saxitoxin wrote:You gotta be kidding me!
Sure it's possible to find limited examples of female-on-male rape, however, I would hazard a guess that these constitute less than 1% of adult-on-adult rapes.
Actually, female-on-male rape is more common than that. The thing is, being raped carries such a social stigma for men that much fewer men who get raped ever report it to anyone - and, even less for men who get raped by women.
Part of this is exactly because of attitudes like yours and carpetmans: "men can't get raped by women", "men always want sex"... and of course, the whole "if you ever show vulnerability you're not a real man" trope.
Just look at how rape is portrayed in popular culture: whenever a woman gets raped, it's a tragedy. When a man gets raped, it's played for laughs...
saxitoxin wrote:I'd consider most cases of female-on-male rape the sexual equivalent of 4th degree assault where the offense is primarily one of annoyance / emotional humiliation.
Rape is just as traumatizing to men as it is to women.
saxitoxin wrote:I think 7 is particularly important. Men can't approach the sex act as the negotiation of equal services between two consenting parties.
Bullshit. Why couldn't they?
Consent is a two-way thing. You can't have consent unless BOTH parties consent.
saxitoxin wrote:Women must always have total authority over sex to advance equality due to the fundamentally inequal physiology of the sex act.
More BS, saxi. The whole "women as gatekeepers of sex" meme is exactly what powers the "transactional model" of sex, which is an entirely toxic way to look at relationships. It is entirely possible to negotiate a sex act from an equal standing, and I don't even see why you think it couldn't be.
Women must have total authority over their own bodies. Men must
also have total authority over
their own bodies.
See, it's not rocket science.