Donjeta
Adji Desir, missing from Florida
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2009
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According to the Sexual Assault Awareness and Prevention Center, that's possible but does not apply in the majority of cases.
http://sapac.umich.edu/article/196
But if women really want to construct an entire bureaucracy around consenting to physical contact, then who is buying Fifty Shades of Grey?
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/dave-chappelle-jokes-bill-cosby-757465Dave Chappelle had the audience laughing during his entire standup set at the Saenger Theater in New Orleans Friday. At the beginning of his set he mentioned comedian Hannibal Buress had opened for him the night before. "You know — the guy who accidentally killed Bill Cosby?" said Chappelle.
During the News Journal interview, Cosby was asked about the re-surfacing accusations against him and he responded that he cannot "cry over spilled milk."
Here is the entire exchange from the question and answer session, originally published on March 6.
Q: Not long after your NBC announcement and after the Woody Allen allegations resurfaced in the news, the allegations against you were also re-reported by a couple of publications. What do you think about that and do you think it's connected?
A: It will always be there. And because it will always be there, I can't cry over spilled milk. Can I be angry with myself over milk that I spilled? I can only be happy with the gift that I have, continue to give and move in the direction that is gift-giving to the people.
Q: And I assume by spilled milk you mean dealing with these allegations and not that you committed any of the acts?
A: This is the first time you have become as bright as I thought you were. [Laughs.] Exactly.
Q: For the record, you still deny all that, right?
A: It was done 10 to 11 years ago. The case was in an agreement. If it comes up and people view it like it was yesterday, I can't stop that.
http://www.delawareonline.com/story/pulpculture/2014/12/12/cosby-milk/20299655/The reporter keeps prompting but he did not say yes, he denies it... It's milk that HE spilled...
(I wonder if he had the threatening expression when he implied the reporter had been stupid so far in the interview...)
Most importantly...the women. The accusers.
Way back when...why not be speak forward? Why not let the world know what you say Cosby did? Why suffer in silence...when 'EVERYBODY' knew his devilish ways? It may have broken the chain. A fellow sister might have escaped the torment.
I wish power to women, really. For all the right reasons.
"Can I be angry with myself over milk that I spilled? "
Uhhh....to me that is an admission. He says it a few times in different ways.
If someone asks/accuses you of a heinous act that you would NEVER do would you refer to it as milk that YOU spilled?
And then he goes ON TO SAY he has "given so much"?. WTF? That is a really twisted and egomaniacal.
He has been UNTOUCHABLE and that made him bolder and probably made him believe what he is doing is just fine because HE is doing it (and he gives so much to society). Let's all remember he schooled others (the black community in general) on their lack of morality and work ethic.
Scary stuff (and that is something I rarely ever say/think when discussing criminals/predators).
"At one point he said, 'I'm Bill Cosby. You're not in the little leagues anymore you're sitting with Mr. Cosby. Do you understand that?'" Jones recalled.
"Why I'm here today is because out of nowhere he got up, started to walk past me, and crouched in front of my knees, grabbed my legs, and tried to pull them apart," Jones continued. "I just remember I was so shocked. And the first thing I did was push Mr. Cosby away and he kind of lost balance."
Thank you.Explanations have been given over and over for why the accusers didn't speak earlier:
BC was extremely revered; they knew he would deny it and they rightly assumed they would not be believed.
BC was extremely powerful; they knew he could destroy their careers. They were afraid to tell.
Many of them had mixed feelings; they, too, had revered him. They began to doubt themselves: did I do something wrong? Did I send out the wrong signals?
In those days, rape victims were so stigmatized; in court, their character would be assassinated, defense lawyers would insinuate that their manner of dress had invited the assault and therefore they were basically "asking for it." Their past sex lives would be trotted out for everyone, as if consenting with other men somehow eliminated the need for the accused to get consent. And on and on...
I don't see how there could be any confusion as to why these women didn't speak up earlier. "Acquaintance rape" or sexual assault continues to be difficult to get people to understand. Back in the 70's it was even more impossible.
Second, police departments have been found to destroy records and ignore or mishandle evidence, which leads not only to undercounting but dismissal of cases.
...
Fourth, people making complaints are often harassed out of pursing them. In 2012, the police department of Cranberry Township, Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh, was held liable in a case in which police accused a reporting victim of lying during her interview, at one point telling her, Your tears wont save you now, and failing to pursue the investigation.
...
In 1999, the Philadelphia Police Department improperly handled 2,300 out of 2,500 rape cases. As late as 2003, the unit investigating sex crimes was jokingly referred to as the lying bi***es unit.
Because of the nature of sexual assault, victims often choose not to report their assault to law enforcement. Fear of repercussions by the assailant, fear of the intrusive nature of evidentiary collection and further legal investigation, and personal embarrassment are a few of the reasons victims do not report their assault. According to the National Center for Crime Victims, only 16 percent of sexual assaults are reported to police.
Scotti said Cosby also had an arrangement with a Manhattan modeling agency in which the owner would deliver young women to his dressing room. Some of the*aspiring models were as young as 16, Scotti said.
Thank you.
No need for further explanations, nor the need to beat dead horses.
A question more of analytical thinking...Why the silence?
...
I KNOW what Cosby is doing. I hear the 'talk'. I KNOW other women are falling prey. I'm sad and I'm sorry. But, I continue to hush.
...
Suppose women are cut from different molds.
I wish power to fearless women.
Thank you.
No need for further explanations, nor the need to beat dead horses.
A question more of analytical thinking...Why the silence?
So...BBM...They were afraid to tell. Fear is an awful thing.
So...I have been drugged, sexually assaulted, either or both by Bill Cosby. I am confused, ashamed...in a fog. If I speak forward...I may lose my dream career, chastised by people (media/public). The risks are too great. So, I hush now.
I KNOW what Cosby is doing. I hear the 'talk'. I KNOW other women are falling prey. I'm sad and I'm sorry. But, I continue to hush.
I'm guessing maybe that's why the accuser's have been silent against this celebrity god...so revered and powerful?
That's where my confusion lies...with full understanding its an unpopular stance of opinion.
I can't fathom going thru my years...KNOWING my drug-pushing rapist was still circulating in action.
Suppose women are cut from different molds.
I wish power to fearless women.
Your welcome.And THAT attitude, in a nutshell, sums up WHY these women were ignored when they first attempted to speak when these incidents first happened. Thank you for proving a point I posted days ago.
Speaking of "power to women", I realize post-modernism holds that all truth/knowledge is subjective and I recognize the wisdom in the notion. But when we are talking about physical assaults--especially if a victim has been drugged without her knowledge--I think we should be careful about calling the claims of rape victims "her truth" or "their truth". Calling the drugging and penetration of a woman "her truth" implies there is a "his truth" by which such actions are NOT criminal or even harmful--and that's a dangerous notion to pass around even by implication, I think. (This is not a response to any poster here, but to the words of some of the alleged victims.)
And while we're on the subject of sexual semantics, I think the concept of sexual coercion gets all too close to good, old-fashioned seduction. Yes, there are clear-cut cases where the power dynamic between one partner and another is simply too unequal to tell if consent is ever given willingly. But if women really want to construct an entire bureaucracy around consenting to physical contact, then who is buying Fifty Shades of Grey?
http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/seductionseduction n. the use of charm, salesmanship, promises, gifts and flattery to induce another person to have sexual intercourse outside marriage, without any use of force or intimidation. At one time seduction was a crime in many states, but if the seducee (usually female) is of the age of consent and is not drugged, intoxicated or otherwise unable to consent, seduction is no longer criminal. However, just as adultery lingers in the criminal codes of some states, so does seduction. (See: adultery, rape, date rape, breach of promise) Copyright © 1981-2005 by Gerald N. Hill and Kathleen T. Hill. All Right reserved.