So, Monica's back on Twitter. One of the things she posted is this:
archived 16 Mar 2019 02:58:26 UTC
archive.is
So, I looked up the study she's talking about and found this NPR article:
A nationwide survey found that most women have experienced some form of sexual harassment, many since their teenage years. The results illustrate why the #MeToo movement was so successful.
www.npr.org
Which points to these studies:
Here's how these people define sexual harassment/assault:
Firstly, this is an online survey, so this more of the fact that 81% of women
reported being sexually harassed, not 81% of women that actually are. But that's not really the issue here. The issue here is what counts as sexual assault here.
For example, #13. "Someone physically following you without your permission." How in the fuck is that sexual harassment? How is it sexual if I was just walking on a sidewalk, minding my business, following some random woman who ended up heading the same direction that I was?
Or #8. "Someone repeatedly texting or calling you in a harassing way." How is that sexual? Really? There's a "block caller" option if you really think someone's harassing you.
#1. How is "staring aggressively at someone" sexual? How is honking sexual? Just looking at this list, I've done some of this stuff, and my life isn't being ruined because of them. I've talked to women before about their bosom and sex. They really didn't mind. Nor did they say no. That's not sexual assault/harassment.
It's as though it's a case of "I didn't know it was sexual assault until someone told me it was."
No wonder MGTOW exists. The fact that all of these things, stuff that was pretty much accepted a generation ago, is now deemed to be sexual harassment/assault and life-ruining now. It will haunt people now that this is the norm.