
WorthlessSlavicShit
Captain
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- Oct 30, 2022
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Jfl. Check this shit out brocels, because feminists and bluepillers sure as fuck won't. In this 2013 study, the researchers looked at the self-reported sexual offending and victimization of male and female students in 10 (well, 9 really, for some reason no women participated in the Austrian study) different European countries.
As in, they asked a bunch of men and women in their early-20s, whether they've sexually assaulted/raped someone, whether someone did it to them, and most importantly, how it was done and their relationship to the perpetrator.
The self-reported perpetration rate is already so far out of what the gynocentric, male-hating media and academia tell us is the reality that they might not even be able to process it. Certainly, quite a lot of soyboys of the "ashamed to be male" crowd would have their minds explode and worldvies crumble if they looked at this:
In Poland, more women than men admitted raping someone with everything except physical force. Meanwhile, in The Netherlands, there actually were more women than men that self-reported using physical force to make someone have sex with them, along with verbal pressure, and we actually don't know about the use of authority because they didn't ask about it for some reason. In Slovakia, the two methods female rapists reported more than male ones were verbal pressure and using their position of authority, while the latter was the only method women in Belgium and Spain reported as using more than men to get sex with someone who didn't want it.
This already kinda goes against the narrative of women being helpless victims
, eternally scared and always vigilant because they were cursed with living in a world with us
, scary males who they believe are always out to get them
.
Then, you look at the self-reported victimization, and all the feminist bullshit fairytales don't just fall down, they get obliterated and deleted like they never existed
:
In four entire countries (Cyprus, Greece, Lithuania and Poland), more men than women reported being raped or sexually assaulted by someone, with this applying to all four methods
, with more men than women in those countries claiming to have been forced into sex via physical force, exploitation while they were drugged/drunk, verbal pressure or an authority figure using their power to coerce them into it. In Portugal, this was almost the case as well, expect that slightly more women than men, 11.5% vs 11.1%, reported being forced into sex by verbal pressure, with men reporting everything else at higher rates than women, while more Spanish men than women reported being forced into sex by an authority figure coercing them into it.
Interestingly, this means that, overall, coercion by someone in the position of authority was the one rape method men overall claimed to have been victims of more than women, with only two of the watched countries having higher rates of this type of victimization reported by women, those being Slovakia (where it was quite close, with 5.6% of men reporting it compared to 6% of women) and Belgium, with Austria, as mentioned, having no women to compare the men to, and the Netherlands which for some reason did not ask people about this rape method either when it came to self-reported perpetration or victimization.
Thoughts
?
@To koniec the Polish results seem pretty crazy even to me, with men only reporting more physical force-based rape perpetration than women, out of all of this.
@Stupid Clown I remember talking with you about another study like this in a previous thread, what do you think about this?
Also if there are any Cypruscels or Greekcels, I'd love to know your thoughts on this, especially the insane rates of both perpetration and victimization recorded in Greece
.
As in, they asked a bunch of men and women in their early-20s, whether they've sexually assaulted/raped someone, whether someone did it to them, and most importantly, how it was done and their relationship to the perpetrator.
The self-reported perpetration rate is already so far out of what the gynocentric, male-hating media and academia tell us is the reality that they might not even be able to process it. Certainly, quite a lot of soyboys of the "ashamed to be male" crowd would have their minds explode and worldvies crumble if they looked at this:
In Poland, more women than men admitted raping someone with everything except physical force. Meanwhile, in The Netherlands, there actually were more women than men that self-reported using physical force to make someone have sex with them, along with verbal pressure, and we actually don't know about the use of authority because they didn't ask about it for some reason. In Slovakia, the two methods female rapists reported more than male ones were verbal pressure and using their position of authority, while the latter was the only method women in Belgium and Spain reported as using more than men to get sex with someone who didn't want it.
This already kinda goes against the narrative of women being helpless victims
Then, you look at the self-reported victimization, and all the feminist bullshit fairytales don't just fall down, they get obliterated and deleted like they never existed
In four entire countries (Cyprus, Greece, Lithuania and Poland), more men than women reported being raped or sexually assaulted by someone, with this applying to all four methods
Interestingly, this means that, overall, coercion by someone in the position of authority was the one rape method men overall claimed to have been victims of more than women, with only two of the watched countries having higher rates of this type of victimization reported by women, those being Slovakia (where it was quite close, with 5.6% of men reporting it compared to 6% of women) and Belgium, with Austria, as mentioned, having no women to compare the men to, and the Netherlands which for some reason did not ask people about this rape method either when it came to self-reported perpetration or victimization.
Thoughts
@To koniec the Polish results seem pretty crazy even to me, with men only reporting more physical force-based rape perpetration than women, out of all of this.
@Stupid Clown I remember talking with you about another study like this in a previous thread, what do you think about this?
Also if there are any Cypruscels or Greekcels, I'd love to know your thoughts on this, especially the insane rates of both perpetration and victimization recorded in Greece