MSO was saying a specific meme (made by a lolicon, by the way(
https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/anatomy-of-a-gamer) portrayed men as pedophile, when the meme was made overwhelmingly (including the creator) by men, portraying kids as their gf/bf.
Omega then stated that this was a reflection of the communities making those memes, and not stereotypes about men.
My exposure to this meme was in one of the gaming circlejerk/shitposting subreddits, modified to be more disparaging as a part of casting it as the stereotypical gamer in the subreddit's usual half-irony anti-gamers stance.
Omega then stated that this was a reflection of the communities making those memes, and not stereotypes about men.
Soreyew posts stats about men being overwhelmingly present in pedophilic crimes perpetrator, not victims.
MSO saw this, and muted soreyew for this.

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From my point of view, soreyew is combating omega's point. Omega's argument is that men are over represented in gaming communities, the group the memes were originally about, and thats why its that way. Soreyew is instead saying no, its because its just men committing the crime and points to stats on convictions that shows 97% men, 3% women. However convection stast can only reflect and show biases in enforcement, not speak to demographic data on who does a given crime.
Maybe its because im a stoner, but this is soo well known i find it hard to think anybody posting crime stats to suggest they reflect the group who commits those crimes is acting in good faith. I've known about weed possession arrest stats being overwhelmingly black since i was 16. (All studies and survives about who uses illegal weed shows race has no to little impact on if somebody will smoke pot).
There are in fact things you can learn from these stats, but who commits crimes is not one of the, only who gets arrested or convicted for the crimes, a data point that is inherently impacted by biases, more so in some crimes.
(You know, In order for somebody to get convicted, the action has to be seen as abusive by the victim (or their providers) soon enough for police to bother, something less likely to happen if one (or both) genders doesn't the narrative.)
Might explain why the dutch Independent Commissioner for Child Sexual Abuse Issues has this to say:
It has to be assumed that sexual abuse inflicted by women is discovered less frequently because they are expected less likely to commit such acts.
(They list the number as 10-25% of abusers are women btw).
You can't try to wash yew's posting of the stats as some high level academic discourse about biases in criminal enforcement like you tried to do in your txt, you can't even say he was trying to make some point about a lesson the stat shows us on socialization of men. He posted it to reinforce the narrative that its only men who commit those crimes.
You know its possible to limit that kind of discussion to such higher level discourses while leaving the default concept of a generic perp be gender neutral right? You don't think the people abused (also gender neutral, how nice) deserve that? You don't think
you deserve that?
Arguing that the overwhelming majority of these memes portray men with child bf/gf because of stereotypes or because the people who make them are men changes nothing to the fact that it's a reflection of reality.
Why? What? How? When?
Why bring it up?
What does that bring to the conversation?
How should it be brought up to avoid reinforcing the harmful stereotypes?
When should it be brought up to avoid reinforcing the harmful stereotypes?
Ultimatly this is an issue of representation, earlier this week you made a joke about the lack of representation of black people video essay because i was memeing about become yet another white trans woman video essayist. This is the same.
I think you'd agree that if you want to seek spaces in which you want your story to be represented, and you're part of the minority, you will not get this in spaces where everyone is included, no one is stopping you from making a safe space for people who are victims of women who commited SA, polcon already is it, as you mentionned a lot of people in polcon have suffered from shit like this, and sharing stories of people being abused by women helps people to come out and admit that they were raped, even if it was by a woman.
Why did yew bring it up in a discussion about the default narrative? Was that really the best place?
What does it bring to the conversation? "here is the most biased towards men stat to suggest that women doing it is so rare its hardly worth caring about" putting up a 3% stat when im commonly finding ones 4 to 6 times as large. Doesn't this seem like it does more to push a harmful gender stereotype then it does to advance any conversation?
How should it be brought up to avoid reinforcing the harmful stereotypes? for starters, how about contextualizing the inherent biased nature of the stats? In this case that would mean not bringing it up to dismiss conversations about women abusers.
When should it be brought up to avoid reinforcing the harmful stereotypes? Bringing them up in contrast to other stats to show the harm of that stereotype?
Categorizing what you underwent as rape is hard,[..] And it's always hard to be a minority, not recognizing yourself in the stories of SA told by others because your aggressor was a woman is tough. But the solution isn't categorically banning all mentions of men being majoritarian perpetrators of SA.
Thank you for those kind and empathic words. but i have to disagree with the end sentence. I still haven't been sold on the benefit of bringing it up except in extremely specific situations, and i fear the stats can't be accurate anyways because this narrative being the default narrative clouds the reporting (as discussed). which is one of many reasons i want it to stop being the default narrative.
Also, for the most part. We do in fact categorically ban (nearly) all mentions of racial groups being the majoritarian perpetrators of anything.
You know! putting it another way, on these same stats, the massive majority of sex abuse against boys is committed by men. 60%-90%. You know! There is another way one could phrase that statistic:
Please explain to me, in which situations you would find it acceptable to point out that the majority of perpetrators of SA against boys are the same gender as their victims?
Don't worry. I'll wait.
In comparison you achieve nothing, you mute people because you disagree with what they say. there is little to not benefit from you muting soreyew here, no one who would refuse to see their SA experience as valid because the perpetrator is a woman would change their mind because the stats aren't posted, because there's still a societal notion that men overwhelmingly perpetrate those crimes.
You do know we ban the 13%ers even if nobody in the channel would be likely to have their view of black people negatively impacted by them posting their bullshit.
No one here has argued that your experience of SA is less valid because the perpetrator is a woman, just that it's less likely for the perpetrator to be a man.
You banned me not because i was discounting the experience of people SAd by women, but because you saw what soreyew posted as sexist towards men, that is the only way your ban makes sense.
I think that last part was enough for a ban on its own, yes, its also something that i have strong thoughts about, and have voiced them in the channel before, yes, I'm not making it my primary argument thou partly because i don't think you'll fucking care, showing you the harm your rhetoric does is something i think you'll care more about, and mostly because the harm this narrative can cause is far more fucking important then my unease at how normalized viewing men as predators by default is.
Speaking of that, there is a fucking
bear elephant in the room i need to address:
Its not just the children who won't see what happened to them as abuse until much later. Its their parents and the other people in their lives too. its the aunt at the family gathering that notices somebody followed their niece down the hallway and gets an gut feeling, stopping the abuse. Its the mother who notices her son has been more withdrawn since the move and new babysitter and replaces them, just in case...
Stats do matter
Not if it means the public perception of who commit abuse causes people to miss abuse,
to fail to stop abuse. Not if it means that same mother ignores the signs her son is getting withdrawn again.
and muting people for posting them because it conflicts with your reality and your experience is anti-intelectual and self centered behavior. You shouldn't feel threatened by stats that show your experience is less likely than another.
This is a nice segue way to the arguments i've already posted in the peanut.
First post, issues with Stats commentary:
► Show Spoiler
Generally speaking, these stats (not just the one yew brought up) are often indirectly used to push a narrative that its ok to view men as potential predators by default, indirectly in that they get brought up to dismiss people trying to speak out against viewing men as potential predators to justify it when people are pointing out examples where it lead to innocent actions being viewed as suspect. (like how white fathers of mixed race children get stopped and harassed because they think the child is being kidnapped) This peeves me because while everybody acknowledges these mistakes are in fact mistakes, it's a mistake that doesn't happen to (cis)women. They don't have to spend as much mental energy worrying about it or spend mental energy making sure not to accidentally do something that could be viewed in that light. (also sometime these men commit suicide before the mistake comes to light)
These stats are also used to justify and reinforce a women default narrative around victims of sex offenses, this is less with child sex abuse where male victims have generally been recognized for longer (when the child is abused by men, (but thats only because doing so allowed homophobes to push a narrative))
and as far as accuracy. even the non-crime stat ones are questionable: I am an mra. I have been an mra since 3rd or 4th grade. I have been speaking up for male victims of sex abuse since highschool, i have been calling out those headlines about female teachers since early college. But it wasn't until i was like 25 that i realized some of the sexual abuse i faced as a child and teen at the hands of women was in fact sexual abuse. If any survey had asked me about being molested by women while a minor before that point, I would have said no. That is how deeply ingrained attitudes about who is seen as the perps and victims of crimes can blind people to their own abuse. That is what bringing that stat up enforces, and the harm of this has to be weighted against the gain from doing so.
I have many reasons to be threaten by the stats. but heres another:
2.22% of millennial men and 4.32% of millennial women reported taking advantage of being an adult more than 5 years older than somebody younger than 16
https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... nial_Shift
This was the most recent pin in the channel while all of this was going down.
The narrative is a fucking
lie. Once you take away the biases of men not thinking that what happened to them was abuse, and go directly to asking men and women about what they've done you get
millennial women being twice as likely to sexually abuse minors under 16.
Does this mean we should start treating women the way we used to treat men? Oh man i can admit that part of me wants that, so they can *feel* how it's like to be treated that way… but no. That's an immature impulse and one even I can see past. I haven't brought this study up until now because I don't think it matters. Even if the narrative against men was true it doesn't justify defending a narrative that casts the default/generic predator as a gender. Full stop.
Also its not like this can be believed any better than the other stats. The culture trend of not treating women committing these offenses seriously may cause a higher percent of them to be willing to report doing so. And even thou 1.4k people were studied very few answered yes.
Error margin still puts the range in the ball park of "equal rates" men and women if you are most favorable to women and least to men. a far fucking cry from 97%/3%.
The best case you could make? is that its complicated. which is exactly the kind of nuance that gets erased when people feel the need to reduce it down to "ackwually its because dats da gender that does it" every time somebody tries to have a conversation on these trends and the impacts they can have, especially when there is multiple (i've given like 7? some repeats of others thou, so, like 5?) reasons to question if this is even true.
Anywho, the bottom line is you don't have a fucking leg to stand on, so sit your ass down and accept your dunce cap.
You ran defense for bigotry against men by needlessly pushing this gendered narrative of who commits sex crimes as necessary when its fucking not and not even concretely true enough. You did so in front of some of the primary victims of the harm that causes, and when given the chance to apologize 3 times, you threw it away.
This isn't even the first time you got in trouble because you felt the need to push or defend a gendered narrative to who commits crimes.
This appeal is denied. You may appeal again in a year.