Ezra Klein Meets Mao Zedong

Article here. Excerpt:

'America’s sexual revolution handed women control over their sexual destiny while hanging on to liberal notions of justice and due process. But now affirmative consent or “yes-means-yes” law proponents think that these notions are inconvenient obstacles in their quest to deliver total safety to women. Rape, they claim, is such a big problem that they have to trade in their “ends don’t justify the means” philosophy with “by any means necessary” battle cry.
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What's truly ugly, I note in The Week, is accepting totalitarian notions of justice to address a problem that is nowhere near as rampant as the proponents of "yes means yes" laws claim and that women are perfectly capable of handling on their own.

Indeed, if the rape culture was rampant, not only would it show up in reliable statistics, but women’s behavior too. For example, I note:

"Scout Willis, Bruce Willis and Demi Moore's daughter, wouldn't have fearlessly strolled topless in Manhattan to protest Instagram's policies against nude pictures last summer. Sure, she's quasi-famous. But nonetheless, try doing that in the pre-sexual revolution America or modern-day India (my native country) without getting assaulted or worse.

Willis chose going topless as her form of protest precisely because, contrary to Klein's assertion, there is no longer a "culture of entitlement" among American men. Her stunt was possible only because social mores that used to work against women now work for them. Far from facing any sanction, she could count on those around her acknowledging — even cheering (like me) — her right to wield her sexuality as she saw fit without becoming prey to jerks who believe she's "asking for it."

Go here to read the whole thing.'

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Things like what Willis did in Manhattan, the Walk A Mile in Her Shoes events, the "Slut-walks", the Yes Means Yes events -- these are victory laps. Look at the attendees; do they act like they feel oppressed and abused? Not at all. They laugh, hang onto one another with shoulder-drapes, get their photos snapped that run in the campus paper as well as the local papers. Colleges, employers, governmental bodies, all endorse or in greater ways support such events.

This is not how the oppressed are greeted. Quite the contrary. Try holding an event that seeks to end male-only draft registration, or a categorical end to neo-natal circumcision for any reason except medically demonstrable, objectively verifiable ones. Or try starting a men's rights student group on a campus with the same support women's rights student groups get.

Oppressed? No. Jubilant. They have a free pass to demand any sort of rules and regs no matter how ludicrous and unjust so long as they apply only to men, and get them. No one, indeed, should ever be so "oppressed"!

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