Undeserved Entitlement

It’s wearying, this constant reminder that we live in a culture that has standards at odds with lofty goals.  People make special conditions for their principles.  The people lamenting the “ruined” lives of the Steubenville rapists would no doubt feel completely different had the victim been their daughter.  But there’s no hesitation to indulge in public shaming since it’s their favored sons who are going to have pay a penalty for indulging what we too often give implicit permission.

I remember clearly the moment the disparity really struck home for me.  I was maybe eighteen or nineteen, watching a Sixty Minutes segment on some aspect of sexuality.  Most of the report is a fog.  It had to do with attitudes in Italy, where publicly available contraception had caused a huge stir (for obvious reasons) and Sixty Minutes did its usual job of crunching numbers and finding relevant interviews.  The bit that stuck with me was a breakdown of premarital attitudes of Italian males and females.

Something like 80% of Italian girls (premaritally) wanted to marry a man who had had sexual experience.  Close to that percentage of young Italian men insisted they would only marry a virgin.

How was this to be addressed?  Where were all those young men going to get the experience their future wives desired if not from the very girls the men would then refuse to marry should they provide said experience?

I worked this over for weeks, trying to make sense of both the disparity and a culture that accepted this without much question, with an “of course” attitude that expected boys to get laid before marriage and demanded girls keep their legs crossed.  Regardless of the stated principles of society, down deep where people live in their skulls, this is the common attitude, and has been thus for millennia.

That’s the attitude we’re seeing on full display in the reaction to the Steubenville trial.  Oh, they were just being high-spirited boys!  They didn’t mean anything by it!  Why ruin their futures with a guilty verdict for doing what we all expect undisciplined unreflective un-self-aware young males to do?  I mean, there but for the grace of Twitter…!

And the girl?  Fox has named her, an absolutely unconscienable act of malice and insensitivity, and most of the networks have been focusing on the “promise” of these boys now endangered and the hell with the girl.

Because she shouldn’t have been there.  Because she’s one of those girls that teased the bull and “got what was coming to her.”

We have halfway internalized the idea that women are allowed to have sex lives, but on some level it seems a lot of people think that if indeed a woman wants to partake of sex outside the rigid guidelines of past traditions then she should be willing to accept it no matter what form in comes in.  That any woman who wants to have sex outside of marriage (before, during, after, or remaining unmarried) has forfeited the right to be selective.  Whether we say that or not, this is at the heart of the reaction to this case.

And somehow, the idea that we should teach young men not to rape is viewed in some quarters as an absurd idea.

Why?

This is, by the way, one of the main bases of fundamentalist Islamic practices in this regard, that men have no control over their libidoes and the only solution is to keep the women in cages to spare the hapless males the temptation.  I mention it here because in Islamic sha’ria law it is so blatantly obvious, but we in the West more or less nurture a similar idea.  It is a ridiculous abandonment of an idea of teaching and training that is taken for granted in most other areas of life.  We assume we can teach people to behave when it comes to just about anything else.  It would be laughable if a defense were mounted for a thief that said, “Well, that house should not have been there, looking so prosperous.  My client couldn’t help himself seeing such temptation.”  We would laugh and unsympathetically sentence the thief for his crime.  Because we assume people can learn, can be taught.

Except in sex.  Gosh, when it comes to that, there’s nothing we can do.  Despite evidence to the contrary, despite programs that do just that—programs that are fought tooth and nail by people who seek to blame the woman because their feckless men can’t understand limits, boundaries, and seem to have the notion that any sex they can get (and get away with) is just their due.

The added fact that these boys were football players just makes it even more absurd.  How could such youth not be given complete sympathy?  They are the standard bearers of our culture.  Football is next to christianity to some people.  You can’t take that away!

We privilege our athletes too much in the first place.  Males who already believe they have rights to other peoples’ well being who are also athletes make for an ugliness of which we should ourselves be ashamed, because we’ve handed them the keys to the house and implied that any harm they do we’ll put down to “boyish enthusiasm”—because we don’t want them to be punished when what they do is so important to us.

I’ve got no sympathy for these boys.  They thought they were getting away with something.  They furthermore didn’t think what they were getting away with was really wrong because they bragged about it.  I want to know how come they missed the part that says fucking someone who has not said, very explicitly and very soberly, yes is absolutely wrong.  By bragging about it, they not only demonstrated that they didn’t think it was wrong but that they felt they deserved it.

And The Culture seems bent on validating their belief.

Shame on us.

Comments

8 responses to “Undeserved Entitlement”

  1. Lori Koonce Avatar
    Lori Koonce

    Thank you! This ks the first time I’ve heard something from the male prespective that actually makes sense.

  2. Keith Byler Avatar
    Keith Byler

    Lori, if you are speaking literally, it’s a sad commentary… that “this is the first time I’ve heard something form the male perspective that actually makes sense.” Mark’s commentary on this issue speaks for my beliefs and feelings, too, down to every comma and period. And I suspect the same could be said for many, many men.

    At our most base instincts we might tend to knock someone over the head for their iPhone, or if they were just generally irritating us. As Mark has pointed out it is possible to teach better, fairer more moral behavior… even (and especially) as it relates to sexual behavior. To appropriate a tag line from many political ads, “I’m a guy, and I approved this message.”

  3. Chuck Messer Avatar
    Chuck Messer

    Part of any sex ed class should be this simple concept: Consenting Adults. If there’s no consent, it’s rape. If they’re not both adults, it’s rape.

    Chuck

    1. Mark Tiedemann Avatar
      Mark Tiedemann

      As a rough rule, I agree, although “adult” is a legal classification. I wrote about it here:

      http://marktiedemann.com/wordpress/?p=64

      I firmly believe if one party is not an adult and the other is, it’s abuse at best, certainly a form of rape. Abuse of authority if nothing else. But…

      Don’t know about you, but I had sex before I was classified Adult by our society. We can’t leave nuance in the dust.

      1. Chuck Messer Avatar
        Chuck Messer

        True enough. There needs to be a bit of legal leeway, especially when two young people are involved. I tend to trust adults with sex a bit more than kids, though. Part of that is the still substandard state of sex ed, at least in some school districts.

      2. bluerabbit Avatar
        bluerabbit

        Okay, Mark and Chuck, these parties were held at private homes. The minors did not own the homes. Where were all of the adults who did? The homeowners at all of the parties where alcohol was served to minors? The parents of those boys (who should have taught them to be human beings)? Would you have a booze and (probably) drug party for teens at your home? The issue here is not statutory rape, which, technically, is illegal in many places no matter how it is enforced or what you think. The issue is engaging in a one-way, no-consent act. That’s rape no matter what the age of the compromised party. I assume you really do understand this, but thought I should clarify. (By the way, I did not have sex before marriage. Neither did my husband, and we are both atheists.)

        1. Mark Tiedemann Avatar
          Mark Tiedemann

          Excellent questions, bluerabbit. No, I would not host such a party. I have, in fact, been chaperone at such parties, though, and think it a good idea that at least one responsible, sober adult be present. Nothing you can do if kids just get together somewhere on their own, but one should have a say over what goes on in their own house. And I agree, the issue is simply rape, statutory or otherwise, as well as a climate that has let certain people think (a) it’s always the woman’s fault and (b) “boys will be boys” is some kind of valid excuse.

          As to your last remark, I meant no judgment on that score. That, too, is a choice. My concern is that choice is optimized and if you choose to remain virgin till marriage, great. I don’t see there being a preferred position on that. No one should be ridiculed for their choice. My concern is that it is, in fact, your choice.

          Thanks for chiming in.

        2. Chuck Messer Avatar
          Chuck Messer

          Which comes back to my original point, Blue. Rape is rape, just as you say. And none of this ‘boys will be boys’ bullshit.

          No consent = rape. Doesn’t matter what she was wearing, where she was, if she was drinking, etc.