Can we finally admit that rape culture exists?
Can we finally admit that rape culture exists?
CNNs "rape academy" exposé spotlights the role of sexual humiliation in male bonding
By Andi Zeisler
Senior Writer
Published April 22, 2026 12:00PM (EDT)
(Salon) Several years ago, the world was shocked to learn that Gisèle Pelicot, a 72-year-old woman living in a small town in the south of France, had for a decade been drugged by her husband and raped by at least 70 men that he recruited online. It was, by almost all measures, a uniquely horrifying case. But less than two years after Pelicots husband and his accomplices were found guilty, we are now finding out how not-unique crimes like his are. A blockbuster CNN exposé published last month investigated the international network of websites, chat rooms and Telegram channels on which men trade tips and offer advice to one another about how best to render their wives and partners unconscious and on which they document themselves, often via livestream, raping them.
The men who do this are threading an unnervingly specific needle: They dont want the women they drug and assault to know that they are being drugged and assaulted, which is why they often use the waking hours following assaults to gaslight their victims: One of the women who spoke to CNN spoke of waking up while her husband assaulted her; he insisted that she was on too much medication and had imagined it.
....(snip)....
In Camille Paglias first book, Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson, she wrote floridly of the importance of honoring maleness in its natural state of savage, brutal beauty: Men, bonding together, invented culture as a defense against female nature. Sky-cult was the most sophisticated step in this process, for its switch of the creative locus from earth to sky is a shift from belly-magic to head-magic. And from this defensive head-magic has come the spectacular glory of male civilization, which has lifted woman with it. Refusing to honor the ungovernable, animalistic essence of maleness, Paglia claimed, was bad for society. For culture. For civilization. And feminism was such a boner-killer, she wrote, given that it does not see what is for men the eroticism or fun element in rape, especially the wild, infectious delirium of gang rape.
Over the years, this quote has echoed in my mind. I was reminded of it when the high-school football players in Steubenville, Ohio, documented themselves raping a passed-out classmate, joking about her, jeering at her. Steubenville was the first truly mediated rape case to play out on a national stage: The way it was reported, discussed and processed by the residents of Steubenville made it a case study of rape culture, a concept that until then had been mostly isolated within academic writing. And the use of the phrase rape culture was, it turned out, what was required to make mainstream media outlets see that its history of sympathizing with young male perpetrators with bright futures was no longer acceptable. ..............(more)
https://www.salon.com/2026/04/22/can-we-finally-admit-that-rape-culture-exists/
hlthe2b
(114,297 posts)and their families (yes, I know they would be unlikely to prevail on 1st Amendment grounds, but at least the pain and devastation Paglia has wrought would be exposed).
Ocelot II
(130,955 posts)I remember reading Paglia's crap way back when, and even at the time I recognized it was pernicious. Of course even pernicious crap is protected by the First Amendment, and I also recall that Paglia regularly got her ass handed to her by other academics. I'm not sure that she had much influence outside academia. She styles herself as a libertarian, and like most libertarians she has a snarky attitude that reveals how much smarter she thinks she is than everyone else. I think of her as kind of the Ayn Rand of gender studies.
hlthe2b
(114,297 posts)derision--something she dearly deserves. We need younger generations to know there were self-proclaimed feminists who were anything but, and mere attention-hounds and opportunists.
Ocelot II
(130,955 posts)theyd be sanctioned under Rule 11; its clearly frivolous because its not grounded in law. Filing a lawsuit without support in the law just to call attention to a person or an issue can get a lawyer fined and disciplined.
hlthe2b
(114,297 posts)Every Trump lawyer to date
Ocelot II
(130,955 posts)Alina Habba had to pay almost a million bucks for the frivolous lawsuit against Clinton. https://www.politico.com/news/2025/11/26/donald-trump-penalty-lawsuit-hillary-clinton-00669616 Rudy Giuliani and John Eastman, among others, have been disbarred.
hlthe2b
(114,297 posts)Have deterred him or his eager idiot lawyer.. they never cease to think it wont happen to me or THEY are different.
ariadne0614
(2,190 posts)We could change the western world in one generation if it were included, along with discussion groups, as high school senior year core curriculum for all students, regardless of gender.