I just can’t fathom how a woman can overpower a man in that manner. Even if a woman is physically stronger than the man. If a man really doesn’t want to, how could she even make him erect by force, let alone force it inside her?

I feel like I’m too ignorant on the subject. So please, anyone, enlighten me.

p.s. Statutory rape I do see how that would happen.

  • Ballistic_86@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    A lot of aggression in this comments with this is literally no stupid questions.

    Sexual assault comes in many forms and men are and can be victims of most of them. Coercion, violence, emotional manipulation, drugs or alcohol, the list is the same regardless of gender.

    As for an erection, it’s a biological response so they don’t correspond to desire/attraction/consent. Many women who are raped get “wet” and even orgasm, but that does not indicate pleasure or consent. It’s actually one of the reasons rape victims feel very guilty about the event. “If I didn’t want it/hated it/was scared, why did I cum?” That reasoning is also part of why people don’t report rape. They think that having an orgasm will hurt their chances to press charges or win because “they enjoyed it”

    Rape can also happen between consenting people as well. In fact, quite a lot of what is and should be considered sexual assault/rape, is a partner “going too far” or doing something their consenting partner didn’t consent to.

    Healthy sexual intimacy requires clear communication, setting boundaries, and making sure those things aren’t broken. The kink/BDSM community is an extreme form of sexual pleasure, and despite literal violence and pain, there is always consent at the forefront and there is always an “opt-out” or safe word that ends the encounter with no second guessing.

    • throwawaysalami@lemm.eeOP
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      3 months ago

      Rape can also happen between consenting people as well. In fact, quite a lot of what is and should be considered sexual assault/rape, is a partner “going too far” or doing something their consenting partner didn’t consent to.

      Say one partner (A) did something to partner (B) which B did not consent to initially. B says this to partner A afterwards to which she replies “Sorry, but I was really close.” But she sort of promised to not do it again. What would you make of that?

      • Ballistic_86@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        It would def have to be a discussion, but that would by default be sexual assault

        Bodily autonomy and safety around boundaries are paramount over “finishing”

  • SloppyPuppy@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Well some woman on the street can definitely drag you to a corner and do a lot of sexual things to yoy without consent. Thats rape.

  • ma11en@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Bear in mind that in most countries rape is defined by a forced sexual act by a male.

    • DarkCloud@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Most countries are corrupt backwards dictatorships… So that might be the best standard to use.

    • norimee@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Bear in mind that rape is not only defined by the law. And this question was not about the law, but about how rape can happen without physical superiority.

      If I would know somebody personally who defines rape only that way, I would actually make an effort to warn all women and girls in proximity about them. Maybe you need to reexamine your own sexual encounters, weather they always been completely consensual…

  • all-knight-party@kbin.run
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    4 months ago

    From my viewpoint, it’s usually more of a coercive thing. Something you’re not necessarily entirely opposed to, but you might rather not, and in order to avoid a situation you might perceive as bad in a different way, you relent and allow it to happen, leading to years of questioning whether it even was rape or not, even though what it does to you mentally is irrefutable.

    • throwawaysalami@lemm.eeOP
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      4 months ago

      So you mean like a woman beats (or like really harasses) a man and in order to keep her at ease he relents? (English is not my first language)

  • AstralPath@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    It happens when your girlfriend is extremely unstable by default, even more so after a fight, comes to your parents house drunk in the middle of the night and essentially shames you for trying to reject her advances while simultaneously being physical about it by forcing you down and assuming you’re playing some mind game while you try your best to avoid waking your parents in the next room and making a scene cause she’s being loud and borderline belligerent. The sheer embarassment is enough for personal boundaries to get absolutely stomped on in that situation.

    Life is living among infinite shades of grey. Every situation has nuance that you might not have thought of.

  • CaptnKarisma@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    I dont necessarily think in all cases its overpowering someone, its more making advances and the person is not saying no or unsure how to deflect their advances. Either gender can hold a position of power. Still rape does not really matter which gender is doing it to whom. No grey area consent must be clear.

  • kora@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    4 months ago

    Prior to my coming out to myself, I was SA’d by a woman after being drugged.

    The many, many mental struggles that followed brought me to the basic realization that everybody, well, maybe not lizardpeople, but the rest of us all bleed if somebody just shot us. Sure, I was drugged, so it helped with feeling weak at being assaulted, but even if I hadn’t been drugged, it wouldn’t have made it any more my fault. Im not saying like “if she had a gun you’d still…”

    Anyone can be convinced by a horrible person that they won’t be safe unless they do something they don’t want to do. Gender, Chromosomes, Sexuality have no effect on that. -Full stop-

  • problematicPanther@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Coersion. For example, “if you don’t have sex with me right now, we’re breaking up/I’m divorcing you/I’m going to ruin your life by doing xyz.” And when you say no, she’ll threaten to call the cops on you for some made up bullshit, but they’ll believe her over you because she’s the woman and you’re the man.

    Also, you don’t have to be erect to have someone force you into performing sex acts. She could force you to perform oral on her, she could grope you, she could even penetrate you.

    But if this happens to you, fight back.

    • DontTreadOnBigfoot@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      But if this happens to you, fight back.

      But remember, YOU will be going to jail if you do.

      It’s not right, but it’s the truth

    • throwawaysalami@lemm.eeOP
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      4 months ago

      I knew this post wouldn’t be a very “positive” one. But man that’s messed up. I think I understand now.

  • Droggelbecher@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Power over another person, the prerequisite for most sexual violence, doesn’t have to come from superior physical strength. It could come from an age difference, a professor-student or boss-employee dynamic, or some form of blackmail, for example. And the body can experience physical arousal in response to the right stimuli even when you don’t want to have sex. You can also do acts of sexual violence that do not require an erect penis.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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    3 months ago

    I mean, I don’t work out and am in terrible shape. A woman could easily overpower me if she was even slightly athletic. Not every man works at being strong, and not every woman is weak.

    Also, as my sister points out: Gun.

  • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    Well, when it happened to me, my (now ex) roommate’s girlfriend came over and he was out, but she said she was gonna stay and I didn’t care. Then she wanted to chill instead of just sit alone, understandable, but in my room I only had a bed to sit on. Then she scooted closer, then closer still, and started grabbing my dick, to which I replied “we really shouldn’t do this, you’re dating my roommate blah blah blah,” and the fifth or so time she replied “no you don’t understand, this is happening.” At this point I gave up fighting because frankly it was either use physical violence to remove her from my house, which while technically legal won’t look good if she calls the cops and says I domestic violenced her and of course “rape” requires penetration in my state and male victims just get laughed at, or just fucking let her do it, which seemed to be the better of the two options at the time.

    The second time I had fully intended to hook up with a girl, we talked about it before we started drinking and were on the same page. But then she got too drunk when it came time by the end of the night so I said "hey let’s just put you on the couch and rain check this. She said “no let’s do it,” and I figured since she had consented while sober it’s probably ok and she is very insistent. Well we start and she starts passing out, so I say “hey yeah I really don’t feel comfortable with this, we can totally just do it later it’s all good,” WELL she fucking said “no” and leglocked me in, I actually faked an orgasm for what must be the only time in my life (thank god for condoms, makes faking it easy, plus all the other bonuses). Now, that may not sound like rape, but the whole “me trying to rain check it twice and her forcing me to ‘cum inside’ (she didn’t know I faked it)” thing is analogous to stealthing which is also considered rape if a man does it.

    So IME it’s less physical strength, as in not a hold-you-down style forcible rape, but stipl would count as rape, y’know if I was a woman, because again by definition where I am women coercing men to have sex isn’t “rape.”

    As far as “how man get boner,” gtfo with that, that shit just happens, you gonna ask a woman who was raped why her pussy was wet next? It’s an uncontrollable biological response to stimulus just the same way and that exact logic is used to minimize men’s experiences and perpetuate the myth that it’s impossible because “well they must’ve liked it.” Been used on me before, hell I’d be surprised if someone doesn’t reply with it in the comments tbh.

  • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    There are a few misconceptions in your logic.

    1. Force is required to rape
    2. Erections are controllable

    Both of them are easy to disprove, but not obvious at first sight.

    For 1 consider any case where a woman might have power (not physical) over a man, e.g. blackmail, teacher, parole officer, boss, etc. Another possibility to remember are weapons or physical threats to a third party. Also you should remember that humans have a fight/flight/freeze response, so a third of humans would just freeze regardless of being able to overpower their attacker. Finally there’s also the possibility of even without any threat, even being able to think properly, and knowing that he could physically overpower a female attacker, a man might not do it for fear of legal or moral repercussions, e.g. being thought not to hit girls or believing that no one would believe that he was defending himself. In fact lots of women who get raped don’t try to fight back or escape, believing (sometimes accurately) that their attacker would worsen the offense if they did that, e.g. by killing them (even if no threat was made), it’s not uncommon for rape victims to feel ashamed and guilt about not having fought back, and by saying that men can’t get raped because they could theoretically overpower their attacker you’re indirectly saying that any woman who doesn’t fight back with all her might is not being raped either, because they could have overpowered their attacker of they tried.

    For 2, erections (and even ejaculation) are physical responses, in fact you can make a corpse get a hard on and cum (some wives do it to preserve their husbands sperm). This is no different from women getting wet or having orgasms while being raped (both of which are common), it means nothing, it’s just a physical reaction to a physical stimulus. In fact lots of victims (both men and women), especially those in abusive relationships think they deserve that because of those physiological reactions. To put it in simpler terms, saying a men can’t be raped because if they got an erection it means they wanted it is like saying that people can’t be stabbed because if they bled is because they wanted the knife.

  • SeattleRain@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Women inflict violence by proxy. So she just threatens to get one of her male acquaintances to harm you. This is also why women on male violence appears so much lower then male on woman violence. That and the fact that society is very incredulous and dismissive of male victims of female violence.

  • CoffeeJunkie@lemmy.cafe
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    3 months ago

    There is one case I know of personally, I don’t think it technically falls under the description of rape but I consider it rape. Husband & wife, wife wanted kid. Husband did not. Their birth control was pill-based oral contraceptive. Wife very purposefully moved off that birth control without telling the husband, husband was just raw-dogging her because “she was on the pill”…lo & behold…she gets pregnant.

    She’s not very smart, and she has told a number of people about this deception & laughs about it. HAHAHA, oh, so funny, yeah that’s rape. You took advantage of your husband & used his reproductive abilities against his explicit wishes. You raped your husband. Had yourself a little rape-baby. Hilarious stuff (stupid broad).

    Again, I don’t think that’s currently covered under rape. But goddamn I think it should be (although it’s harder to prove without confession/admission).

    • Illuminostro@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      That’s not rape, it’s deception. She willing had sex with him. She deceived him on whether she was on birth control. It’s not the same thing, not even close.

      MRA’s are pussies, by the way. The have every advantage, but whine when they actually have to compete. Real men, yessir.

      • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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        3 months ago

        Would he have had unprotected sex with her if he knew the truth? If not it’s pretty rapey. What if it were the other way around and he had slipped the condom off without her knowledge?

          • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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            3 months ago

            The only difference between it being forcible rape and it being “deception” is that the victim doesn’t know the real situation. It’s still forcing them to have sex against their will because if they knew the truth they would resist. The dictionary also supports this being rape.

            rape 1 of 4 noun (1) ˈrāp Synonyms of rape 1 : unlawful sexual activity and usually sexual intercourse carried out forcibly or under threat of injury against a person’s will or with a person who is beneath a certain age or incapable of valid consent because of mental illness, mental deficiency, intoxication, unconsciousness, or deception