Anonymous wrote:Because people desperately want to believe that nothing bad can happen to them.
Anonymous wrote:All of the above.
And also victim-blaming reinforces existing power structures, and most people will always seek to align themselves with the most powerful person. Even, it turns out, if that person is a known pedophile. Especially if he is?
If you don't see these dynamics happening at a smaller scale in your own life, you are likely not looking very hard.
Anonymous wrote:Because people desperately want to believe that nothing bad can happen to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there is an inherent problem with how people define "victim blaming". Here is an example:
A person decides to walk down a city street late at night while holding a bunch of cash over their head and singing loudly. Someone robs them.
I say: "That person should have not walked down that street doing that". That statement is an undeniable truth. Their decision played a role in what happened. BUT...I am NOT blaming them. The fault lies solely on the person who robbed them. That person shouldn't have done a bad thing, not matter what.
Again, I'm not BLAMING the victim, but they did play a role and could have made better decisions (even though they shouldn't have to).
Do you still think I'm victim-blaming?
It’s really this.
I closely follow a case where a woman had a creepy colleague who was obsessed with her. One day he asked for a ride home and she gave it to him. He killed her. Did she deserve to die? Absolutely not. Did she play a role by agreeing to give her creepy stalker a ride? Yes.
Back in college I went on a sketchy date with an even sketchier stranger who asked me to lunch after a brief conversation in the campus bookstore, because I was dumb. If something would have gone terribly wrong, my role would have mattered in the outcome.
She "played a role" in her own murder because she agreed to give a colleague a ride home?
GTFO. I would argue you are much dumber than your college-age self accepting some sketchy lunch date if you actually believe that. I mean, why stop with the ride? Wasn't she complicit for continuing to work there even after the guy had been creepy? She should have quit her job and gone to work somewhere else. Or wait, should she even have started working there in the first place? She should have anticipated that one of her colleagues might have been a creepy killer and just gone to work somewhere else. Perhaps the error was in choosing that career path, whatever it was -- did she compare the psychological profiles of men in working in various fields and choose the one with the lowest rate of creepy or potentially dangerous behavior? Well that's on her then.
You sound like such an idiot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there is an inherent problem with how people define "victim blaming". Here is an example:
A person decides to walk down a city street late at night while holding a bunch of cash over their head and singing loudly. Someone robs them.
I say: "That person should have not walked down that street doing that". That statement is an undeniable truth. Their decision played a role in what happened. BUT...I am NOT blaming them. The fault lies solely on the person who robbed them. That person shouldn't have done a bad thing, not matter what.
Again, I'm not BLAMING the victim, but they did play a role and could have made better decisions (even though they shouldn't have to).
Do you still think I'm victim-blaming?
It’s really this.
I closely follow a case where a woman had a creepy colleague who was obsessed with her. One day he asked for a ride home and she gave it to him. He killed her. Did she deserve to die? Absolutely not. Did she play a role by agreeing to give her creepy stalker a ride? Yes.
Back in college I went on a sketchy date with an even sketchier stranger who asked me to lunch after a brief conversation in the campus bookstore, because I was dumb. If something would have gone terribly wrong, my role would have mattered in the outcome.
She "played a role" in her own murder because she agreed to give a colleague a ride home?
GTFO. I would argue you are much dumber than your college-age self accepting some sketchy lunch date if you actually believe that. I mean, why stop with the ride? Wasn't she complicit for continuing to work there even after the guy had been creepy? She should have quit her job and gone to work somewhere else. Or wait, should she even have started working there in the first place? She should have anticipated that one of her colleagues might have been a creepy killer and just gone to work somewhere else. Perhaps the error was in choosing that career path, whatever it was -- did she compare the psychological profiles of men in working in various fields and choose the one with the lowest rate of creepy or potentially dangerous behavior? Well that's on her then.
You sound like such an idiot.
She’d likely still be here if she had said to herself, this guy is creepy and stalks me at work and I’m not giving him a ride. Now, if he chose to break into her house and murder her, that’s a different story.
Anonymous wrote:Because people want to believe that others cause their own misfortunes. I have seen it happen in my life (hint: the abuser was my XH and the survivor was me). I was shocked at how parents and a few friends blamed me after I left him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there is an inherent problem with how people define "victim blaming". Here is an example:
A person decides to walk down a city street late at night while holding a bunch of cash over their head and singing loudly. Someone robs them.
I say: "That person should have not walked down that street doing that". That statement is an undeniable truth. Their decision played a role in what happened. BUT...I am NOT blaming them. The fault lies solely on the person who robbed them. That person shouldn't have done a bad thing, not matter what.
Again, I'm not BLAMING the victim, but they did play a role and could have made better decisions (even though they shouldn't have to).
Do you still think I'm victim-blaming?
It’s really this.
I closely follow a case where a woman had a creepy colleague who was obsessed with her. One day he asked for a ride home and she gave it to him. He killed her. Did she deserve to die? Absolutely not. Did she play a role by agreeing to give her creepy stalker a ride? Yes.
Back in college I went on a sketchy date with an even sketchier stranger who asked me to lunch after a brief conversation in the campus bookstore, because I was dumb. If something would have gone terribly wrong, my role would have mattered in the outcome.
She "played a role" in her own murder because she agreed to give a colleague a ride home?
GTFO. I would argue you are much dumber than your college-age self accepting some sketchy lunch date if you actually believe that. I mean, why stop with the ride? Wasn't she complicit for continuing to work there even after the guy had been creepy? She should have quit her job and gone to work somewhere else. Or wait, should she even have started working there in the first place? She should have anticipated that one of her colleagues might have been a creepy killer and just gone to work somewhere else. Perhaps the error was in choosing that career path, whatever it was -- did she compare the psychological profiles of men in working in various fields and choose the one with the lowest rate of creepy or potentially dangerous behavior? Well that's on her then.
You sound like such an idiot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there is an inherent problem with how people define "victim blaming". Here is an example:
A person decides to walk down a city street late at night while holding a bunch of cash over their head and singing loudly. Someone robs them.
I say: "That person should have not walked down that street doing that". That statement is an undeniable truth. Their decision played a role in what happened. BUT...I am NOT blaming them. The fault lies solely on the person who robbed them. That person shouldn't have done a bad thing, not matter what.
Again, I'm not BLAMING the victim, but they did play a role and could have made better decisions (even though they shouldn't have to).
Do you still think I'm victim-blaming?
It’s really this.
I closely follow a case where a woman had a creepy colleague who was obsessed with her. One day he asked for a ride home and she gave it to him. He killed her. Did she deserve to die? Absolutely not. Did she play a role by agreeing to give her creepy stalker a ride? Yes.
Back in college I went on a sketchy date with an even sketchier stranger who asked me to lunch after a brief conversation in the campus bookstore, because I was dumb. If something would have gone terribly wrong, my role would have mattered in the outcome.
Anonymous wrote:Adults generally have agency, and with agency comes the reality that our choices can place us in certain situations. Agency means our choices matter, sometimes in ways that increase risk, even when harm remains unjustified. Life is rarely a single-cause event. Outcomes often arise from a combination of personal decisions and others’ actions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of the above.
And also victim-blaming reinforces existing power structures, and most people will always seek to align themselves with the most powerful person. Even, it turns out, if that person is a known pedophile. Especially if he is?
If you don't see these dynamics happening at a smaller scale in your own life, you are likely not looking very hard.
+1
People side with abusers because (1) they want to be on the side of the powerful, (2) they agree that some people matter more than others, and/or (3) they want to believe that nothing bad will happen to them, so they tell themselves a story where bad things only happen to people who deserve them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are so desperate to be seen as victims. Our culture is obsessed with performative victimhood. Many so called victims are not. I reserve my sympathy for the real victims, not people who are simply desperate for attention or regret their bad decisions.
Why does every jerk on the internet act like 1. their sympathy is of any value and 2. sympathy is a limited resource?
Every other day I see some lower functioning being saying "I have NOOO SYMNPATHY for..." and OK...what would you like us to do with this information?
I guess some people just think of themselves as special.
People who feign victimhood are nothing more than pathetic attention seekers who exploit the sympathy of naive virtue signalers like yourself in order to gain attention and status.