Not quite sure it was 100% bragging as he also talked about trying to cheat on his wife & being rejected in the same tape. He was just revealing himself, revealing himself as someone without sexual boundaries. Clearly he has self-esteem issues & feels that he needs money & power for women to put up with him.
That's probably true, yeah.
This is utter nonsense of course. In fact it is more likely to be the reverse: an accusation of rape is likely to destroy the accuser's life, particularly if the rapist is rich or powerful.
I would think one of us is living in Bizarro World, were it not for that last part of the sentence. I completely agree that, if you accuse a famous or rich person of rape, you're probably not going to have a good time. Well, that part about the rich person is true in the american context, it's not so much in Germany, but the part about the famous person? Totally agree with.
What you're ignoring is that the situation is completely different for "common people".
I mean, you just have to google to see some examples:
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-surrey-11676804
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/man-wrongly-accused-rape-said-7515309
http://www.standard.co.uk/news/lond...cked-by-a-false-rape-allegation-a3148651.html
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/men/thin...ocent-life-after-a-false-rape-accusation.html
Then you've got things like
A rape on campus, where mattress girl made up a bs gang rape-story with tons of contradictions against a
fraternity that was then targeted by violence and abuse.
I know, I know. "Anecdotal evidence!", right? Somehow that's always the answer when people are cited who give their personal experience that goes against the narrative. But those accounts should totally be taken into account when they support the narrative, eh?
There are tons of these cases, are you seriously claiming that for common people, if a woman accuses a man of rape, people turn on her, and not on him?
Ah, so I guess it's already time for your typical tactic of contorting and twisting arguments just to try and show that you're right?
Ah, so I guess it's already time for you to accuse me of twisting your argument to try to boost your position, isn't it?
Joking aside though, I'm not twisting anything, I'm not even saying you're wrong in most of the things you've said, quite the opposite, I've partly agreed with the things you said, and I fully acknowledge that you say that men can be the victims of sexism against them in a theoretical environment, and that you say that men are victims of sexism. What I disagree on is...
I have stated multiple times that men are also victims of sexism towards women. I have moreover stated that men can be victims of sexism towards men. However, I also argued that when men are victims of sexism towards women, it does not suddenly make the sexism not sexism towards women. Neither you nor the OP has addressed this issue of intentionality of sexism, instead merely playing the victim card (ironically) and repeatedly asserting that I don't acknowledge that men are victims too, which is demonstrably false.
...your assessment that the intentionality of sexism is that of women in this case.
Because it is 'sexism against men', not 'sexism against women that also has sexist consequences for men' (or however you'd phrase it).
It may have started as sexism against women, like I said, that may very well be the case. That does not change that over time, that attitude of sexism towards women also creates sexism towards men, sexism that then stands on its own and does no longer require the sexist attitude towards women to exist.
The expectation for men to take their role as the protectors does become a thing of its own the moment it gains traction. That's why it is perfectly possible to have a theoretical society where women are seen as equally strong and capable as men and men are still seen as the ones who have to defend them. Not on the basis that they're more capable of doing that, but because that's seen to be their role, as long as a
country needs defenders - even if individual women don't need them - that role doesn't just evaporate.
That is, again, sexism against men, and you should call it that - not
"Sexism against women that also has negative effects on men". You're completely ignoring the outcome, how the situation is now, and keep looking at the intention behind what it was in the past.