her stem. Liberal arts colleges are, in some cultural critics and in my estimation, a hostile place to be for a man who likes masculine things. I never should have gone to a small liberal arts school (and we were considered conservative!) and I wouldn't do it again. I made great friends, but I dislike the institution.

I don't think anybody here is judging her for screwing and using cocaine. I'm certainly not.
I think there's a bit of a chicken and egg problem here. She wouldn't be famous for being an activist were it not for conservatives holding her up as an easy target because she fits their stereotype of a hated feminist so perfectly- wealthy background, well-educated, NYC resident and kinda chubby. If you think they'd treat her like this if she was a feminist who occasionally said some antagonizing things but was also smoking hot you're out of your mind- here's exhibit A.

If they didn't obsess about her she'd just be that woman with that weird HBO show. I stopped watching the show early in Season 2 so I could be wrong on this, but I don't believe there is anything political/strongly feminist in it at all. If anything, parts of it made women look kinda weak and needy.
I haven't watched the show, but her celebrity is socio-political. The New York Times was covering her liberal, debutante-esque parties in the social pages when she was sixteen, which is a long time before she'd made a name for herself in any way but being from that wealthy background with those liberal views. That's…pretty early. She's also been a willing participant in the culture wars as a spokesperson for the left, and receives nothing but positive media coverage in mainstream media. This drives right-wingers apoplectic. I can go into reasons for this, but then this post gets long as the day. Let's say that her political activism appeals to a particular voter that conservatives are losing in droves as the years increase -- single, unmarried, white women in their twenties who then form lifelong bonds with cultural leftism and the political parties that represent these views.
Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
They chose her because of stuff like this.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o6G3nwhPuR4

 
Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.
My friends, long veterans of both journalism and politics, had never even heard of her when I brought her up a few years ago on an annual trip we used to take. I was stunned. "Never heard of Lena Dunham?"

"Nope," they responded.

"Must be nice," I thought.

Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
Weirdly, and this has to be anecdotal and for that I apologize, I happen to be friends with people who aren't my age for various reasons. A few years ago, they were still in their late twenties, and some of the single women love Lena Dunham. My Facebook feed is full of some Lena Dunham. And the politics and musings about men that you see from these girls is appalling. So I can see those conservatives that work on campuses and stuff -- well, I can see what they deal with when it comes to proselytizing and the like. So there's a huge cottage industry here and she isn't a boogeyman, but really a generational voice that conservatives rightly feel that they have to contend with.

If you'll permit me a general observation and a defense of myself a bit: I tell people this about the "culture wars." It's the old saw about "politics isn't through with you…" You can detest the culture wars. You can rather they'd go away. You can not want to get involved. You can find them odious and think that they appeal to a person of a certain disposition. But the culture wars haven't finished with you. And we just saw it last week with the UVA thing. If you aren't willing to address them and their claims, you'll wind up with policy that reflects where the culture wars are. And that's how the culture wars become political, which becomes personal, especially for the feminist left, which is where its intellectual and economic origins lie -- in the politically personal.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.
My friends, long veterans of both journalism and politics, had never even heard of her when I brought her up a few years ago on an annual trip we used to take. I was stunned. "Never heard of Lena Dunham?"

"Nope," they responded.

"Must be nice," I thought.

Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
Weirdly, and this has to be anecdotal and for that I apologize, I happen to be friends with people who aren't my age for various reasons. A few years ago, they were still in their late twenties, and some of the single women love Lena Dunham. My Facebook feed is full of some Lena Dunham. And the politics and musings about men that you see from these girls is appalling. So I can see those conservatives that work on campuses and stuff -- well, I can see what they deal with when it comes to proselytizing and the like. So there's a huge cottage industry here and she isn't a boogeyman, but really a generational voice that conservatives rightly feel that they have to contend with.

If you'll permit me a general observation and a defense of myself a bit: I tell people this about the "culture wars." It's the old saw about "politics isn't through with you…" You can detest the culture wars. You can rather they'd go away. You can not want to get involved. You can find them odious and think that they appeal to a person of a certain disposition. But the culture wars haven't finished with you. And we just saw it last week with the UVA thing. If you aren't willing to address them and their claims, you'll wind up with policy that reflects where the culture wars are. And that's how the culture wars become political, which becomes personal, especially for the feminist left, which is where its intellectual and economic origins lie -- in the politically personal.
I suspect your longstanding familiarity with her is not the case for most people. Most people know her from the TV show and nothing else, and know about her politics only because of the National Review's ridiculous hatchet job of a cover story (which is where the "rape accuser" stuff started).

 
And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
I'm highly skeptical of any number attached to something like this, if for no other reason than you can drive the statistics by how you define "sexual assault." The one-in-five number that people sometimes throw around has an extremely broad definition of sexual assault that includes things like "unwanted kissing," which might technically be assault in a hyper-literal legal sense but, it's not the something that anyone really cares about either. Likewise, I'm sure you could get engineer a low number by defining your terms very narrowly. No idea if that's what the DOJ did, but I could see a researcher doing that if they had an agenda.
Absolutely agree, IK. You would probably be really interested, just from an intellecual level, to read the second and third page of the linked report, which talks about the methodology used: http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/rsavcaf9513.pdf

It is very interesting. I still think the number under-represents, but from my very quick read-through, I don't see anything that I can criticise on the methodological front in this report. But I'm sure someone will. (yes, I could nitpick, and say much the same that you say above -- just from the "other side."). But it certainly seems fair.

And I was talking merely about personal experience. Everybody defines "unacceptable" sexual assault differently, I'm sure. But I do know a remarkably surprising number of women in my life -- parent, granparents, aunts and great-aunts, co-workers, close-relations, and friends, who I know have been victims of rape, incest, sexual assault. It happens a lot. These are hard conversations to have, but (for example), I wonder if many posters here had real conversations with their mothers, aunts, or other relations about this subject, whether they would be surprised to hear about their famiily members' experiences with it.

 
Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.
My friends, long veterans of both journalism and politics, had never even heard of her when I brought her up a few years ago on an annual trip we used to take. I was stunned. "Never heard of Lena Dunham?"

"Nope," they responded.

"Must be nice," I thought.

Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
Weirdly, and this has to be anecdotal and for that I apologize, I happen to be friends with people who aren't my age for various reasons. A few years ago, they were still in their late twenties, and some of the single women love Lena Dunham. My Facebook feed is full of some Lena Dunham. And the politics and musings about men that you see from these girls is appalling. So I can see those conservatives that work on campuses and stuff -- well, I can see what they deal with when it comes to proselytizing and the like. So there's a huge cottage industry here and she isn't a boogeyman, but really a generational voice that conservatives rightly feel that they have to contend with.

If you'll permit me a general observation and a defense of myself a bit: I tell people this about the "culture wars." It's the old saw about "politics isn't through with you…" You can detest the culture wars. You can rather they'd go away. You can not want to get involved. You can find them odious and think that they appeal to a person of a certain disposition. But the culture wars haven't finished with you. And we just saw it last week with the UVA thing. If you aren't willing to address them and their claims, you'll wind up with policy that reflects where the culture wars are. And that's how the culture wars become political, which becomes personal, especially for the feminist left, which is where its intellectual and economic origins lie -- in the politically personal.
I suspect your longstanding familiarity with her is not the case for most people. Most people know her from the TV show and nothing else, and know about her politics only because of the National Review's ridiculous hatchet job of a cover story (which is where the "rape accuser" stuff started).
Probably not. I wasn't saying it to prove my longstanding knowledge of her. I was doing it to show how even plugged in people had heard nothing of her when she first came out, and it shouldn't surprise anybody that people still don't know of her political activism. I was relating to Steve Tasker by saying, "yeah, even friends I'd expect to know don't know." My knowledge of her came from two girls on my Facebook feed and having had caught the first episode of Girls, which I was immediately struck by.

The two girls laying in the tub and the quick anal sex within minutes of the opening credits was an interesting choice.

And NR has actually done a service is exposing some of her claims, which means it's not a hatchet job at all. It it's Kevin Williamson you're talking about, he's probably the furthest thing from a hack you'll find these days. If there's any hack jobs, it's her talking about putting marbles in her sister's ######, masturbating while next to her baby sister, and making a false rape claim in a "memoir."

 
DOJ report released today states that .03/5 female college students are victims of sexual assault, not 1/5 as claimed by many in the media and politics.

Right wing version:

http://thefederalist.com/2014/12/11/new-doj-data-on-sexual-assaults-college-students-are-actually-less-likely-to-be-victimized/

CBS version:

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/doj-releases-report-on-college-age-rape-and-sexual-assault/

BJS site:

http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=5176
Wow. 20% and .61% aren't even in the same universe. Those numbers absolutely destroy the claims of rape culture.

Maybe it's time for us to stop portraying all men as monsters.
You sure your numbers are right?

edit: yeah, I see I did the same thing as fatguy.

And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
only in America would we politicize even this statistic. America has truly lost its moral compass as fewer and fewer or our institutions are concerned about the actual facts.

 
I think Lena Dunham considers anyone outside of her liberal/hippie/artsy bubble to be a Republican.
Maybe the most unbelievable story is that she went on a date with, got loaded, did coke with, and willingly shagged a college Republican (albeit under the false presumption that he would wear protection).

Was she like a totally different girl back then?
It's weird how obsessed people are with this one twenty-something writer/actress. Seems like every conservative-leaning poster on this message board believes they have some deep insight into her persona and dating habits.

Also, have you all never been to college or done coke? I was so horny and indiscriminate during either of those phases of my life I would have nailed Bea Arthur.
I can only speak for myself: I'm not obsessed with her nor pretend to know that which she hasn't already explicitly stated in overtly political terms. It just happens that she's a very vocal critic of anything to the right and people on the right see her as a non-traitorous Jane Fonda, really. Her activism is part of her notoriety and her fame. It's inextricable.

And on the contrary about college: She also plays exactly to collegiate liberal "type," and those of us -- ahem -- lucky enough to have experienced that special sort of feminist/leftist hate reserved for even somewhat outspoken critics of various campus political fads have our skin crawl just at the thought of her. It's actually the converse of your statement. It's having actually been to college from which some of my problems with her stem. Liberal arts colleges are, in some cultural critics and in my estimation, a hostile place to be for a man who likes masculine things. I never should have gone to a small liberal arts school (and we were considered conservative!) and I wouldn't do it again. I made great friends, but I dislike the institution.

I don't think anybody here is judging her for screwing and using cocaine. I'm certainly not.
I think there's a bit of a chicken and egg problem here. She wouldn't be famous for being an activist were it not for conservatives holding her up as an easy target because she fits their stereotype of a hated feminist so perfectly- wealthy background, well-educated, NYC resident and kinda chubby. If you think they'd treat her like this if she was a feminist who occasionally said some antagonizing things but was also smoking hot you're out of your mind- here's exhibit A.

If they didn't obsess about her she'd just be that woman with that weird HBO show. I stopped watching the show early in Season 2 so I could be wrong on this, but I don't believe there is anything political/strongly feminist in it at all. If anything, parts of it made women look kinda weak and needy.
I haven't watched the show, but her celebrity is socio-political. The New York Times was covering her liberal, debutante-esque parties in the social pages when she was sixteen, which is a long time before she'd made a name for herself in any way but being from that wealthy background with those liberal views. That's…pretty early. She's also been a willing participant in the culture wars as a spokesperson for the left, and receives nothing but positive media coverage in mainstream media. This drives right-wingers apoplectic. I can go into reasons for this, but then this post gets long as the day. Let's say that her political activism appeals to a particular voter that conservatives are losing in droves as the years increase -- single, unmarried, white women in their twenties who then form lifelong bonds with cultural leftism and the political parties that represent these views.
Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
I'm not a politics geek, but the first time I became aware of Dunham in a political context was when she did those campaign ads for Obama in 2012....

 
Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.
My friends, long veterans of both journalism and politics, had never even heard of her when I brought her up a few years ago on an annual trip we used to take. I was stunned. "Never heard of Lena Dunham?"

"Nope," they responded.

"Must be nice," I thought.

Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
Weirdly, and this has to be anecdotal and for that I apologize, I happen to be friends with people who aren't my age for various reasons. A few years ago, they were still in their late twenties, and some of the single women love Lena Dunham. My Facebook feed is full of some Lena Dunham. And the politics and musings about men that you see from these girls is appalling. So I can see those conservatives that work on campuses and stuff -- well, I can see what they deal with when it comes to proselytizing and the like. So there's a huge cottage industry here and she isn't a boogeyman, but really a generational voice that conservatives rightly feel that they have to contend with.

If you'll permit me a general observation and a defense of myself a bit: I tell people this about the "culture wars." It's the old saw about "politics isn't through with you…" You can detest the culture wars. You can rather they'd go away. You can not want to get involved. You can find them odious and think that they appeal to a person of a certain disposition. But the culture wars haven't finished with you. And we just saw it last week with the UVA thing. If you aren't willing to address them and their claims, you'll wind up with policy that reflects where the culture wars are. And that's how the culture wars become political, which becomes personal, especially for the feminist left, which is where its intellectual and economic origins lie -- in the politically personal.
I suspect your longstanding familiarity with her is not the case for most people. Most people know her from the TV show and nothing else, and know about her politics only because of the National Review's ridiculous hatchet job of a cover story (which is where the "rape accuser" stuff started).
Probably not. I wasn't saying it to prove my longstanding knowledge of her. I was doing it to show how even plugged in people had heard nothing of her when she first came out, and it shouldn't surprise anybody that people still don't know of her political activism. I was relating to Steve Tasker by saying, "yeah, even friends I'd expect to know don't know." My knowledge of her came from two girls on my Facebook feed and having had caught the first episode of Girls, which I was immediately struck by.

The two girls laying in the tub and the quick anal sex within minutes of the opening credits was an interesting choice.

And NR has actually done a service is exposing some of her claims, which means it's not a hatchet job at all. It it's Kevin Williamson you're talking about, he's probably the furthest thing from a hack you'll find these days. If there's any hack jobs, it's her talking about putting marbles in her sister's ######, masturbating while next to her baby sister, and making a false rape claim in a "memoir."
It was a horrible hatchet job, intentionally inflammatory red meat meant to appeal to idiots who prefer personal attacks to substantive arguments. The Post highlighted some of it here. It was also, as I mentioned before, incredibly silly and lacking in self-awareness to attack her "privilege" considering the source.

Also, not sure why you say she made a false rape claim since (1) since there's no evidence she lied about the account, only that she used a pseudonym that resulted in an unfortunate coincidence, and (2) she was hesitant to call it a rape and also didn't name the person. You should slow your roll here IMO. Not only is your personal dislike of her making you look like a bit of an obsessed lunatic about a 26 year old actress/writer of marginal relevance, but it's also a bit hypocritical to call someone out for being a false rape accuser without concrete evidence that it was false. You're engaging in exactly the same behavior you're protesting.

 
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Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.
My friends, long veterans of both journalism and politics, had never even heard of her when I brought her up a few years ago on an annual trip we used to take. I was stunned. "Never heard of Lena Dunham?"

"Nope," they responded.

"Must be nice," I thought.

Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
Weirdly, and this has to be anecdotal and for that I apologize, I happen to be friends with people who aren't my age for various reasons. A few years ago, they were still in their late twenties, and some of the single women love Lena Dunham. My Facebook feed is full of some Lena Dunham. And the politics and musings about men that you see from these girls is appalling. So I can see those conservatives that work on campuses and stuff -- well, I can see what they deal with when it comes to proselytizing and the like. So there's a huge cottage industry here and she isn't a boogeyman, but really a generational voice that conservatives rightly feel that they have to contend with.

If you'll permit me a general observation and a defense of myself a bit: I tell people this about the "culture wars." It's the old saw about "politics isn't through with you…" You can detest the culture wars. You can rather they'd go away. You can not want to get involved. You can find them odious and think that they appeal to a person of a certain disposition. But the culture wars haven't finished with you. And we just saw it last week with the UVA thing. If you aren't willing to address them and their claims, you'll wind up with policy that reflects where the culture wars are. And that's how the culture wars become political, which becomes personal, especially for the feminist left, which is where its intellectual and economic origins lie -- in the politically personal.
I suspect your longstanding familiarity with her is not the case for most people. Most people know her from the TV show and nothing else, and know about her politics only because of the National Review's ridiculous hatchet job of a cover story (which is where the "rape accuser" stuff started).
Probably not. I wasn't saying it to prove my longstanding knowledge of her. I was doing it to show how even plugged in people had heard nothing of her when she first came out, and it shouldn't surprise anybody that people still don't know of her political activism. I was relating to Steve Tasker by saying, "yeah, even friends I'd expect to know don't know." My knowledge of her came from two girls on my Facebook feed and having had caught the first episode of Girls, which I was immediately struck by.

The two girls laying in the tub and the quick anal sex within minutes of the opening credits was an interesting choice.

And NR has actually done a service is exposing some of her claims, which means it's not a hatchet job at all. It it's Kevin Williamson you're talking about, he's probably the furthest thing from a hack you'll find these days. If there's any hack jobs, it's her talking about putting marbles in her sister's ######, masturbating while next to her baby sister, and making a false rape claim in a "memoir."
It was a horrible hatchet job, intentionally inflammatory red meat meant to appeal to idiots who prefer personal attacks to substantive arguments. The Post highlighted some of it here. It was also, as I mentioned before, incredibly silly and lacking in self-awareness to attack her "privilege" considering the source.

Also, not sure why you say she made a false rape claim since (1) since there's no evidence she lied about the account, only that she used a pseudonym that resulted in an unfortunate coincidence, and (2) she was hesitant to call it a rape and also didn't name the person. You should slow your roll here IMO. Not only is your personal dislike of her making you look like a bit of an obsessed lunatic about a 26 year old actress/writer of marginal relevance, but it's also a bit hypocritical to call someone out for being a false rape accuser without concrete evidence that it was false. You're engaging in exactly the same behavior you're protesting.
I really don't care about her that much. I care more about your defense of her and casting aspersions on those who think she acted wrongly in her personal life and the way she wrote her memoir. And declaratives about Williamson's piece aren't going to make them any more true for your own certitude. What's funny is that you keep defending her and casting aspersions on those that sort of have an issue with her "memoir" and her general ridiculousness, which is going to lead to one guy being falsely accused of rape and a large settlement.

Not sure the facts are on your side here.

eta* That Style Blog article was a ripping takedown that quoted eight words from the article.

 
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DOJ report released today states that .03/5 female college students are victims of sexual assault, not 1/5 as claimed by many in the media and politics.

Right wing version:

http://thefederalist.com/2014/12/11/new-doj-data-on-sexual-assaults-college-students-are-actually-less-likely-to-be-victimized/

CBS version:

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/doj-releases-report-on-college-age-rape-and-sexual-assault/

BJS site:

http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=5176
Wow. 20% and .61% aren't even in the same universe. Those numbers absolutely destroy the claims of rape culture.

Maybe it's time for us to stop portraying all men as monsters.
You sure your numbers are right?

edit: yeah, I see I did the same thing as fatguy.

And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
only in America would we politicize even this statistic. America has truly lost its moral compass as fewer and fewer or our institutions are concerned about the actual facts.
(1) regarding your first sentence: of course this statistic is politicized. Gender issues have been politicized since the beginning of our country (which, by the way, is probably one of the best places for a woman to be, fwiw).

(2) regarding your second: that's the problem: "actual facts" are not easy to come by, regardless of issue. This is based on a self-reporting survey, for god's sake, there are NO "actual facts" that we are really dealing with, unless you are talking about number of women actually interviewed.

take a good look at IK's earlier response. He nails it.

 
Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.
My friends, long veterans of both journalism and politics, had never even heard of her when I brought her up a few years ago on an annual trip we used to take. I was stunned. "Never heard of Lena Dunham?"

"Nope," they responded.

"Must be nice," I thought.

Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
Weirdly, and this has to be anecdotal and for that I apologize, I happen to be friends with people who aren't my age for various reasons. A few years ago, they were still in their late twenties, and some of the single women love Lena Dunham. My Facebook feed is full of some Lena Dunham. And the politics and musings about men that you see from these girls is appalling. So I can see those conservatives that work on campuses and stuff -- well, I can see what they deal with when it comes to proselytizing and the like. So there's a huge cottage industry here and she isn't a boogeyman, but really a generational voice that conservatives rightly feel that they have to contend with.

If you'll permit me a general observation and a defense of myself a bit: I tell people this about the "culture wars." It's the old saw about "politics isn't through with you…" You can detest the culture wars. You can rather they'd go away. You can not want to get involved. You can find them odious and think that they appeal to a person of a certain disposition. But the culture wars haven't finished with you. And we just saw it last week with the UVA thing. If you aren't willing to address them and their claims, you'll wind up with policy that reflects where the culture wars are. And that's how the culture wars become political, which becomes personal, especially for the feminist left, which is where its intellectual and economic origins lie -- in the politically personal.
I suspect your longstanding familiarity with her is not the case for most people. Most people know her from the TV show and nothing else, and know about her politics only because of the National Review's ridiculous hatchet job of a cover story (which is where the "rape accuser" stuff started).
Probably not. I wasn't saying it to prove my longstanding knowledge of her. I was doing it to show how even plugged in people had heard nothing of her when she first came out, and it shouldn't surprise anybody that people still don't know of her political activism. I was relating to Steve Tasker by saying, "yeah, even friends I'd expect to know don't know." My knowledge of her came from two girls on my Facebook feed and having had caught the first episode of Girls, which I was immediately struck by.

The two girls laying in the tub and the quick anal sex within minutes of the opening credits was an interesting choice.

And NR has actually done a service is exposing some of her claims, which means it's not a hatchet job at all. It it's Kevin Williamson you're talking about, he's probably the furthest thing from a hack you'll find these days. If there's any hack jobs, it's her talking about putting marbles in her sister's ######, masturbating while next to her baby sister, and making a false rape claim in a "memoir."
It was a horrible hatchet job, intentionally inflammatory red meat meant to appeal to idiots who prefer personal attacks to substantive arguments. The Post highlighted some of it here. It was also, as I mentioned before, incredibly silly and lacking in self-awareness to attack her "privilege" considering the source.

Also, not sure why you say she made a false rape claim since (1) since there's no evidence she lied about the account, only that she used a pseudonym that resulted in an unfortunate coincidence, and (2) she was hesitant to call it a rape and also didn't name the person. You should slow your roll here IMO. Not only is your personal dislike of her making you look like a bit of an obsessed lunatic about a 26 year old actress/writer of marginal relevance, but it's also a bit hypocritical to call someone out for being a false rape accuser without concrete evidence that it was false. You're engaging in exactly the same behavior you're protesting.
I really don't care about her that much. I care more about your defense of her and casting aspersions on those who think she acted wrongly in her personal life and the way she wrote her memoir. And declaratives about Williamson's piece aren't going to make them any more true for your own certitude. What's funny is that you keep defending her and casting aspersions on those that sort of have an issue with her "memoir" and her general ridiculousness, which is going to lead to one guy being falsely accused of rape and a large settlement.

Not sure the facts are on your side here.

eta* That Style Blog article was a ripping takedown that quoted eight words from the article.
Sure, I can tell.

You seem to be OK with the National Review's work here. I considered it a lowbrow personal attack that represent a new low from a once proud publication, to say nothing of the almost comical hypocrisy/double standard I've pointed out a number of times now. If you think there's value in that sort of work there's really no reason to continue this discussion. You and I just have different opinions about journalism.

 
Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.
My friends, long veterans of both journalism and politics, had never even heard of her when I brought her up a few years ago on an annual trip we used to take. I was stunned. "Never heard of Lena Dunham?"

"Nope," they responded.

"Must be nice," I thought.

Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
Weirdly, and this has to be anecdotal and for that I apologize, I happen to be friends with people who aren't my age for various reasons. A few years ago, they were still in their late twenties, and some of the single women love Lena Dunham. My Facebook feed is full of some Lena Dunham. And the politics and musings about men that you see from these girls is appalling. So I can see those conservatives that work on campuses and stuff -- well, I can see what they deal with when it comes to proselytizing and the like. So there's a huge cottage industry here and she isn't a boogeyman, but really a generational voice that conservatives rightly feel that they have to contend with.

If you'll permit me a general observation and a defense of myself a bit: I tell people this about the "culture wars." It's the old saw about "politics isn't through with you…" You can detest the culture wars. You can rather they'd go away. You can not want to get involved. You can find them odious and think that they appeal to a person of a certain disposition. But the culture wars haven't finished with you. And we just saw it last week with the UVA thing. If you aren't willing to address them and their claims, you'll wind up with policy that reflects where the culture wars are. And that's how the culture wars become political, which becomes personal, especially for the feminist left, which is where its intellectual and economic origins lie -- in the politically personal.
I suspect your longstanding familiarity with her is not the case for most people. Most people know her from the TV show and nothing else, and know about her politics only because of the National Review's ridiculous hatchet job of a cover story (which is where the "rape accuser" stuff started).
Probably not. I wasn't saying it to prove my longstanding knowledge of her. I was doing it to show how even plugged in people had heard nothing of her when she first came out, and it shouldn't surprise anybody that people still don't know of her political activism. I was relating to Steve Tasker by saying, "yeah, even friends I'd expect to know don't know." My knowledge of her came from two girls on my Facebook feed and having had caught the first episode of Girls, which I was immediately struck by.

The two girls laying in the tub and the quick anal sex within minutes of the opening credits was an interesting choice.

And NR has actually done a service is exposing some of her claims, which means it's not a hatchet job at all. It it's Kevin Williamson you're talking about, he's probably the furthest thing from a hack you'll find these days. If there's any hack jobs, it's her talking about putting marbles in her sister's ######, masturbating while next to her baby sister, and making a false rape claim in a "memoir."
It was a horrible hatchet job, intentionally inflammatory red meat meant to appeal to idiots who prefer personal attacks to substantive arguments. The Post highlighted some of it here. It was also, as I mentioned before, incredibly silly and lacking in self-awareness to attack her "privilege" considering the source.

Also, not sure why you say she made a false rape claim since (1) since there's no evidence she lied about the account, only that she used a pseudonym that resulted in an unfortunate coincidence, and (2) she was hesitant to call it a rape and also didn't name the person. You should slow your roll here IMO. Not only is your personal dislike of her making you look like a bit of an obsessed lunatic about a 26 year old actress/writer of marginal relevance, but it's also a bit hypocritical to call someone out for being a false rape accuser without concrete evidence that it was false. You're engaging in exactly the same behavior you're protesting.
I really don't care about her that much. I care more about your defense of her and casting aspersions on those who think she acted wrongly in her personal life and the way she wrote her memoir. And declaratives about Williamson's piece aren't going to make them any more true for your own certitude. What's funny is that you keep defending her and casting aspersions on those that sort of have an issue with her "memoir" and her general ridiculousness, which is going to lead to one guy being falsely accused of rape and a large settlement.

Not sure the facts are on your side here.

eta* That Style Blog article was a ripping takedown that quoted eight words from the article.
Sure, I can tell.

You seem to be OK with the National Review's work here. I considered it a lowbrow personal attack that represent a new low from a once proud publication, to say nothing of the almost comical hypocrisy/double standard I've pointed out a number of times now. If you think there's value in that sort of work there's really no reason to continue this discussion. You and I just have different opinions about journalism.
And memoirs.

 
DOJ report released today states that .03/5 female college students are victims of sexual assault, not 1/5 as claimed by many in the media and politics.

Right wing version:

http://thefederalist.com/2014/12/11/new-doj-data-on-sexual-assaults-college-students-are-actually-less-likely-to-be-victimized/

CBS version:

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/doj-releases-report-on-college-age-rape-and-sexual-assault/

BJS site:

http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=5176
Wow. 20% and .61% aren't even in the same universe. Those numbers absolutely destroy the claims of rape culture.

Maybe it's time for us to stop portraying all men as monsters.
You sure your numbers are right?

edit: yeah, I see I did the same thing as fatguy.

And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
only in America would we politicize even this statistic. America has truly lost its moral compass as fewer and fewer or our institutions are concerned about the actual facts.
(1) regarding your first sentence: of course this statistic is politicized. Gender issues have been politicized since the beginning of our country (which, by the way, is probably one of the best places for a woman to be, fwiw).

(2) regarding your second: that's the problem: "actual facts" are not easy to come by, regardless of issue. This is based on a self-reporting survey, for god's sake, there are NO "actual facts" that we are really dealing with, unless you are talking about number of women actually interviewed.

take a good look at IK's earlier response. He nails it.
Rape is not a "gender issue", it's a crime issue....maybe this mindset is where the train starts to run off of the tracks...

 
Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.
My friends, long veterans of both journalism and politics, had never even heard of her when I brought her up a few years ago on an annual trip we used to take. I was stunned. "Never heard of Lena Dunham?"

"Nope," they responded.

"Must be nice," I thought.

Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
Weirdly, and this has to be anecdotal and for that I apologize, I happen to be friends with people who aren't my age for various reasons. A few years ago, they were still in their late twenties, and some of the single women love Lena Dunham. My Facebook feed is full of some Lena Dunham. And the politics and musings about men that you see from these girls is appalling. So I can see those conservatives that work on campuses and stuff -- well, I can see what they deal with when it comes to proselytizing and the like. So there's a huge cottage industry here and she isn't a boogeyman, but really a generational voice that conservatives rightly feel that they have to contend with.

If you'll permit me a general observation and a defense of myself a bit: I tell people this about the "culture wars." It's the old saw about "politics isn't through with you…" You can detest the culture wars. You can rather they'd go away. You can not want to get involved. You can find them odious and think that they appeal to a person of a certain disposition. But the culture wars haven't finished with you. And we just saw it last week with the UVA thing. If you aren't willing to address them and their claims, you'll wind up with policy that reflects where the culture wars are. And that's how the culture wars become political, which becomes personal, especially for the feminist left, which is where its intellectual and economic origins lie -- in the politically personal.
I suspect your longstanding familiarity with her is not the case for most people. Most people know her from the TV show and nothing else, and know about her politics only because of the National Review's ridiculous hatchet job of a cover story (which is where the "rape accuser" stuff started).
Probably not. I wasn't saying it to prove my longstanding knowledge of her. I was doing it to show how even plugged in people had heard nothing of her when she first came out, and it shouldn't surprise anybody that people still don't know of her political activism. I was relating to Steve Tasker by saying, "yeah, even friends I'd expect to know don't know." My knowledge of her came from two girls on my Facebook feed and having had caught the first episode of Girls, which I was immediately struck by.

The two girls laying in the tub and the quick anal sex within minutes of the opening credits was an interesting choice.

And NR has actually done a service is exposing some of her claims, which means it's not a hatchet job at all. It it's Kevin Williamson you're talking about, he's probably the furthest thing from a hack you'll find these days. If there's any hack jobs, it's her talking about putting marbles in her sister's ######, masturbating while next to her baby sister, and making a false rape claim in a "memoir."
It was a horrible hatchet job, intentionally inflammatory red meat meant to appeal to idiots who prefer personal attacks to substantive arguments. The Post highlighted some of it here. It was also, as I mentioned before, incredibly silly and lacking in self-awareness to attack her "privilege" considering the source.

Also, not sure why you say she made a false rape claim since (1) since there's no evidence she lied about the account, only that she used a pseudonym that resulted in an unfortunate coincidence, and (2) she was hesitant to call it a rape and also didn't name the person. You should slow your roll here IMO. Not only is your personal dislike of her making you look like a bit of an obsessed lunatic about a 26 year old actress/writer of marginal relevance, but it's also a bit hypocritical to call someone out for being a false rape accuser without concrete evidence that it was false. You're engaging in exactly the same behavior you're protesting.
I really don't care about her that much. I care more about your defense of her and casting aspersions on those who think she acted wrongly in her personal life and the way she wrote her memoir. And declaratives about Williamson's piece aren't going to make them any more true for your own certitude. What's funny is that you keep defending her and casting aspersions on those that sort of have an issue with her "memoir" and her general ridiculousness, which is going to lead to one guy being falsely accused of rape and a large settlement.

Not sure the facts are on your side here.

eta* That Style Blog article was a ripping takedown that quoted eight words from the article.
Sure, I can tell.

You seem to be OK with the National Review's work here. I considered it a lowbrow personal attack that represent a new low from a once proud publication, to say nothing of the almost comical hypocrisy/double standard I've pointed out a number of times now. If you think there's value in that sort of work there's really no reason to continue this discussion. You and I just have different opinions about journalism.
And memoirs.
I don't recall sharing any opinions about memoirs in general or Dunham's in particular. But yes, to the extent that you think a 26 year old writer/actress's memoirs are important enough to warrant a National Review cover with a photoshop of insults and buzzwords on her arm tattoo and a privilege, sex and weight-obsessed takedown in the story itself, then yeah, I suppose we have different opinions about them.

 
Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.
My friends, long veterans of both journalism and politics, had never even heard of her when I brought her up a few years ago on an annual trip we used to take. I was stunned. "Never heard of Lena Dunham?"

"Nope," they responded.

"Must be nice," I thought.

Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
Weirdly, and this has to be anecdotal and for that I apologize, I happen to be friends with people who aren't my age for various reasons. A few years ago, they were still in their late twenties, and some of the single women love Lena Dunham. My Facebook feed is full of some Lena Dunham. And the politics and musings about men that you see from these girls is appalling. So I can see those conservatives that work on campuses and stuff -- well, I can see what they deal with when it comes to proselytizing and the like. So there's a huge cottage industry here and she isn't a boogeyman, but really a generational voice that conservatives rightly feel that they have to contend with.

If you'll permit me a general observation and a defense of myself a bit: I tell people this about the "culture wars." It's the old saw about "politics isn't through with you…" You can detest the culture wars. You can rather they'd go away. You can not want to get involved. You can find them odious and think that they appeal to a person of a certain disposition. But the culture wars haven't finished with you. And we just saw it last week with the UVA thing. If you aren't willing to address them and their claims, you'll wind up with policy that reflects where the culture wars are. And that's how the culture wars become political, which becomes personal, especially for the feminist left, which is where its intellectual and economic origins lie -- in the politically personal.
I suspect your longstanding familiarity with her is not the case for most people. Most people know her from the TV show and nothing else, and know about her politics only because of the National Review's ridiculous hatchet job of a cover story (which is where the "rape accuser" stuff started).
Probably not. I wasn't saying it to prove my longstanding knowledge of her. I was doing it to show how even plugged in people had heard nothing of her when she first came out, and it shouldn't surprise anybody that people still don't know of her political activism. I was relating to Steve Tasker by saying, "yeah, even friends I'd expect to know don't know." My knowledge of her came from two girls on my Facebook feed and having had caught the first episode of Girls, which I was immediately struck by.

The two girls laying in the tub and the quick anal sex within minutes of the opening credits was an interesting choice.

And NR has actually done a service is exposing some of her claims, which means it's not a hatchet job at all. It it's Kevin Williamson you're talking about, he's probably the furthest thing from a hack you'll find these days. If there's any hack jobs, it's her talking about putting marbles in her sister's ######, masturbating while next to her baby sister, and making a false rape claim in a "memoir."
It was a horrible hatchet job, intentionally inflammatory red meat meant to appeal to idiots who prefer personal attacks to substantive arguments. The Post highlighted some of it here. It was also, as I mentioned before, incredibly silly and lacking in self-awareness to attack her "privilege" considering the source.

Also, not sure why you say she made a false rape claim since (1) since there's no evidence she lied about the account, only that she used a pseudonym that resulted in an unfortunate coincidence, and (2) she was hesitant to call it a rape and also didn't name the person. You should slow your roll here IMO. Not only is your personal dislike of her making you look like a bit of an obsessed lunatic about a 26 year old actress/writer of marginal relevance, but it's also a bit hypocritical to call someone out for being a false rape accuser without concrete evidence that it was false. You're engaging in exactly the same behavior you're protesting.
I really don't care about her that much. I care more about your defense of her and casting aspersions on those who think she acted wrongly in her personal life and the way she wrote her memoir. And declaratives about Williamson's piece aren't going to make them any more true for your own certitude. What's funny is that you keep defending her and casting aspersions on those that sort of have an issue with her "memoir" and her general ridiculousness, which is going to lead to one guy being falsely accused of rape and a large settlement.

Not sure the facts are on your side here.

eta* That Style Blog article was a ripping takedown that quoted eight words from the article.
Sure, I can tell.

You seem to be OK with the National Review's work here. I considered it a lowbrow personal attack that represent a new low from a once proud publication, to say nothing of the almost comical hypocrisy/double standard I've pointed out a number of times now. If you think there's value in that sort of work there's really no reason to continue this discussion. You and I just have different opinions about journalism.
And memoirs.
I don't recall sharing any opinions about memoirs in general or Dunham's in particular. But yes, to the extent that you think a 26 year old writer/actress's memoirs are important enough to warrant a National Review cover with a photoshop of insults and buzzwords on her arm tattoo and a privilege, sex and weight-obsessed takedown in the story itself, then yeah, I suppose we have different opinions about them.
NR has been famous, even in its prouder journalistic days of which you are so well aware, of those covers. They've always been on the edge of bad taste, and I think Buckley liked it that way. Buckley himself dealt with so many insults, that often his own dry wit was absurdly, um, piquant, if one were the subject of his barbs. I think you're ascribing a new mode, a new method, a new mood to a magazine that has always had that mode, that method, that mood.

It has always picked on liberal hypocrisy. It has always taken shots.

The facts remain: She'll be paying a settlement to guy she identified as a rapist, and she'll have played with her sister's chooch as a child by stuffing marbles in it and masturbating in the bed next to her, trying to "woo" her with kisses and the like. It's a hatchet job in her own words, man.

 
DOJ report released today states that .03/5 female college students are victims of sexual assault, not 1/5 as claimed by many in the media and politics.

Right wing version:

http://thefederalist.com/2014/12/11/new-doj-data-on-sexual-assaults-college-students-are-actually-less-likely-to-be-victimized/

CBS version:

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/doj-releases-report-on-college-age-rape-and-sexual-assault/

BJS site:

http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=5176
Wow. 20% and .61% aren't even in the same universe. Those numbers absolutely destroy the claims of rape culture.

Maybe it's time for us to stop portraying all men as monsters.
You sure your numbers are right?

edit: yeah, I see I did the same thing as fatguy.

And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
only in America would we politicize even this statistic. America has truly lost its moral compass as fewer and fewer or our institutions are concerned about the actual facts.
(1) regarding your first sentence: of course this statistic is politicized. Gender issues have been politicized since the beginning of our country (which, by the way, is probably one of the best places for a woman to be, fwiw).

(2) regarding your second: that's the problem: "actual facts" are not easy to come by, regardless of issue. This is based on a self-reporting survey, for god's sake, there are NO "actual facts" that we are really dealing with, unless you are talking about number of women actually interviewed.

take a good look at IK's earlier response. He nails it.
Rape is not a "gender issue", it's a crime issue....maybe this mindset is where the train starts to run off of the tracks...
:rolleyes: whatever, man. You've got your agenda, I don't know why I even bothered to engage.

 
I don't recall sharing any opinions about memoirs in general or Dunham's in particular. But yes, to the extent that you think a 26 year old writer/actress's memoirs are important enough to warrant a National Review cover with a photoshop of insults and buzzwords on her arm tattoo and a privilege, sex and weight-obsessed takedown in the story itself, then yeah, I suppose we have different opinions about them.
NR has been famous, even in its prouder journalistic days of which you are so well aware, of those covers. They've always been on the edge of bad taste, and I think Buckley liked it that way. Buckley himself dealt with so many insults, that often his own dry wit was absurdly, um, piquant, if one were the subject of his barbs. I think you're ascribing a new mode, a new method, a new mood to a magazine that has always had that mode, that method, that mood.

It has always picked on liberal hypocrisy. It has always taken shots.

The facts remain: She'll be paying a settlement to guy she identified as a rapist, and she'll have played with her sister's chooch as a child by stuffing marbles in it and masturbating in the bed next to her, trying to "woo" her with kisses and the like. It's a hatchet job in her own words, man.
The facts remain that you and the National Review are taking personal shots at someone for what they did when they were seven years old. I'm fairly comfortable on the other side of this one.

My two year old daughter pooped her pants last night. Maybe you should file this away so that if she grows up to be famous and takes political stances you disagree with you can ridicule her for it!

As for the magazine's history, that really only goes to my aside that it's a new low for a "once proud" magazine. I'll withdraw that comment if you'd like. I don't think it's always been a comically hypocritical gossip rag, but maybe I'm remembering it through rose-colored glasses

 
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And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
I'm highly skeptical of any number attached to something like this, if for no other reason than you can drive the statistics by how you define "sexual assault." The one-in-five number that people sometimes throw around has an extremely broad definition of sexual assault that includes things like "unwanted kissing," which might technically be assault in a hyper-literal legal sense but, it's not the something that anyone really cares about either. Likewise, I'm sure you could get engineer a low number by defining your terms very narrowly. No idea if that's what the DOJ did, but I could see a researcher doing that if they had an agenda.
And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
I'm highly skeptical of any number attached to something like this, if for no other reason than you can drive the statistics by how you define "sexual assault." The one-in-five number that people sometimes throw around has an extremely broad definition of sexual assault that includes things like "unwanted kissing," which might technically be assault in a hyper-literal legal sense but, it's not the something that anyone really cares about either. Likewise, I'm sure you could get engineer a low number by defining your terms very narrowly. No idea if that's what the DOJ did, but I could see a researcher doing that if they had an agenda.
Exactly. I don't think I could trust any data on sexual assault because of the fluid definitions and challenge of obtaining a verified statistic.

ETA: I have no idea why that quoted 3 times.

 
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DOJ report released today states that .03/5 female college students are victims of sexual assault, not 1/5 as claimed by many in the media and politics.

Right wing version:

http://thefederalist.com/2014/12/11/new-doj-data-on-sexual-assaults-college-students-are-actually-less-likely-to-be-victimized/

CBS version:

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/doj-releases-report-on-college-age-rape-and-sexual-assault/

BJS site:

http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=5176
Wow. 20% and .61% aren't even in the same universe. Those numbers absolutely destroy the claims of rape culture.

Maybe it's time for us to stop portraying all men as monsters.
You sure your numbers are right?

edit: yeah, I see I did the same thing as fatguy.

And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
only in America would we politicize even this statistic. America has truly lost its moral compass as fewer and fewer or our institutions are concerned about the actual facts.
(1) regarding your first sentence: of course this statistic is politicized. Gender issues have been politicized since the beginning of our country (which, by the way, is probably one of the best places for a woman to be, fwiw).

(2) regarding your second: that's the problem: "actual facts" are not easy to come by, regardless of issue. This is based on a self-reporting survey, for god's sake, there are NO "actual facts" that we are really dealing with, unless you are talking about number of women actually interviewed.

take a good look at IK's earlier response. He nails it.
Rape is not a "gender issue", it's a crime issue....maybe this mindset is where the train starts to run off of the tracks...
:rolleyes: whatever, man. You've got your agenda, I don't know why I even bothered to engage.
sounds like you are the one with the agenda... My only agenda is an accurate picture of crime statistics for rape and sexual assault and we are presented with wildly different numbers being touted by those who do have an agenda...It's says a lot about where we are as a society and the lack of intellectual honesty by those holding the megaphones.

 
DOJ report released today states that .03/5 female college students are victims of sexual assault, not 1/5 as claimed by many in the media and politics.

Right wing version:

http://thefederalist.com/2014/12/11/new-doj-data-on-sexual-assaults-college-students-are-actually-less-likely-to-be-victimized/

CBS version:

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/doj-releases-report-on-college-age-rape-and-sexual-assault/

BJS site:

http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=5176
Wow. 20% and .61% aren't even in the same universe. Those numbers absolutely destroy the claims of rape culture.

Maybe it's time for us to stop portraying all men as monsters.
You sure your numbers are right?

edit: yeah, I see I did the same thing as fatguy.

And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
only in America would we politicize even this statistic. America has truly lost its moral compass as fewer and fewer or our institutions are concerned about the actual facts.
(1) regarding your first sentence: of course this statistic is politicized. Gender issues have been politicized since the beginning of our country (which, by the way, is probably one of the best places for a woman to be, fwiw).

(2) regarding your second: that's the problem: "actual facts" are not easy to come by, regardless of issue. This is based on a self-reporting survey, for god's sake, there are NO "actual facts" that we are really dealing with, unless you are talking about number of women actually interviewed.

take a good look at IK's earlier response. He nails it.
Rape is not a "gender issue", it's a crime issue....maybe this mindset is where the train starts to run off of the tracks...
:confused:

You really don't see the point - which is actually being made by three people not trying to politicize anything, but merely using common sense - that relying heavily on rape statistics is a very bad and unreliable way to then conclude that there is a serious sociological issue?

 
And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
I'm highly skeptical of any number attached to something like this, if for no other reason than you can drive the statistics by how you define "sexual assault." The one-in-five number that people sometimes throw around has an extremely broad definition of sexual assault that includes things like "unwanted kissing," which might technically be assault in a hyper-literal legal sense but, it's not the something that anyone really cares about either. Likewise, I'm sure you could get engineer a low number by defining your terms very narrowly. No idea if that's what the DOJ did, but I could see a researcher doing that if they had an agenda.
Exactly. I don't think I could trust any data on sexual assault because of the fluid definitions and challenge of obtaining a verified statistic.

ETA: I have no idea why that quoted 3 times.
A few weeks back I heard a report on NPR about how Title IX has created this whole problem with schools feeling compelled to lower the standards for assault and rape and harassment because the DOE requires reporting and if there are too few reports or just a lack of reports there are repercussions. The schools are more interested in meeting some imaginary quota than the details or facts of what is going on.

 
Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.
My friends, long veterans of both journalism and politics, had never even heard of her when I brought her up a few years ago on an annual trip we used to take. I was stunned. "Never heard of Lena Dunham?"

"Nope," they responded.

"Must be nice," I thought.

Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
Weirdly, and this has to be anecdotal and for that I apologize, I happen to be friends with people who aren't my age for various reasons. A few years ago, they were still in their late twenties, and some of the single women love Lena Dunham. My Facebook feed is full of some Lena Dunham. And the politics and musings about men that you see from these girls is appalling. So I can see those conservatives that work on campuses and stuff -- well, I can see what they deal with when it comes to proselytizing and the like. So there's a huge cottage industry here and she isn't a boogeyman, but really a generational voice that conservatives rightly feel that they have to contend with.

If you'll permit me a general observation and a defense of myself a bit: I tell people this about the "culture wars." It's the old saw about "politics isn't through with you…" You can detest the culture wars. You can rather they'd go away. You can not want to get involved. You can find them odious and think that they appeal to a person of a certain disposition. But the culture wars haven't finished with you. And we just saw it last week with the UVA thing. If you aren't willing to address them and their claims, you'll wind up with policy that reflects where the culture wars are. And that's how the culture wars become political, which becomes personal, especially for the feminist left, which is where its intellectual and economic origins lie -- in the politically personal.
I suspect your longstanding familiarity with her is not the case for most people. Most people know her from the TV show and nothing else, and know about her politics only because of the National Review's ridiculous hatchet job of a cover story (which is where the "rape accuser" stuff started).
Probably not. I wasn't saying it to prove my longstanding knowledge of her. I was doing it to show how even plugged in people had heard nothing of her when she first came out, and it shouldn't surprise anybody that people still don't know of her political activism. I was relating to Steve Tasker by saying, "yeah, even friends I'd expect to know don't know." My knowledge of her came from two girls on my Facebook feed and having had caught the first episode of Girls, which I was immediately struck by.

The two girls laying in the tub and the quick anal sex within minutes of the opening credits was an interesting choice.

And NR has actually done a service is exposing some of her claims, which means it's not a hatchet job at all. It it's Kevin Williamson you're talking about, he's probably the furthest thing from a hack you'll find these days. If there's any hack jobs, it's her talking about putting marbles in her sister's ######, masturbating while next to her baby sister, and making a false rape claim in a "memoir."
Am I the only person who had no idea of Lena Dunham's political leanings before opening this thread? I mean, it doesn't surprise me that she's super liberal, but I had no idea. I had no idea that people hated her this much.
My friends, long veterans of both journalism and politics, had never even heard of her when I brought her up a few years ago on an annual trip we used to take. I was stunned. "Never heard of Lena Dunham?"

"Nope," they responded.

"Must be nice," I thought.

Come on. The Times "covered" her in a one off story about a weird party a rich person had; they do stuff like that all the time in their Sunday back pages. I'm guessing the reason you know about it is because some sort of conservative commentator dug it up and shared it. If so that would prove my point. She's the anti-feminist boogeyman. They chose her not because she's particularly outspoken or outrageous, but because her family's wealth/social status/education and her physical appearance push their buttons. Which, as I mentioned before, is ironic and revealing considering the foundation for this anti-Dunham movement came from the magazine founded by this guy.
Weirdly, and this has to be anecdotal and for that I apologize, I happen to be friends with people who aren't my age for various reasons. A few years ago, they were still in their late twenties, and some of the single women love Lena Dunham. My Facebook feed is full of some Lena Dunham. And the politics and musings about men that you see from these girls is appalling. So I can see those conservatives that work on campuses and stuff -- well, I can see what they deal with when it comes to proselytizing and the like. So there's a huge cottage industry here and she isn't a boogeyman, but really a generational voice that conservatives rightly feel that they have to contend with.

If you'll permit me a general observation and a defense of myself a bit: I tell people this about the "culture wars." It's the old saw about "politics isn't through with you…" You can detest the culture wars. You can rather they'd go away. You can not want to get involved. You can find them odious and think that they appeal to a person of a certain disposition. But the culture wars haven't finished with you. And we just saw it last week with the UVA thing. If you aren't willing to address them and their claims, you'll wind up with policy that reflects where the culture wars are. And that's how the culture wars become political, which becomes personal, especially for the feminist left, which is where its intellectual and economic origins lie -- in the politically personal.
I suspect your longstanding familiarity with her is not the case for most people. Most people know her from the TV show and nothing else, and know about her politics only because of the National Review's ridiculous hatchet job of a cover story (which is where the "rape accuser" stuff started).
Probably not. I wasn't saying it to prove my longstanding knowledge of her. I was doing it to show how even plugged in people had heard nothing of her when she first came out, and it shouldn't surprise anybody that people still don't know of her political activism. I was relating to Steve Tasker by saying, "yeah, even friends I'd expect to know don't know." My knowledge of her came from two girls on my Facebook feed and having had caught the first episode of Girls, which I was immediately struck by.

The two girls laying in the tub and the quick anal sex within minutes of the opening credits was an interesting choice.

And NR has actually done a service is exposing some of her claims, which means it's not a hatchet job at all. It it's Kevin Williamson you're talking about, he's probably the furthest thing from a hack you'll find these days. If there's any hack jobs, it's her talking about putting marbles in her sister's ######, masturbating while next to her baby sister, and making a false rape claim in a "memoir."
I like NR, but Kevin Williamson is a hack and a jerk. That guy is frequently nasty just to be nasty. He often resorts to name calling and trolling. He's the absolute worst writer at NR right now.

 
And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
I'm highly skeptical of any number attached to something like this, if for no other reason than you can drive the statistics by how you define "sexual assault." The one-in-five number that people sometimes throw around has an extremely broad definition of sexual assault that includes things like "unwanted kissing," which might technically be assault in a hyper-literal legal sense but, it's not the something that anyone really cares about either. Likewise, I'm sure you could get engineer a low number by defining your terms very narrowly. No idea if that's what the DOJ did, but I could see a researcher doing that if they had an agenda.
Absolutely agree, IK. You would probably be really interested, just from an intellecual level, to read the second and third page of the linked report, which talks about the methodology used: http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/rsavcaf9513.pdf

It is very interesting. I still think the number under-represents, but from my very quick read-through, I don't see anything that I can criticise on the methodological front in this report. But I'm sure someone will. (yes, I could nitpick, and say much the same that you say above -- just from the "other side."). But it certainly seems fair.

And I was talking merely about personal experience. Everybody defines "unacceptable" sexual assault differently, I'm sure. But I do know a remarkably surprising number of women in my life -- parent, granparents, aunts and great-aunts, co-workers, close-relations, and friends, who I know have been victims of rape, incest, sexual assault. It happens a lot. These are hard conversations to have, but (for example), I wonder if many posters here had real conversations with their mothers, aunts, or other relations about this subject, whether they would be surprised to hear about their famiily members' experiences with it.
Thanks for the link. I was going to look at this at some point anyway, but I went ahead and read the two pages you mentioned. You're right that it seems like this survey uses a pretty narrow "criminal justice issue only" definition. The alternative CSA definition, which includes incapacitation, makes more sense to me. but I can see why the DOJ might choose this approach.

 
DOJ report released today states that .03/5 female college students are victims of sexual assault, not 1/5 as claimed by many in the media and politics.

Right wing version:

http://thefederalist.com/2014/12/11/new-doj-data-on-sexual-assaults-college-students-are-actually-less-likely-to-be-victimized/

CBS version:

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/doj-releases-report-on-college-age-rape-and-sexual-assault/

BJS site:

http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=5176
Wow. 20% and .61% aren't even in the same universe. Those numbers absolutely destroy the claims of rape culture.

Maybe it's time for us to stop portraying all men as monsters.
You sure your numbers are right?

edit: yeah, I see I did the same thing as fatguy.

And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
only in America would we politicize even this statistic. America has truly lost its moral compass as fewer and fewer or our institutions are concerned about the actual facts.
(1) regarding your first sentence: of course this statistic is politicized. Gender issues have been politicized since the beginning of our country (which, by the way, is probably one of the best places for a woman to be, fwiw).

(2) regarding your second: that's the problem: "actual facts" are not easy to come by, regardless of issue. This is based on a self-reporting survey, for god's sake, there are NO "actual facts" that we are really dealing with, unless you are talking about number of women actually interviewed.

take a good look at IK's earlier response. He nails it.
Rape is not a "gender issue", it's a crime issue....maybe this mindset is where the train starts to run off of the tracks...
:confused:

You really don't see the point - which is actually being made by three people not trying to politicize anything, but merely using common sense - that relying heavily on rape statistics is a very bad and unreliable way to then conclude that there is a serious sociological issue?
did I say those three people were politicizing anything?

relying on rape statistics may be very "unreliable" , yet they are often highly touted as reliable and a powerful insight into the culture. You don't see the point that even for such an issue as this, the fact that people (not the three on this thread) are willing to tout their version of an unreliable statistic so stridently as an indicator that our moral compass and concern for the real truth may be off kilter?

 
chauncey said:
DOJ report released today states that .03/5 female college students are victims of sexual assault, not 1/5 as claimed by many in the media and politics.

Right wing version:

http://thefederalist.com/2014/12/11/new-doj-data-on-sexual-assaults-college-students-are-actually-less-likely-to-be-victimized/

CBS version:

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/doj-releases-report-on-college-age-rape-and-sexual-assault/

BJS site:

http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=5176
Maybe they're talking about one specific group of 5 girls and one of them is a sloppy drunk ####-tease?

 
I think most people would be shocked to know the number of women in their lives who have been a victim of sexual assault or rape at some part of their lives. Mothers, aunts, grandmothers, sisters, co-workers, friends. I happen to think the 20% number is more correct (side-note: this doesn't have to implicate a "rape-culture," which I don't really undertand that term). But I think many more woman are victims than men truly understand.

But reasonable people can disagree, I guess.
And I'll do one more edit: those who were really quick to question the methodology at the 20% number may want to use an equally wary eye with this number. I'm not sure this one is that much more "correct" than the other. These things are hard to measure.
I'm highly skeptical of any number attached to something like this, if for no other reason than you can drive the statistics by how you define "sexual assault." The one-in-five number that people sometimes throw around has an extremely broad definition of sexual assault that includes things like "unwanted kissing," which might technically be assault in a hyper-literal legal sense but, it's not the something that anyone really cares about either. Likewise, I'm sure you could get engineer a low number by defining your terms very narrowly. No idea if that's what the DOJ did, but I could see a researcher doing that if they had an agenda.
it's probably a safe presumption that the higher rate includes sexual assaults like smacking a person on her/his butt, while the lower rate is usually penetrative offenses.

We deal with "statistics" like "1.2% of males were sexually assaulted last year while X% chose to report the assault". (I forget the exact report rate but it's something like 20%) Which was based on an anonymous survey which was emailed to a random sampling of males. The presumption appears to be that this random anonymous poll is accurate and reflects a true sampling across the force.

Conveniently, the stats indicate a lower total number of sexual assaults combined with a higher report rate.

 
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Just found out this weekend that the Rolling Stone "journalist" was the same one that did a hatchet job on a local school district and their allegedly anti-gay policies a couple years back.

I hope she/RS gets their proverbial pants sued off.

 
http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2014/12/college_rape_campus_sexual_assault_is_a_serious_problem_but_the_efforts.html

Excellent article on how drunken sluts are replacing "regret" with "rape," enabled by a feminist-lesbian cabal of influential man-haters.

I'm unsure of the actual rules in this forum. It says "free for all" but is it?
I think it's unfair and wrong to label them sluts, but I think the central point is on target. Regret is not rape and if both parties are drunk and indicating consent, there should be no double standard. It's unbelievably unfair to blame the male automatically if both are drunk. I think this quote nails it:
If both are intoxicated they both did the same thing to each other. Why should only the male be charged if both students behave in ways defined as prohibited by the policy? He has been called in to consult on cases in which schools have suspended or expelled the young man when both students were equally intoxicated. Schools that are doing so, he says, are creating male Title IX plaintiffs.
It would be interesting to see how a school would handle a situation where 2 drunk students had consensual sex and the guy filed a complaint the next day.

 
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Just found out this weekend that the Rolling Stone "journalist" was the same one that did a hatchet job on a local school district and their allegedly anti-gay policies a couple years back.

I hope she/RS gets their proverbial pants sued off.
I have a thread about how she also was in the same class, school, school paper, and academic department as known fabulist Stephen Glass of New Republic and Rolling Stone fame.

According to The Federalist this weekend -- and then IMPORTANTLY updated that the incident involved was that the article was in the spirit of the paper it was submitted to (think early Onion) - Sabrina Rubin Erdely was once suspended by Stephen Glass for submitting fake articles to other papers.

 
Erdely also falsified a sensational series on Catholic priests. Basically her entire career has been about making up one lie after another about sexual abuse, always with her particular politics (left-wing Jewish) attached, and never held accountable by an Eastern Media complex that is overwhelmingly left-wing Jewish. The whole story of how she went away from Penn, where she teaches and where there is a huge problem with crimes like assault, to UVA is scandalous. She went away from a Jewish campus to a Southern one due to her politics.

 
http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2014/12/college_rape_campus_sexual_assault_is_a_serious_problem_but_the_efforts.html

Excellent article on how drunken sluts are replacing "regret" with "rape," enabled by a feminist-lesbian cabal of influential man-haters.

I'm unsure of the actual rules in this forum. It says "free for all" but is it?
After reading that article, it is amazing to me that the places that are supposed to be educating our young adults, are implementing the suggested government policies in this article.

 
Erdely also falsified a sensational series on Catholic priests. Basically her entire career has been about making up one lie after another about sexual abuse, always with her particular politics (left-wing Jewish) attached, and never held accountable by an Eastern Media complex that is overwhelmingly left-wing Jewish. The whole story of how she went away from Penn, where she teaches and where there is a huge problem with crimes like assault, to UVA is scandalous. She went away from a Jewish campus to a Southern one due to her politics.
Okay, now you're doing this in the Islam thread, too. I'd be careful with what you're saying, lest you come off as an uneducated bigot and unreflective and unthoughtful religionist.

 
http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2014/12/college_rape_campus_sexual_assault_is_a_serious_problem_but_the_efforts.html

Excellent article on how drunken sluts are replacing "regret" with "rape," enabled by a feminist-lesbian cabal of influential man-haters.

I'm unsure of the actual rules in this forum. It says "free for all" but is it?
In recent years, young activists, many of them women angry about their treatment after reporting an assault, have created new organizations and networks in an effort to reform the way colleges handle sexual violence. They recognized they had a powerful weapon in that fight: Title IX, the federal law that protects against discrimination in education. Schools are legally required by that law to address sexual harassment and violence on campus, and these activists filed complaints with the federal government about what they describe as lax enforcement by schools.
This is what's going on. Same kind of thing used to go on in Maoist and Stalinist area societies, basically crimes against the state had to be reported or it was treated as complicity. I know, it's not the same thing, but the state insistence on reporting is the same, bad reports and expanded standards to include meaningless, innocent activity lead to harmful identification of ordinary citizens as criminals. It also gives absurd power to those who do the accusing. It's bad enough that liberals and academics are complaining, it's really screwed up.

 
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http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2014/12/college_rape_campus_sexual_assault_is_a_serious_problem_but_the_efforts.html

Excellent article on how drunken sluts are replacing "regret" with "rape," enabled by a feminist-lesbian cabal of influential man-haters.

I'm unsure of the actual rules in this forum. It says "free for all" but is it?
After reading that article, it is amazing to me that the places that are supposed to be educating our young adults, are implementing the suggested government policies in this article.
You mean the businesses that need mom and dad's money.

 
http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2014/12/college_rape_campus_sexual_assault_is_a_serious_problem_but_the_efforts.html

Excellent article on how drunken sluts are replacing "regret" with "rape," enabled by a feminist-lesbian cabal of influential man-haters.

I'm unsure of the actual rules in this forum. It says "free for all" but is it?
After reading that article, it is amazing to me that the places that are supposed to be educating our young adults, are implementing the suggested government policies in this article.
You mean the businesses that need mom and dad's money.
Ah, so the institutions don't really care about educating young adults. Gotcha.

What about the majority of the faculty? Do you think they agree with the policies that are being implemented?

 

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