Posted on 12/15/2014 5:51:23 AM PST by outpostinmass2
The young woman who introduced Jackie Coakley to journalist Sabrina Rubin Erdely used Jackies story to push a federal law eroding due process for men on college campuses.
Emily Renda, a 2011 sociology major who wrote on Title IX and the campus rape myth for her college thesis, testified before a U.S. senate panel earlier this year. Heres what she said in June.
(Excerpt) Read more at gotnews.com ...
We now know that that entire story of rape was made up. Will Emily Renda now ask to have it removed?
Well, we’ve already lost our due process property rights.
Whats criminalizing men on college campii?
Guess who else was at the hearing, Liz Warren, everyone should watch this testimony in its entirety.
I’ll bet that dingbat voted for Bill Clinton - twice, if she’s old enough.
Its the same thing they’re calling for if a cop kills a black perp.
Maybe some of these females are miffed that frat men and athletes won’t give them the time of day and are getting revenge.
Sociology? Really? Does anybody consider that a real major? Who would take anything a sociology major had to say seriously?
I’ve heard liberals call frats “Cradles of capitalism”.
Sociology has its place in things like market research and psy ops but its a pretty limited field. I dated a sociology PhD who wrote her thesis as an intern with Hershey foods.
She is also linked to the White House:
University alumna Emily Renda, who worked with the White House Task Force last spring and interns in the University Office of Student Affairs, said the new campaign will change the language used to discuss sexual assault prevention.
Men werent particularly engaged with sexual violence prevention because the only thing we were really pushing as part of [it] was dont rape people, which is not exactly a very proactive thing to tell people to do, Renda said. The language is starting to shift more to healthy conversations about healthy sexuality and consent, and having those for both men and women as kind of an engagement point.
Renda said the changed approach will involve men who have felt alienated and broadly characterized as perpetrators of sexual violence, as well as women who have felt alienated and broadly characterized as victims.
This campaign and the stuff that U.Va. is already doing, is irrespective of gender saying it is, in fact, our responsibility just as individuals and humans, regardless of our gender, she said. Its a lot about pulling back on the victim-perpetrator dichotomy we were using before.
Its On Us follows the path of University initiatives like Hoos Got Your Back and Not On Our Grounds in stressing the importance of bystander education and intervention against sexual assault.
As always. Top down manipulation of the masses.
I use to not be a conspiracy person but this is playing out exactly like previous narratives. The testimony she gives and the legislation being discussed is essentially using Title IX to allow colleges to expel students without due process.
OOOHHhhhh I know this one! -
The Government, when they want a 'useful idiot' to promote their agenda.
The young woman who introduced Jackie Coakley to journalist Sabrina Rubin Erdely used Jackie's story to push a federal law eroding due process for men on college campuses.
One of the student survivors I worked with, Jenna*, was gang-raped by five fraternity men early in her freshman year. Despite the severity of the assault and injuries she sustained, Jenna still experienced a feeling of personal responsibility. Looking for affirmation, she sought out peers and told her story. Sadly, each and every one of the friends she reached out to responded with varying denials of her experience; these responses worsened her feelings of self-blame that she must be confused because that fraternity is full of great guys; that she must have made them think she was down for that; questioning how no one else at the party could have heard what was going on if she was telling the truth; or discouraging her from seeking help because you dont want to be one of those girls who has a reputation for reporting that kind of thing. These statements haunted Jenna. She told me that they made her feel crazy, and made her question whether her own understanding of the rape was legitimate. Survivors who receive disaffirming responses to initial disclosures are more likely to experience negative mental health consequences as wellii. These negative and victim-blaming responses from her peers reinforced Jennas sense of fault, and prevented her from coming forward to the Universitys administration or the Police. When she finally sought assistance from the Dean of Students office, after struggling and nearly failing out of her classes for two semesters, it was difficult for the university to conduct a meaningful investigation because much of the evidence had been lost, and witnesses were more difficult to locate.
(Excerpt) Read more at help.senate.gov ...
Yet more evidence for why men are utterly opting out of contact with females in the US. My (non-US) wife cannot understand why women here are sabotaging themselves and their lives by trying to do and be things that are antithetical to healthy relationships.
What man wants to be associated with a woman who will come to the relationship from the perspective that he’s a criminal, will expect him to accept this without protest, and that she can (and likely will) bankrupt him and deprive him of any children resulting from the relationship should she become bored of him?
Fake Rape , Black Crime is not crime ,D’oh the country is falling apart
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