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Dear Auntie Pinko,
What is rape? I don’t mean the legal definition or the physical mechanics, I mean the intent. I believe that no woman should be forced to have sex against her will and that doing so is rape, but in the wake of the Duke Lacrosse team scandals I have to wonder if there is some kind of “gray area?” And what about women who use accusations of rape for revenge or to excuse their own behavior? Surely that creates a reasonable doubt?
I don’t believe that sex workers should be raped any more than any other woman, but isn’t it one of the occupational hazards?
Lorne Fort Collins, CO
Dear Lorne,
It grieves me very much that I am still having to have this conversation with well-intentioned people after more than forty years of the modern struggle to establish equity for women in law, economics, and culture. And we’ve made so much progress in so many areas that it seems even more tragic that such questions can be serious considerations in addressing this particularly destructive form of criminal violence.
If you go into a store and pay for a half-gallon of milk, is it excusable for you to grab a pint of cream without paying? Isn’t that one of the occupational hazards of being a storekeeper?
If you volunteer to man the dunk tank at the Cancer Fund carnival, is it alright for me to climb the ladder and throw a punch at you? Or waylay you in the parking lot when your shift is over and dump a barrel of freezing water on you?
If she says no, it’s rape. Even if she says no after meeting you at the front door of her apartment in a low-cut negligee, offering you a drink, mentioning that her roommate is in Cleveland for a week, and necking with you until your erection makes your head hurt and your eyes cross. Even if she gets up and dances across the room flinging the negligee in your lap and twirling a pair of sparkly gold pasties. If, after all that, she says “no,” it’s rape. And if you don’t listen, you’re a rapist, just as much as if you’d waylaid a strange woman in a parking lot and held a knife to her throat.
Can Auntie be any clearer about this? Six words, one syllable each: “If she says no, it’s rape.”
Her bad manners, bad judgment, malicious intent, or folly notwithstanding, carrying forward with any sexual activity after she says “no” to that activity is a criminal act on your part. (Not to mention bad judgment. What are you doing hanging out with a woman who would stoop to such vile and irresponsible —but not criminal— behavior?)
It’s rape if she says no, even if she just got through “putting out” willingly for sixteen of your friends. It’s rape if she says no, even if she’s got nine illegitimate children by nine different fathers, a terminal meth habit and a criminal record as long as your arm. (And again, what are you doing hanging out with her, if that’s the case?)
Do women abuse rape accusations? Yes, it does happen, although far more rarely than wishful-thinking male criminals and deluded parents would like to admit. Knowingly making a false criminal accusation, especially for your own gain or the purposes of extortion, is a crime and should be prosecuted as a crime. But the fact that it occasionally happens in no way constitutes a presumptive “reasonable doubt” in a case of rape.
“Reasonable doubt” is a legal phenomenon with very precise (though complex) definition, and can be assumed only on the basis of specific evidence in a specific case. “Reasonable doubt” may exist if a witness claims that an accused rapist was having dinner with them at Denny’s at the time the accuser said the rape was taking place. The judge would, in such a case, give the jury instructions as to what would constitute ‘reasonable’ based on their estimation of the credibility of the witness, the credibility of conflicting witnesses, the weight of contradictory evidence, etc.
In other words, the fact that some women, in some cases, have made criminal false accusations, is not a reason for assuming that any particular woman is making a false accusation in any particular case. Nor should it ever be advanced as a presumption. Rape is a serious crime and accusations of rape should always be taken seriously.
Does it sometimes come down to “he said/she said?” Yes, of course. For all the fantasy TV shows about forensic science, a great many serious crimes cannot be proved on the basis of incontrovertible physical evidence. In such cases it can come down to “he said/she said.” But in such cases, nothing about a woman’s sexual experience, sexual behavior, appearance, clothing choices, etc. constitutes the slightest evidence of her credibility or lack thereof.
Even if she’s had wild sex with two hundred horny frat boys, that proves nothing about her truthfulness regarding the circumstances of sexual intercourse with the two hundred and first. Now, if you can prove that she has lied about serious matters in the past, and has solid tangible benefits to gain from making a false accusation, you may have reasonable doubt. But what she was wearing or who she’d had sex with an hour before the rape are utterly irrelevant.
I’m sorry if I seem to be belaboring the point, Lorne. But it’s apparently a point that needs a lot of reiteration, since a lot of people aren’t getting it yet. Thanks for offering Auntie Pinko one more opportunity!
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