SECURITY WARNING: Please treat the URL above as you would your password and do not share it with anyone. See the Facebook Help Center for more information.
SECURITY WARNING: Please treat the URL above as you would your password and do not share it with anyone. See the Facebook Help Center for more information.
Campus Reform

Student: Men who have been raped still have more privilege than women

Kaitlyn Schallhorn
Kaitlyn Schallhorn Reporter @K_Schallhorn
5662
 

Total Shares
This is the CRO SBAR
1890
 
541
 
1902
G +
0
 

  • An ASU student penned an editorial for the campus newspaper declaring the men who are victims of sexual assault still have more privileges than women.
  • The student claimed that men should not be a part of the "feminist conversations" on sexual assaults.
  • Men who have been sexually assaulted are still more privileged than women, an Arizona State University student said in a recent editorial.
    Kaelyn Polick-Kirkpatrick, an opinion columnist for ASU’s student newspaper, wrote that while “victims of sexual violence should never be silenced,” men do not belong in feminist conversations on that topic as they still inherently have more privilege.
    "...Men have privileges that prevent them from being able to empathize with the struggles of women, even when they are survivors of sexual crimes.”    Tweet This
    “Feminism provides a safe-space for women to cope with and fight back against the oppressive society in which they live,” Polick-Kirkpatrick opined in The State Press. “It exists because oppressed people often need support from others who can empathize with their struggles—men have privileges that prevent them from being able to empathize with the struggles of women, even when they are survivors of sexual crimes.”
    Polick-Kirkpatrick alleged in her piece that when men participate in “feminist conversations about sexual violence,” women feel uncomfortable as men are “taking up much-needed space in their community” as, according to the student, women are most often the victims and men are most often the perpetrators.
    “When men want a space in this feminist conversation, it indicates the already prevalent patriarchal desire to control how oppressed groups fight their own battles,” Polick-Kirkpatrick wrote. “When one comes forward to report and discuss the atrocities they have experienced, this should not mean they take up the space of others in the same conversation, even within the feminist community.”
    Polick-Kirkpatrick goes on to blame men’s rights activists in her article for accusing feminists of not caring about male victims of sexual assault.
    According to the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network (RAINN), one in six American women has been the victim of an attempted or completed rape. The sexual assault organization also says that one in 33 men are victims of an attempted or completed rape.
    In 2013, there were nine forcible sex offenses on-campus reported to ASU campus police. That number is down from 2012 when 15 forcible sex offenses on-campus were reported and in 2011 when 13 forcible sex offenses on-campus were reported.
    Earlier this year, an ASU event discouraged women from learning self-defense, and instead encouraged men to convince other men to go on taco runs instead of potentially bringing a girl home from a bar. The event similarly encouraged men to convince friends that drunk women are “ugly” in order to prevent a possible sexual assault.
    Polick-Kirkpatrick has written a variety of opinion columns for The State Press including a piece slamming a student club which advocates for men treating women with respect as sexist and a piece calling on the university to increase its gender-neutral bathrooms.
    Follow the author of this article on Twitter: @K_Schallhorn
    Kaitlyn Schallhorn

    Kaitlyn Schallhorn

    Reporter
    Kaitlyn Schallhorn is a reporter with Campus Reform. Prior to joining Campus Reform, Kaitlyn was a reporter at Red Alert Politics and covered business and restaurants for the Alexandria Times.  
    More By Kaitlyn Schallhorn
    Add a comment

     

    .
     
    .
    .
    .
    Follow Campus Reform on Facebook Follow Campus Reform on Twitter RSS Feed

    NEWSLETTER

    LATEST TWEETS

    Former Democrat
    @NeedA2ndJob - 3 hours ago

    @FoxNewsInsider @ffweekend @TuckerCarlson @campusreform @CalebBonham These same students will be wondering why there are no jobs for them

    Campus Reform
    @campusreform - 3 hours ago

    RT @FoxNewsInsider: Students Raise Money for Illegal Immigrant Scholarship Fund @ffweekend @TuckerCarlson @campusreform @CalebBonham http:/…

    SeldomSeen
    @jentzg - 3 hours ago

    @solitaryrider @Jami_USA @campusreform I already own one. Now I want one on a t-shirt. Or would that be over-the-top aggressive?

    Bricktop
    @solitaryrider - 3 hours ago

    I will personally buy a soda stream product now, thank you Harvard racists haters for pointing this out @Jami_USA @jentzg @campusreform

    SeldomSeen
    @jentzg - 3 hours ago

    @Jami_USA @campusreform Does anybody actually take these people seriously? I mean, come on!

    Matthew
    @mattlast84 - 4 hours ago

    @Jami_USA @campusreform somewhere in America, a baby bald Eagle just died.

    Matt Wells
    @bigredmatt1011 - 4 hours ago

    @Jami_USA @campusreform Liberal Arts Ivy Leaguers are really just overpaying for cushy leftist reeducation.

    Jami
    @Jami_USA - 4 hours ago

    Harvard students protest soda fountains, claim dispensers are 'microaggression' http://t.co/TB5UOguCJK via @campusreform (more SJW crazies)

    Latest 30 Articles

    A PROJECT OF THE

    Steven P.J. Wood Building
    1101 North Highland Street
    Arlington, VA 22201
    (703) 247-2000
    CampusReform.org is a project of the Leadership Institute. The Leadership Institute is a non-partisan educational organization approved by the Internal Revenue Service as a public foundation operating under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue code. The Leadership Institute does not endorse, support, or oppose candidates or proposed legislation. The Institute has an open admissions policy; all programs are open to the public. Contributions to the Leadership Institute by individuals, corporations, and foundations are tax deductible

    Share this with friends!
    OK
    Send it via your
    email provider:
         
     

    Sign in via:
    to authenticate your
    email account and
    continue sharing

    Recents:
    : Google  |  Yahoo
    Send
    Cancel
    Your browser does not accept 3rd party cookies. Some of the ShareThis features require 3rd party cookies.
     
    Submit
    Cancel
    Since your browser does not accept 3rd party cookies. The system does not work as expected and captcha will be requested every time.
    Your message was successfully shared!
    Share Again
    Enable FastShare
    You have successfully enabled FastShare!
    Now, sharing is just one click away. Just look for the white check in the green circle.
    Popular Shares:
    Post to :
    Message:
    Blog URL
    http:///
    Client ID
    117 Characters Left
    Submit
    Cancel
    Loading...
     
    0%
    10%
    20%
    30%
    40%
    50%
    60%
    70%
    80%
    90%
    100%