Rape “Hilarious”? A danse macabre.

Rape me
Rape me, my friend
Rape me
Rape me again

Scro­lling the notes of a site I fre­quent I noti­ced a few men get­ting a real guf­faw out of this Onion parody of the sen­sa­tio­na­list, unrea­lis­tic, and totally dis­gus­ting cove­rage of news by our “media”?

I’m not pos­ting the vid here. I don’t think it’s funny, and it is at the bot­tom end of tas­te­less. It is ger­mane to this post though, so please view it. I’ve laughed at the Onion many times, much less as I get older. This struck me as pretty low on the totem pole of comedy. Not that the truth is not there, buried under the mul­ti­ple times the word rape is ban­died about, but at what cost to decency?

In my search for what others feel on this sub­ject, (At twenty-two, I often seek out the rea­so­ning of others to stack it up against my own and com­pare). I found this small post con­tai­ning a sen­tence which sums up part of why this isn’t funny.

“I think the days of the Onion are num­be­red. Satire has no where to go. The real world has become satire”

That may be the rea­son why I feel very little college type humor is funny, at least not past the age of college, but it’s not the rea­son this goes too far.

Is it merely a parody, making fun of a media? Maybe, yet no so much.
It is more com­pli­ca­ted than that, if you are female that is. The guf­faws exude a con­temp­tuous dis­re­gard for women, though I’m sure the men who found this to be a sides­plit­ting video would deny that.

Not only is it in the worse of taste, it’s obvious some peo­ple just do not get it; those peo­ple are, for the most, part male. It never fails to amaze me when peo­ple, usually males not lac­king in inte­llec­tual capa­city, are able to turn off the part of the brain which con­trols empathy and com­prehen­sion of a large picture.

Mind the Gap had a post ear­lier in August which asked the ques­tion — if we can laugh at all man­ner of things, even death why can’t we laugh at something which inc­lu­des the word rape as a by product?

For me it is clear, death by wha­te­ver means is ine­vi­ta­ble, ill­ness for the most is also ine­vi­ta­ble, as is tra­gedy, family issues, and weird cul­tu­ral proc­li­vi­ties which depend on our family, eth­nic and social envi­ron­ment – all an ine­vi­ta­ble part of life. Rape is not one of these things. Rape is not ine­vi­ta­ble; it is an act of vio­lence usually per­pe­tra­ted upon women by men.

Do I need to exa­mine my thoughts on this more com­ple­tely? Pro­bably. It doesn’t stop the disap­point­ment from seeing the large num­ber of men, only a few who are really totally igno­rant, laughing at something like this without loo­king at the big­ger picture.

Are we not where we are because we often fail to look at the big­ger pic­ture?

Hate me
Do it and do it again
Waste me
Rape me, my friend

Nir­vana

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39 Comments

  • I get a sick fee­ling in the pit of my sto­mach at things like this. It’s not a bad satire. It’s not hila­rious. There is too much to sati­rize, and there isn’t a need to accen­tuate something like this. A really good satire could have been done without the rape angle. Should have been done without the rape angle.

    I laugh at some pretty sick things, so I hate to make too much of it.

    ot: I pos­ted that contest.

  • I can­not believe you are only 22 and this aware and political…I get more ama­zed by you every day :-)

  • I have been ama­zed by you since you were a 20 year old girl with a blog

    Why can’t we laugh at rape? Let me count the ways. Some sub­jects can never and should never be funny

    After 9/11 they said the age of irony was dead. They got it back­wards. It was just begin­ning
    But I look for­ward to the time OTN Coo­per rules the world

  • Hey -
    I’m pretty much an ano­maly, in that I was rai­sed to revere women not deni­grate them. I thank my parents for that.
    I never unders­tood how males could not treat fema­les with anything but res­pect. If the woman is not deser­ving of res­pect, then walk away — there’s no need for vio­lence.
    If ever­yone stu­died their his­tory, they would learn that women were the first “gods” of our ances­tors. They were worshi­ped and ado­red — car­vings and sta­tues were made in their image which sur­vive to this day. This took place long before we worshi­ped the moon, the sun, the stars, the rulers, the priests, the wise men, etc. And we revere them today — Who hasn’t heard of ‘Mother Nature’, ‘Mother Earth’, etc.
    In fact, women ruled the tri­bes and the men were obe­dient to them. (The exact oppo­site of what the Bible teaches — don’t get me star­ted). It was a won­der­ful society as the women were very wise, the men accep­ted this orga­ni­za­tion, and all thought only of the well being of the ‘village’. Sure there might have been jea­lou­sies, and such, but the clans grew due to this nur­tu­ring spi­rit.
    Okay, fast for­ward to the pre­sent.
    We have songs, movies, books, artic­les, jokes — all about how stu­pid blonde’s are, how women are pros­ti­tu­tes, how women are only good for being a man’s slave, how women are being raped and this is a fairly ubi­qui­tous event, how women aren’t as smart as men, how women are the ‘wea­ker’ sex, and on and on and on.
    How sad we’ve come so far tech­no­lo­gi­cally and yet have regres­sed so far in so many other ways — deport­ment was the first word to come to mind, but there are doubt­lessly many more.
    Those of you who might be rea­ding this com­ment and think that I’m full of crap or have a misogy­nis­tic bent — do your­self a favor. Before you cross swords with me, be sure your powder’s dry and that you’re not firing blanks.

  • Humor, as in all tas­tes, is sub­jec­tive. I thought the most we can hope for is to find that most of the world finds the same things sub­jec­ti­vely in good or bad tas­tes. It’s never going to be a per­fect num­ber, but we can work towards fin­ding a com­mon set of values.

  • I see nothing funny about rape. It is one of those few items about which I never joke. I had to go to Fluttercraft’s blog to remind myself why sick com­ments about rape can never ever be con­si­de­red fod­der for humor.

    And I’m a guy. Ima­gine that.

  • I get what you are saying.

    It’s easy, as a male, to look at that video and laugh at the parody without even pic­king up on the rape fac­tor. As a guy I don’t have that gut reac­tion to the “word” rape. Does that mean I don’t unders­tand rape is wrong or find rape appa­lling? No it doesn’t.

    Sexual based vio­lence should then not be used for come­dic pur­po­ses? I don’t know. Does your argu­ment on the ine­vi­tia­blity of death but not rape stand? Don’t know. As always I have to think about this.

    Rape is wrong. If the act, and the­re­fore the word could be obli­te­ra­ted from society we would be in a good place.

  • I get very tired of peo­ple who want to push the boun­dries just to push the boun­dries. They’ve pas­sed by shock value (which is use­less most of the time) and simply gone on to pure crap. Ins­tead may I recom­mend the docu­men­tary I saw tonight on Mili­tary Sexual Assault. Something like 1 in 7 of all the women in the first Gulf War were raped or sexually assaul­ted by other U.S. troops.

    Now there’s something to make you sick.

  • G: I know exactly what you mean. The sick fee­ling. You’re right it could have been done dif­fe­rently. And should have.

    good for you — send me all your winnings.;)

    Invi­si­ble Woman: Aw shucks. Seriously though some things just piss me off.

    Pia: What you weren’t rea­ding me when I was 19? I am devas­ta­ted. Please I can barely write this prop paper I’m sup­po­sed to be doing this weekend.…the world will have to wait a cou­ple weeks.

    Mor­gan: I am not going to argue with that.
    I’m glad you stop­ped by Morgan.

    MoJo: Yes, and valuing all gen­ders equally would be a good place to start.……yes?

    Sauer­kraut: Even rea­li­zing that this parody was not about rape, the usage of the term rape should have pro­vo­ked a gut res­ponse in those who get it. That it pro­vo­ked, in many cases, hila­rity is what sur­pri­sed me.

    John: I disa­gree, as there are guys who do have that gut reac­tion. It is true they may be like G the same guys who have that reac­tion to anything which deri­des human beings, it may not. I don’t know.

    Please do.

    Think about it.

    Coyote: yes sexual assault in the mili­tary is pretty high, higher than one would expect from peo­ple who are so willing to die for a cause .…

  • I rea­lize I might be going against the rest of the com­ments here. I watched the video. I found it dis­tur­bing, but not shocking.

    I don’t think the inten­tion of satire is always to create laugh­ter. This works differently.

    Whether it was effec­tive or not, or to what pur­pose is deba­ta­ble. But the fact that it takes a deter­mi­ned level of con­cen­tra­tion to dif­fe­ren­tiate bet­ween this satire and real tele­vi­sion repor­ting is what is really shocking.

  • It’s not that the video was funny. It wasn’t. Its entire punch­line was the word “rape,” which makes it hypoc­ri­ti­cal if it’s trying to sati­rize a news media which quite lite­rally stands to pro­fit from rape.

    But to dec­lare that this is one case where you can­not in good taste hold a mirror up to nature is to level an accu­sa­tion of ThoughtCrime.

    Which isn’t to say that the act of rape is funny. It isn’t. But that’s not all you’re saying here. What you’re saying is that nothing that rela­tes to rape can be funny. And that’s patently incorrect.

    Death is ine­vi­ta­ble, but mur­der, can­ni­ba­lism, tor­ture, star­va­tion, sui­cide, etc… aren’t. And peo­ple joke about those. And often it’s funny. Even though the things them­sel­ves are horri­ble

    As for the big­ger pic­ture, rape is not just an act of sexual vio­lence per­pe­tra­ted by men on women. It’s also per­pe­tra­ted by women on women, men on men, and yes, women on men. And who it hap­pens to more in this case doesn’t really mat­ter. It’s a pro­blem that can touch anyone, and it’s really a cop-out to point the fin­ger at men laughing at it. Espe­cially since there is next to no one telling peo­ple not to laugh at pri­son rape. And that comes up in come­dies far more often.

    It’s not that the world is making satire inef­fec­tive. It’s that the world is so fuc­ked up that any half-wit with a pen thinks he can be a bri­lliant sati­rist. And the mas­ses have peri­lously low stan­dards, as evi­den­ced by what pas­ses for satire and by what pas­ses for news and by what pas­ses for government.

  • Coo­per, have you noti­ced this is the most emai­led AND most vie­wed clip currently on the site?

    I think satire should be allo­wed to laugh on everything. we can’t have some “sub­jects” ban­ned because some of us think its not funny. If we do, we won’y have any satire at all. that’s just how things work — shut one mouth, and the next will follow.

    With that I do think we have another case of the “stu­pid blond tee­nage girl”: mass media has always been used to sup­port our socia­li­za­tion pro­cess and strengthen our social values. As men rule the world for many years they used all kinds of means during his­tory to main­tain their upper hand and jokes is one of them.

    Also, various forms of rape were legi­ti­mate acts in many cul­tu­res until recently (in some they still are). Women were raped and mur­de­red by men on a regu­lar basis for years.

    Coo­per, don’t get disap­poin­ted. The new world some of us try to make since about 100 years ago is not going to be here any­time soon. It’s still quite a jun­gle out there. I live in Israel, I know what I am tal­king about. Also check on what coyo­te­mike said about the docu­men­tary he just saw.

  • Actually can­ni­ba­lism is a cul­tu­ral proc­li­vity, sui­cide a means of death…death being ine­vi­ta­ble anything that leads to it no mat­ter what might be con­si­de­red fair game —  no mat­ter what we will all die, it mat­ters not the means. That having been said, I wouldn’t find a simi­lar parody on tor­ture funny either, although admit­tedly I might not have the same gut reac­tion to them.

    Rape is still overwhel­mingly a male on female crime. Men always like to bring up the fact of it not being solely a male on female crime every time rape is men­tio­ned. The fact is if it was a sexually vio­lent crime “most often” per­pe­tra­ted by males on males, or fema­les on males, I don’t think men would have found this video hila­rious at all. I think they might have had the same gut reac­tion I had.

    I don’t feel it is a cop out to point out that men still don’t get it, even bri­lliant ones such as yourself.

    I sta­ted in the post that most likely I need to exa­mine my fee­lings on this a little dee­per, so far I haven’t chan­ged my mind. I have had my cof­fee yet though so we’ll see.

    Gil: Can’t say I’ve noti­ced that, but it doesn’t sur­prise me.

    The pro­blem here is the “some of us” may well be a large some of us — women.

    Women in many parts of the world are sub­jec­ted to horri­fic sexual vio­lence still — rea­ding “Infi­del” just helps me to assure myself of that. The fact that we are not far from the dar­ker times here in this country is no excuse . The fact that so few men unders­tand this gut reac­tion is the problem.

    It’s the old “I love women, but you are way off base to feel that way in reac­tion to this video and we should be able to make fun of anything even this in our effort to find something funny in the sad state of ouR society”.

    The sexual vio­lence in the mili­tary, a known pro­blem, just goes to high­light my point really.

    Irish Space Monk: Not going against the grain here at all as you can obviously now see.

    The sexual vio­lence in the mili­tary, a known pro­blem just goes to high­light my point really.

    To be the effect of this satire was les­se­ned sig­ni­fi­cantly because the rape thing inter­fe­red with it. As G said, the very same point could have been made a dif­fe­rent way, and would have been just as effec­tive. The fact that no one cares to do so just high­lights what I see to be the problem.

    You see the fact that there is no thought to it. It is the reac­tions that disappoint.

    Sexual vio­lence — way too pre­va­lent around the world — seems only to make cer­tain peo­ple wince, calling it fair game and calling it no worse than this or that just goes to show we have a long way to go.

    As I said and will say again.
    I unders­tood it was sup­po­sed to be a parody of our pathe­tic news and obvious for some it was effec­tive as well as “hila­rious”. At this point in time how many times are we going to parody the news any­way? It has been a joke for some time, if we stop­ped watching it we would have to put up with pathe­tic satire such as this.

    Poe­tress: You’re abso­lu­tely right, from my point of view.

    Dedd: I think it is the get­ting off on this stuff that bothe­red me most. The get­ting off on it without rea­li­zing that the sub­ject mat­ter, even if not the crux of the parody was highly offen­sive and pain­ful for a whole gen­der of indi­vi­duals. How easily it is to dis­re­gard this in the name of free speech , comedy, parody, the need to make us laugh, is sad. It should be frigh­te­ning. It could have been funny done dif­fe­rently; it should have been and if a moments thought had been given maybe would have been.

  • Someone once said and I quo­ted this before in re to Imus igno­rance and I will say this again in re to the Onion lyric satire, “A Joke Isn’t A Joke When It Hurts Someone”. For the to many women, girls and men, boys who have been raped I know you unders­tand this, for those who have not had to endure the pain of such devas­ta­ting defi­le­ment of not only ones body but also the tota­lity of self and inno­cence, IT IS NOT FUNNY at any cost for any reason.

  • It isn’t really funny, it’s blunt, and it’s sopho­mo­ric. But there is one valid point; as long as peo­ple get off on this stuff, we’re gonna keep seein’ it.

    As for the Onion having “nowhere to go,” and satire beco­ming tired, that may be true, too. I’ve (obviously) been thin­king a lot about what’s funny, and what other peo­ple think is funny, and how that is chan­ging. As the tar­gets of our humor become more and more ridi­cu­lous, it is beco­ming har­der and har­der to lam­poon them with effec­ti­ve­ness. For ins­tance, one doesn’t need a comic recap of a Bush press con­fe­rence; you only need to see the actual per­for­mance to laugh.
    Like all our com­pa­nies and media out­lets, the sour­ces of our humor are also beco­ming con­so­li­da­ted. Sad.

  • Yes, can­ni­ba­lism is a cul­tu­ral proc­li­vity. But horri­ble as it is, so is rape. And if sui­cide, mur­der, star­va­tion, etc can me just lum­ped in as “means of death which is ine­vi­ta­ble” then by the same logic rape can be con­si­de­red “means of sex.” It’s a sim­ple ana­lo­gue. Mur­der is to death what rape is to sex. Both are horri­ble, vio­lent means of something that is other­wise natural.

    See I think that you ins­tantly lum­ped me and my argu­ment with what “men who don’t ‘get it’” and what they “always like to bring up” demons­tra­tes pretty rea­dily that it is a cop-out. Espe­cially seeing as you didn’t offer any expla­na­tion as to why it’s per­fectly ok to let refe­ren­ces to pri­son rape in comedy slide without reproach. I know that the mes­sage you’re sen­ding isn’t that when men are raped it’s funny and when women are raped it’s not, but that’s the silent mes­sage that comes of it all when next to no one rai­ses a voice when the for­mer is refe­ren­ced in comedy and when there’s an uproar with the latter.

    Let me spe­cify. I know two men whose lives have been irre­vo­cably alte­red by rape. One was con­cei­ved by it, and another is a sur­vi­vor of it. Both have laughed at things that relate to rape in a simi­lar way as this video. Does that mean they don’t “get it?”

    And I know you said you need to exa­mine your thoughts on the sub­ject. That’s part of the pur­pose of debate. Not just to advo­cate a point of view, but to refine one’s own perspective.

  • I can’t say much that you did not all ready address as honestly and calmly as possible.

    It’s not something really any guy can (or should) say anything defen­ding “it.”

  • I was­ted my time loo­king at the video. There are a lot of peo­ple get­ting a “guf­faw” out of it, if it is the most emai­led thing they have going on over there.

    I get your point that “men don’t get it”. I can’t see it from a fema­les point of view. The word rape doesn’t stand out to me, the satire does, that may be the dif­fe­rence here. men see the satire and woman see the word. It a inex­cu­sa­ble act, but it does not strike fear into me or nau­sea or anything at all because I have no expe­rience with it. Maybe that’s the dif­fe­rence. I can over­look the word because the word does not reso­nate, it is easier to see just the satire.

    You may be right, that we can’t see could also be the problem.

    I don’t know coo­per, even you said that you have to think this one over.

  • In the inte­rest of adding another layer to the dis­cus­sion, I’d have to say that there are some men who do not limit their raunchy rape fla­vo­red humor to depic­tions of man on woman aggression.

    I used to work in a machine manu­fac­tu­ring plant, and as you might ima­gine, we had a large variety of weird indi­vi­duals emplo­yed there. There were a few (men) that used to get a real kick out of snea­king up behind other men, clas­ping them around the mid-section and dry hum­ping them from behind, simu­la­ting rape.

    Of course this was all sup­po­sed to be inno­cent fun because hey, these guys were straight, and they weren’t offen­ding women. Bah. Rape is lame in any con­text, and it seems to have many.

  • EW: Rape is not a cul­tu­ral proc­li­vity it is a socially cons­truc­ted abe­rrant beha­vior which due to patriarchal ideo­lo­gies has been allo­wed to go unchec­ked in many parts of the world. Here at times it is often igno­red and often con­si­de­red accep­ta­ble. Ie: the girl wore a short skirt, the girl was a whore any­way, the girl asked for it. Etc.

    Rape is not sex, rape is a vio­lent act which inc­lu­des a for­ced sex act as a form of power.

    Cer­tainly free­dom of speech, but doesn’t free­dom have its res­pon­si­bi­li­ties? Isn’t it funny how the same peo­ple who cla­mor for free­dom con­ti­nually call on free­dom to sup­port sup­pres­sion of others?

    I don’t lump you anywhere wom­bat, you know that. I’m not a “lumper”.

    I didn’t say anywhere it was ok to refe­rence a pri­son rape wom­bat, I sta­ted clearly none of this stuff is funny to me. What one can do one post is limi­ted, as you well know; it is hard enough to try to make one point and have peo­ple read it all the way through, when you start to make a point and half you tend to lose everyone.

    One more point, I would bet my life that if rape of men was as pre­va­lent world­wide as rape of women this thing would have got­ten much less in the way of laughs and would not have been the most emai­led vid of the day.

    Jason: Peo­ple are free to say wha­te­ver they want here, so don’t let that stop you.

    Casey:
    I don’t see what ‘s wrong with having dif­fe­rent reac­tions to dif­fe­rent things. It allows peo­ple look at things dif­fe­rently. It is too bad that one can not read others opi­nions and disa­gree without always trying to deni­grate the other person.

    If I did it I’m sorry.

    That may be part of it.

    Of course I have to think on everything. I’m pretty solid on this at this point though.

    Dave: What I never unders­tand is what kind of society pro­du­ces grown men who find this kind of thing funny. What kind of world are they living in that we end up with peo­ple whose mind func­tions at that level?

  • How can you use a phrase like “rape cul­ture” and then say that it’s not a cul­tu­ral defect? Also, I’m sort of fuzzy on how what you said makes my ana­logy incorrect.

    You cer­tainly see­med to be saying that I was a part of the pro­blem. And I wasn’t expec­ting you to talk about it in the post, but you jum­ped all over my other argu­ment and left that one alone

    Living in a free society means that some­ti­mes you get offen­ded. And it’s ludic­rous to say that this video sup­ports the sup­pres­sion of anyone other than fear­mon­ge­ring news anchors.

    Also, I’d for­got­ten about my other counterpoint.

    Easily the fun­niest moment in “The Aristocrats”

    As for the spe­cu­la­tion, I’d posit that men are far more likely to laugh at horri­ble and dis­gus­ting things, even if it were something that only vic­ti­mi­zes them. It’s not a big sec­ret that men and women tend to have dif­fe­rent sen­ses of humor. It was female stand-ups who brought on the current trend of obser­va­tio­nal humor, put­ting the “joke” in its grave at least where wor­king come­dians are con­cer­ned. It’s hardly as if the only things that get laughs out of men but offend women are things that are oppre­sive of women.

    And just why is there so obviously something wrong with the way someone thinks if they make jokes that aren’t hurt­ful to anyone pre­sent? It’s one thing to take objec­tion to something that gets broad­cast, and still another something that to see you need to seek out on the inter­net, but something that a group of friends do on their own?

  • How can you use a phrase like “rape cul­ture” and then say that it’s not a cul­tu­ral defect? Also, I’m sort of fuzzy on how what you said makes my ana­logy incorrect.

    Did I use rape cul­ture in the post? I’ll have to look, I didn’t think I had. I was addres­sing spe­ci­fi­cally the idea of it being “:hila­rious”, and the idea that it would not have been hila­rious if rape were a vio­lent humi­lia­ting inva­sive crime per­pe­tra­ted mostly on men.

    Living in a free society means that some­ti­mes you get offen­ded. And it’s ludic­rous to say that this video sup­ports the sup­pres­sion of anyone other than fear mon­ge­ring news anchors.

    The video itself may not but the hila­rity at it without regard for the term rape used many, many times does — that was the point which I obviously did not arti­cu­late it well enough.

    The video I found offen­sive — not funny, but the post would not have been writ­ten had it not been for the “hila­rity” fac­tor which I found in that ori­gi­nal post at the notes, it was not the only place I found that atti­tude because I went loo­king, and there was a lot of hila­rity over it; it is was just the first place and hence used as a reference.

    It was female stand-ups who brought on the current trend of obser­va­tio­nal humor, put­ting the “joke” in its grave at least where wor­king come­dians are con­cer­ned. Again it is the fault of the women. The argu­ments are stan­dard I’ve heard them many times.
    But that has nothing to do with my point of view, as I speak only for myself and not some ran­dom female comedienne.

    It’s one thing to take objec­tion to something that gets broad­cast, and still another something that to see you need to seek out on the inter­net, but something that a group of friends do on their own?

    The pur­pose was to point out an atti­tude, at the time that atti­tude had a per­fect exam­ple through a thread of posts which has since been removed.

  • The word “hila­rity” in the face of the multi epi­so­dic use of the term rape — I said the video was not funny and was the basest form of comedy — not an attack, an opi­nion. It was not neces­sary to bring up the “female comics trend sim­ple to bring fema­les into the mix — which is exactly why it was done.

    It’s an appro­priate phrase, but there is no rela­tionship  — it is a man made, not a natu­ral (at least I hope not). I think you know well I was not refe­rring to man made oppres­sive social cons­tructs, but natu­ral cul­tu­ral and eth­nic proc­li­vi­ties one might finds in say… your Irish family, or my Austrian/Hungarian/Cuban family or withing a sin­gle family unit itself or a tribe of peo­ple. Anth­ro­po­lo­gi­cally spea­king the natu­ral things not the aberrant.

    It’s late dare I turn on my chat.…

  • Doesn’t mat­ter if you used it in this post. Unless you don’t believe it to be an appro­priate phrase any­more, which I doubt.

    But you were attac­king the video. You said that the word “rape” inva­li­da­tes it as satire, and if the Onion isn’t shoo­ting for hila­rity, what else is there? Peo­ple calling something “hila­rious” that’s not is hardly a new thing. peo­ple still use it to desc­ribe SNL and it’s not true. And yes there are peo­ple who will apply it to anything with shock value, even clum­sily wiel­ded shock value. I do believe I said that I find the video itself hypocritical.

    Who said I was bla­ming women for anything? If not for that trend there’d be no Sein­feld or Mitch Hed­burg. The “joke” is obso­lete except in rare ins­tan­ces. I was just poin­ting out a dif­fe­rence in sense of humor. I’m not trying to start a gen­der war or fan the fla­mes of one.

  • I wasn’t rea­ding anything in to the video . I was rea­ding it into the the ensuing hila­rity, a hila­rity which occu­rred in many pla­ces and was not read into.

    I agree it should be paro­died, and could h ave been done so quite cle­verly without rape such empha­sis. The fact is our media is a joke and many in this country are just figu­ring it out. Parody the public in this country for watching that shit and caring about the blond girls gone mis­sing in lieu of any thing else. At this point in time that is a more deser­ving parody because the fact that out media sucks is old news .

    Des­pite that, the point of this was not the parody it was the effect of that kind of parody has on women and the fact that men can look past a lot of things which really do not effect them no mat­ter how horri­ble. It could have been done dif­fe­rently. As I said, that hila­rity would not have been there if rape was a crime most often com­mit­ted against males.

    Nice to see you though Jason.

  • Wow. That’s a lot to read into a silly Onion piece, chica.

    Actually, I swing the other way on this. Women get raped every hour of the day on this pla­net. But the Ame­ri­can public only beco­mes enth­ra­lled when it’s a white college-educated kid from Middle Fuc­king Ame­rica. That should be paro­died. You’ve got women get­ting gang-raped at the ends of mache­tes in cen­tral Africa, but when Mrs. Poll­yanna Corn­fed disap­pears from a college cam­pus, has a cutesy Face­book pic, then that beco­mes a sen­sa­tion. Screw the women of the world who have no con­trol over their des­ti­nies, face AK-47 fire and geni­tal muti­la­tion. America’s dam­ned Sweetheart gets the headline.

  • I was spea­king to a gene­ral dif­fe­rence in sen­ses of humor, to sup­port my posi­tion that even if rape hap­pe­ned solely to men, there would still be as many peo­ple calling that video “hila­rious.” And I said that right there.

    Pri­son rape is laughed at by men, and men are almost always the vic­tims when it’s depic­ted. Your con­ten­tion that the peo­ple laughing at the video must not “get it” is just untenable

  • And I con­tend, although you may find men laughing at jokes based on it, you would not find the atti­tude of “hila­rity” surroun­ding it. In an envi­ron­ment where male rape was the norm had the same tape been done and the rape been refe­rring to male rape you would have very few men calling it hilarious.

    There is no way to really know this though is there as it is hypothe­ti­cal as male rape is not the norm and as hypothe­ti­cal situa­tions can lead to infi­nite com­men­tary I’m done with this for the moment.

    Fede­rer is calling. ;)

  • no one said that rape was hila­rious. they said that this one clip that had the word rape used in it was hilarious.

    And I think it’s more than fair to say that that, being male, I’m in a bet­ter posi­tion to know what men are more likely to laugh at. And yes. There’s no way to know for sure. But there’s no way to know anything for sure. The hypothe­ti­cal you draw isn’t sup­por­ted by anything that we do know.

  • I wasn’t using a hypothe­ti­cal I was sta­ting a fact of what I saw and read online. You were sta­ting a hypothe­ti­cal. “even if rape hap­pe­ned solely to men“
    but as seem to be domi­na­ting the con­ver­sa­tion and it is obvious we are not going to see eye to eye on this is is pro­bably best to end it here. If you want to have the last word you may.

  • Forc­fully attac­king another human for sexual gra­ti­fi­ca­tion can never be con­do­ned. As a for­mer Judo instructor/coach fre­quently approached by women to teach them anti-rape tech­ni­ques, I unders­tand a bit about their fear and anxiety. Humour and or satire are in poor taste addres­sing this subject.

  • This cer­tainly has been an inte­res­ting set of com­ments. Cer­tainly one of the best I’ve read in the blo­gosphere on any topic in some time.

    I would, neverthe­less, like to add a little something.

    I think we can all agree that rape is most often a crime of vio­lent domi­na­tion, not sexual gratification.

    In the pri­son envi­ron­ment, howe­ver, it is usually a com­bi­na­tion of the two. And, given the ever-rising male pri­son popu­la­tion, the inci­dents of male-on-male rape is sky-rocketing. In this country, sadly, male-on-male rapes repre­sents a huge chunk of all rapes. But they never really make it into the kept sta­tis­tics or nightly news because they occur in pri­sons. And con­victs deserve it, right? Which makes it okay for jokes.

    Rape, in any con­text or set­ting, is never okay.

    Exce­llent topic, Cooper.

  • Willi: Obviously I agree with you.
    Thanks for stop­ping by. Kaya­king is one thing I could never get a handle on.

    SK: I agree of course. I think in some ways this whole thing stems from the fact that I find very little funny about things like this in gene­ral but it was just so per­fectly com­mon to find men using words such as hila­rious with no regard to what lies beyond the ini­tial attempt at satire.

  • I love your willing­ness to post opi­nions you know will get you kic­ked around a bit.

  • Just stum­bled upon this and totally agree with you Coo­per. The­res lots of funny shit about. This is not funny. And I find humour in most stuff.
    I assume that this is attemp­ting to be a sati­ri­cal look at todays media.
    The vast majo­rity of peo­ple abhor rape. We should be dis­cus­sing the medias por­tra­yal and mani­pu­la­tion of the news. 5 stars for high­ligh­ting this.
    Someone once said something like “Bad things hap­pen when good peo­ple say nothing“
    Keep posting.

  • Also, I think when men laugh at the male-on-male rape that hap­pens in pri­sons, the ones who are laughing are men who have a lot of pri­vi­lege, who have never been in pri­son and will likely never be in pri­son because they can afford good attor­neys, etc. Having wor­ked a bit with ex-convicts, I can safely say that they’re simply not inc­lu­ded in the con­ver­sa­tion; we never see their views or needs in the mains­tream, and our cul­ture is so hos­tile to them that they have an extre­mely dif­fi­cult time get­ting jobs and rein­te­gra­ting into society and very often land back in pri­son, where they once again have about a 0% chance of taking part in any public dia­lo­gue about what affects them.

    Also, I’d just like to say that I think it’s really, really mes­sed up to say that mur­der is to death as rape is to sex. Whe­reas most peo­ple fear death and every­body only goes through it once, sex is meant to be an extre­mely enjo­ya­ble act that most peo­ple will par­ti­ci­pate in many times throughout their lives. A more apt com­pa­ri­son would be to say that rape is to sex as mur­der is to life. It takes away your abi­lity to enjoy a won­der­ful thing, and yes, I am tal­king from expe­rience when I say rape takes away your abi­lity to enjoy sex. Hell, it’s taken away my abi­lity to enjoy most aspects of life, and I don’t think it’s something that can ever, ever be funny. It must be nice to not know what that’s like and be able to pass rape jokes off as comedy gold.

  • Joe: it’s good for the mind.

    jericho: I will, as much as it cau­ses some unhap­pi­ness at times. If one more per­son gets it each time, well so much the bet­ter. Thanks for commenting.

    veri­fi­tas: Also, I think when men laugh at the male-on-male rape that hap­pens in pri­sons, the ones who are laughing are men who have a lot of pri­vi­lege, who have never been in pri­son and will likely never be in pri­son because they can afford good attor­neys, etc.

    You make a very good point one that has not been made here as yet.

    You are dead on here.

  • Hmm. Let me start by sta­ting that I know a fair amount of women who’ve been raped. I also know at least one guy that’s been sexually abu­sed as a child, and have wor­ked with chil­dren from abu­sive fami­lies. Peo­ple con­fide in me.

    As a con­se­quence, I tend to think a lot more about rape than most peo­ple do, and what the con­se­quen­ces of rape are. Nothing about rape is funny, not even in the slightest.

    But rape isn’t sexual vio­lence, that really doesn’t do the crime cre­dit. There is inhe­rently nothing in it about sex, that’s just the tool, and anyone clai­ming other­wise doesn’t really unders­tand it. With rape, peo­ple demons­trate that their victim’s wishes are utterly irrelevant.

    Part of the moti­va­tion for even con­si­de­ring the act may be sexual, and the sexual plea­sure may con­tri­bute to the fee­ling of supe­rio­rity peo­ple get from vic­ti­mi­zing someone, but that doesn’t make rape sexual. Sex hap­pens mostly in the mind. Some peo­ple get off on bea­ting someone up — does that make it a sex crime?

    No, the simi­la­rity bet­ween both isn’t the sexual part, it’s the domi­nance part, the demons­tra­tion of “I can do to you wha­te­ver I want”. And expe­rien­cing that on the vic­tims part is where the horror of rape lies, the com­plete lack of control.

    What makes rape worse than other, simi­lar cri­mes, isn’t so much the sexual part, it’s how rape gets trea­ted by society. Rape vic­tims often feel they can’t con­fide in others, because rape is a taboo sub­ject, one that one isn’t allo­wed to talk about in nor­mal tones. One has to react outra­ged, shoc­ked, sym­pathe­tic, so peo­ple do that. You might as well treat rape vic­tims as lepers — they don’t need peo­ple con­fu­sed about how to treat them, somewhat sym­pathe­tic yet oddly dis­tant. They need genuine and unc­ri­ti­cal warmth, just like anyone else.

    Which, apart from pos­si­ble threats by the rapists, is why a fair num­ber of vic­tims keep the crime to them­sel­ves. Which is why rapists get away with what they do. Which is why the whole thing won’t stop that quickly.

    There is really only one way to treat rape, and that’s to pull it out into the open, to talk and even to use it in jokes, as unfunny as the sub­ject itself may be. Yes it may be uncom­for­ta­ble for some vic­tims, but it’s the only way to start pre­ven­ting more cases of rape, by star­ting a para­digm shift in our culture’s per­cep­tion of the crime.

    Note that I do not pro­pose joking /about/ rape. But using rape as a hook in a parody, such as the Onion one — I see little pro­blem with that. The joke isn’t about rape any­way, the joke is about how media create news.

    I don’t find it terribly funny because it’s too close to the truth. My only pro­blem with the Onion video is that, and the fact that they’ve done the same thing before. There is no need to pull rape into it, and the­re­fore it beco­mes a bit of a cheap shock — and the topic deser­ves bet­ter treat­ment than that.

  • I’m in total agree­ment with you unwesen.