New Rape Laws

How do they know this if they aren't reported? You have a source as it seems mightily high...

Mainly based on the British Crime Survey. However, it's likely that even this under-estimates.


Edit: excepting murder, the reporting rate for most crimes is well under 50%.
 
1. A woman cannot legally give consent if intoxicated yet the man, who is equally intoxicated, not only has the responsibility to get consent but also deem if the woman is able to give it. How can this double standard operate? :confused:

Intoxicated covers a rather large spectrum of (in)capacity - there is nothing in the law to say that you cannot have a drink or indeed that your partner cannot have a drink but you should still be able to give informed consent. That might well feel like a higher standard than before but really if you've got doubts about whether your partner is in a fit state to consent then you've probably got to be asking yourself if you should be doing anything together.

2. Anonymity in sexual crimes - Either it is anonymity for both or none. You cannot have anonymity for the accuser and expect it to be ok for the accused's name to be in the papers when there is no guilty verdict. If a guilty verdict is reached then crack on, but to have someone's life ruined over what might be a false allegation is criminal in itself. That person can NEVER go back to their old life.

It's not entirely fair and it is unfortunate that an accusation of rape (even if found innocent or not proven) can linger - however it's a question of which option is the least damaging on balance. Rape victims are often reluctant to come forward for obvious reasons including the fear that they won't be believed - having the accused named can be enough to persuade them to come forwards and support the claim (and indeed make a claim of their own if necessary). It's not perfect but the other option of anonymity is likely to leave more rape victims not choosing to come forward.
 
but really if you've got doubts about whether your partner is in a fit state to consent then you've probably got to be asking yourself if you should be doing anything together.

And what if neither party is in a fit state, which I can only imagine is incredibly common of a weekend, but only one subsequently sees a problem with it the next day?

I suspect that "I was so drunk I don't remember what happened" isn't going to be an equally satisfactory defence for a guy as it is an accusation from a female.
 
That might well feel like a higher standard than before but really if you've got doubts about whether your partner is in a fit state to consent then you've probably got to be asking yourself if you should be doing anything together.

If intoxication results in a lack of ability to give informed consent then as I highlighted earlier it also results in the lack of ability to recognise consent should be obtained, the lack of ability to gain it, and the lack of ability to assess it has been given or not given sufficiently.

It's not entirely fair and it is unfortunate that an accusation of rape (even if found innocent or not proven) can linger - however it's a question of which option is the least damaging on balance. Rape victims are often reluctant to come forward for obvious reasons including the fear that they won't be believed - having the accused named can be enough to persuade them to come forwards and support the claim (and indeed make a claim of their own if necessary). It's not perfect but the other option of anonymity is likely to leave more rape victims not choosing to come forward.

Alternatively, rather than branding people guilty via lynch mob irrespective of a weighing of evidence the criminal justice system could recognise the part it plays in people not coming forward, health bodies and charities could recognise their part in creating a climate of rape acceptance historically and in the present, and the actual trial process could be made less harrowing for all concerned. Surely, punishment should be handed out to the guilty not the victim and the accused (who is innocent until proven guilty) during the trial. Evidence can be gained without brinksmanship and aggressive cross-examination.

You have painted a very false dichotomy there.
 
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And what if neither party is in a fit state, which I can only imagine is incredibly common of a weekend, but only one subsequently sees a problem with it the next day?

I suspect that "I was so drunk I don't remember what happened" isn't going to be an equally satisfactory defence for a guy as it is an accusation from a female.

"I was so drunk I don't remember getting in the car" isn't a excuse for drink driving...

To be honest the best way is not to get so drunk that you are insensible.
 
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To be honest the best way is not to get so drunk that you are insensible.

but you don't have to be insensible, they could seem quite sober but decide the next day they were too drunk.

also a lot of the stats posted before come from an old phone survey which deemed something like over a quarter of all women have been raped, even if they didnt think they had based on questions such as "has a partner ever asked more than once for sex" if they answered yes and that they then had sex thats rape according to the survey.

because they were pressured into it.
 
How prevalent do people think false allegations of rape are? Most of the evidence seems to suggest they are very rare, especially in comparison to rapes.

Nobody knows. How could they? The only thing that can be quantified is the proportion of rape allegations that are admitted by the accuser to be false. Which, of course, has nothing to do with how many actually are false. It's assumed that they're very rare not because of evidence but because that fits the prevailing attitudes.
 
but you don't have to be insensible, they could seem quite sober but decide the next day they were too drunk.

also a lot of the stats posted before come from an old phone survey which deemed something like over a quarter of all women have been raped, even if they didnt think they had based on questions such as "has a partner ever asked more than once for sex" if they answered yes and that they then had sex thats rape according to the survey.

because they were pressured into it.

You got a reference to back that up?
 
So what happens if a skinny man gets over powered by some fat bird after a night out, and she rapes him.

Does the female have to prove that the skinny man consented to sex?
 
You got a reference to back that up?

http://www.newrepublic.com/article/119364/cdcs-report-one-five-women-raped-other-statistics-disagree

http://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/pdf/nisvs_report2010-a.pdf

In NISVS, sexual coercion refers to unwanted vaginal, oral,
or anal sex after being pressured in ways that included being worn down by someone who repeatedly asked for sex or showed they were unhappy

yes showing your unhappy because someone doesn't want sex makes you a rapist if they change their mind.
 
So what happens if a skinny man gets over powered by some fat bird after a night out, and she rapes him.

Does the female have to prove that the skinny man consented to sex?

nope she cant rape him at worse she can be charged with sexual assault.
 
"I was so drunk I don't remember getting in the car" isn't a excuse for drink driving...
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Exactly, it's not deemed remotely sufficient as a defence against doing something but it's sufficient as an accusation of rape against a man.

If a woman is deemed to have diminished responsibility due to excessive drunkenness, the same ought to apply to the man but seemingly doesn't, he has increased responsibility.
 
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