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To obtain
permission to reprint any or all portions of the below article
written by Mike Domitrz (Executive Director of
The Date Safe Project),
e-mail
mike@thedatesafeproject.org.
Date Rape, Rape, Sexual Assault, Prevention, Awareness --
the words we use.
Date Rape, Rape,
Sexual Assault, Prevention, Awareness – which are the right
words to use? The average person often confuses these words and
so this article provides you with simple and basic definitions.
Using the wrong word can be extremely damaging to a survivor of
sexual assault:
DATE RAPE
What most people think and/or visualize:
a violent and forced sexual encounter during a date where the
male physically forces the female to have sexual intercourse
against her will.
Reality:
“date rape” is a word that is used most often by the media and
academia. Very few states have any laws that utilize the words
“date rape”. The correct term for the actions that result in a
date rape is a “non-stranger sexual assault” (in most states).
Date rapes can vary from subtle mental manipulation to horrific
violence against a dating partner.
Misconceptions:
"Date rape" is a poor choice of words because often the
situation is not a "date." The two people could be at a
club, a party, at a house, or a variety of different locations
that would not be part of a date. The survivor can know
the assailant very well, but not be dating. For this
reason, "non-stranger sexual assault" is much more accurate.
Plus, many
people can only imagine a "rape" to be committed by a big, ugly
psycho (as described below in the next section of this article).
When the assault is committed by an acquaintance, it is harder
for the survivor to consider the assailant a rapist --
because of that stereotypical image of a rapist.
RAPE
What most people think and/or visualize:
a very violent crime in which a female has sexual intercourse
forced upon her by a rapist. The rapists is usually pictured as
a big, ugly, and scary looking stranger and rape is often
assumed to happen in parks, alleys, and other “unsafe”
locations.
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Reality:
Like “date rape, the word “rape” is a word used mainly by
academia and the media. As mentioned earlier, “sexual assault”
is the proper term for such crimes. Most sexual assaults occur
between two people who KNOW each other (80% - 85% of the time
both individuals know each other). Just like “date rape”, rapes
can vary from subtle mental manipulation to horrific violence
against another person.
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Misconceptions:
By thinking of a rapist as a “big, ugly, and scary looking
stranger”, the average person does not think a rape will occur
to him/her. Why? The average person says, “I would never find
myself in that type of a situation – especially with a person
like that”. By creating this false and delusional thought
process, people let their guard down in “safe” locations (places
you are comfortable in such as your own home, apartment, and/or
dorm room). People trust those individuals that they consider
to be “safe” people (boyfriends, classmates, people they
know). Now, a person’s guard is down and so he/she feels
comfortable . Thus, this person does not notice the signs of
trouble or danger. Most sexual assaults occur in a place you
ARE comfortable in and with someone you know (as discussed
previously).
The false
concept that all rapists are “big and ugly” has enabled our
society to say “he would never rape someone” about the average
guy and/or popular person. Not only does our culture have a
history of not blaming the male, we actually BLAME the survivor
by saying “she must have asked for it because he would never do
that”. This way of thinking has been one of most damaging
components of sexual assaults in
America.
By blaming survivors, we make it more difficult for survivors to
WANT to report the crime and/or speak out about the crime.
Consequently, the crime of sexual assault goes tragically
under-reported!
FYI: people of
all types (genders, sexual orientations, races, socioeconomic
categories, etc…) have sexually assaulted other people.
SEXUAL ASSAULT
What most people think and/or visualize:
sexual contact against someone’s will.
Reality:
Sexual contact WITHOUT CONSENT is the true definition of sexual
assault in most states. “Consent” is the key word to
understanding all the issues behind sexual assault. For a
person to have “consent” to do anything in life, that person
must have permission. To get permission or consent to take
action, what must you do? You must ask! The legal words
"without consent” forces the accused assailant to prove that
he/she had consent before taking action against and/or with the
survivor.
Sexual Assault
is the correct word to use in all cases of sexual contact
without consent (not rape or date rape). In various states,
differing degrees of sexual assault exist such as 1st
degree, 2nd degree, 3rd degree, and 4th
degree sexual assault (just like the crime of homicide has
multiple degrees).
Misconceptions:
By thinking sexual assault is “sexual contact against someone’s
will”, the issue of sexual assault is much more confusing
because you would have to prove what the person’s “will” was in
that situation. “Against someone’s will” can mistakenly place
the burden on the survivor to prove he/she did not want it. How
do you prove that? You have one person’s word against another.
In most courtrooms, a defendant’s lawyer will try to push this
concept “of against someone’s will” on the jury to help confuse
the jury and to complicate both the issue and the case against
their client.
Consent is very
simple to understand. Asking for and gaining consent is an
action that everyone takes throughout their daily lives…asking
their parents to borrow the car, asking their boss to have a day
off, and you can think of many more daily examples. To get
consent, you ask. If you tell me, “I can’t ask. I would not be
comfortable asking someone.” Do you know what I would say to
you? Here is my answer, “you can’t ask her if she wants to have
sex with you, but you are comfortable having sex with her?
Isn’t something wrong with that picture? If I told you ‘hey, I
want to do this certain thing, but I can’t talk about it. Do
you think I am ready to do it?’, what would you tell me?” Use
common sense: if you can’t talk about it, you're not ready to
do it!
While reading
the below script, imagine you are in a courtroom as part of a
jury:
Prosecutor:
“Did you ask her if you could kiss her before you kissed
her?”
Assailant:
“No. No one asks. That is just stupid.”
Prosecutor:
Well, then how did you know she wanted it?”
Assailant:
“I could tell through her body language, the way she looked
at me, etc…”
Prosecutor:
“Oh, so you can read her mind. Without talking, you knew
exactly what she wanted. Maybe you could read a few minds in
the courtroom’s audience today. Would you be willing to do that
for us?”
Assailant:
“No. I never said I could read minds”
Prosecutor:
“So how did you get consent?”
Assailant:
“You just know when someone wants it? Everyone knows what I
mean?”
Prosecutor:
“In dating situations, do people ever guess incorrectly?”
Assailant:
“Of course.”
Prosecutor:
“So people can misread body language, etc..?
Assailant:
“People can misread, but I didn’t.”
Prosecutor:
“That is nice that YOU believe that. How did you get
consent?”
Assailant:
“She didn’t say ‘no’ and so that is how I knew she wanted it”
Prosecutor:
“What didn’t she say ‘no’ to?
Assailant:
“She didn’t say ‘no’ to me touching her?”
Prosecutor:
“Oh, so you asked?
Assailant:
“No, I didn’t ask”
Prosecutor:
“How could she say ‘no’ to a question you never asked her?”
Through the
above script, you can see that the assailant goes from trying to
make the prosecutor’s argument look stupid TO the assailant
sounding foolish and continuously talking himself into a
corner. The assailant tried to argue “that she didn’t say no” –
one of the most common and weakest defenses in courtrooms. The
law is written in a way that demands consent! For her to say
“no”, someone needs to ask her a question. You probably do not
walk down the street and yell “no” to every stranger – just in
case the stranger was thinking of mugging you. Yet, many people
expect rape survivors to do this.
PREVENTION
The word
“prevention” is one of the most widely misused words in
educating people about sexual assault. The base word being
“prevent” implies that you can prevent all sexual assaults from
happening to you. You can’t! There is no 100% way to “prevent”
sexual assault. By using the word “prevention”, many people
will assume the survivor “could have prevented the assault if….”
– thus, placing blame on the survivor for not being able to stop
the assault from occurring. Awareness is the correct word to
use.
AWARENESS
The base word being “aware” defines the concept of sexual
assault awareness. By being more aware, each of us can
help ourselves and those around us to see potentially dangerous
situations. Awareness helps us to keep our eyes and ears
out for trouble – without assuming we can always “prevent” an
attack. Nevertheless, the more aware each of us is, the
less likely an attack can occur. “Awareness” is a
wonderful word for survivors and for everyone else.
=========================================
Mike Domitrz
is an expert in dating and communicating on sex and other
intimate issues with tweens, teenagers, and college students. To
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issues, get Mike's critically-acclaimed resource for parents
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- written by Michael Domitrz, Executive Director of the "The Date Safe Project" LLC
To obtain permission to reprint any or all portions of the
above press release,
e-mail
mike@thedatesafeproject.org.
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