XPost: alt.law-enforcement, alt.true-crime, talk.politics.guns   
   XPost: alt.politics.immigration   
   From: msnyder@sonic.net   
      
   Chocolic wrote:   
   >   
   > "Michael Snyder" wrote in message   
   > news:49f5e5a1$0$95519$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net...   
   >> editor@netpath.net wrote:   
   >>> How do YOU know this - if they went unreported - unless you were   
   >>> either the rapist or the victim in every one of these "cases?" Sounds   
   >>> like just another made-up "statistic" some advocacy group with an   
   >>> agenda puts out.   
   >>   
   >> The justice department knows perfectly well how many rapes go   
   >> unreported -- at least they know better than the women's   
   >> advocacy movement does. Rape *is* more under-reported than   
   >> most comparable violent crimes -- but not by that much.   
   >> To say that most rapes go unreported is a gross exaggeration.   
   >   
   > I think when family or friends (or a trusted one in the clergy) are   
   > involved in the rape that it more often goes unreported, at least in the   
   > past.   
      
   That may be true -- the key word being "more often", which   
   begs the question, "more often than what?"   
      
   Friends and family rape may be more often unreported than   
   stranger rape, but that doesn't necessarily mean "highly often",   
   and it most certainly doesn't mean "as often as feminists say".   
      
   > Kids don't want to be responsible for their parents going to jail,   
   > families don't want the scandal, or the victims had the fear nobody   
   > would believe them.   
   >   
   > I also think men/boys tend to under-report because of the stigma   
   > attached of having a gay rape, or if it's with a woman (i.e., teacher),   
   > a male victim is more apt to be teased, or think he might be. I'm   
   > speculating, of course. But I don't find that hard to believe at all.   
   >   
   > I have known several aquaintances over the years during my childhood and   
   > adulthood, both male and female, that claim they were molested/raped as   
   > children or teens, and didn't report it, or one of their parents didn't   
   > report it. I knew one girl, when I was in the fourth grade, that   
   > confided to me that she was raped by her young adult step-brother. Her   
   > mother found out when she noticed sperm on her clothes. Her mother   
   > packed the step-son's clothes up in a box and tossed him out of the   
   > house. No cops were called. I really don't think that is, or was, all   
   > that uncommon.   
   >   
   > Chocolic   
   >   
      
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    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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