When Allegations Replace Evidence
This came across a social media feed. It immediately hit home, as this author has discussed the false rape allegation culture in the US in several posts (many of which will be linked here).
As a reminder, this author came across the phenomenon back in 1994. A friend had consensual sex, then a year later, called the same moment "rape."
Part of the problem is the myth that "1 in 4" female college students are raped. That is certainly not the case - not even close. This author's daughter was recently accepted to college, and this author looks forward to her continuing her education. This author does not, however, believe there's a legit 25% chance she is raped in college.
From that second article by this very author, please be reminded: only 6.25% of rape allegations result in convictions. (Most charges are dropped before trial when she changes her mind) And this number is likely very high, given the source. That would be a similar number to the chart above.
Takeaways:
This chart is accurate, but understand, they want you to think that all of these accusations are rape.
The chart is accurate, because very few of the allegations result in conviction - meaning MOST of the allegations are patently false!
What this chart fails to account for, is how many male lives are ruined by these false allegations.
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