• Culture
    Culture
    Filipino actors Bridgerton

    Get to know the Filipino actors in ‘Bridgerton’

    pura luka vega chappell roan church

    Matched her freak! Pura Luka Vega performs Chappell Roan’s ‘Good Luck, Babe!’ at ‘Church’

    AI and deepfake porn is a form of sexual assault—and we need to talk about it

    AI and deepfake porn is a form of sexual assault—and we need to talk about it

    • Women
    • Queer
    • Politics
    • Environment
    • Food
  • Style
    Style
    Pond's serums

    These night serums are your new solutions for radiant, glowing skin

    5 original Filipino fragrance brands to check out

    5 original Filipino fragrance brands to check out

    Here’s where you can get unique, one-off accessories—designed by you

    • Fashion
    • Beauty
    • Space
    • Shopping
  • Entertainment
    Entertainment
    Filipino actors Bridgerton

    Get to know the Filipino actors in ‘Bridgerton’

    pura luka vega chappell roan church

    Matched her freak! Pura Luka Vega performs Chappell Roan’s ‘Good Luck, Babe!’ at ‘Church’

    charlie’s angels totally spies!

    Our favorite onscreen spies, from Austin Powers to ‘Totally Spies!’

    • Celebrities
    • TV & Movies
    • Music
  • Life+Money
    Life+Money
    Single woman adopts baby

    Forming a family: When a single woman adopts a baby

    painting of baby

    A mother-to-be’s survival guide

    Navigating a friend breakup that has no bad blood

    It’s no one’s fault: When a friendship naturally runs its course

    • Career & Money
    • Parenting & Relationships
    • Sex & Health
    • Astrology
    • Travel
  • Inquirer.net
  • Lifestyle
Reading
Women post photos of their underwear online to show that #ThisIsNotConsent
ShareTweet
In Culture
2 min read

Women post photos of their underwear online to show that #ThisIsNotConsent

By B. del Rioon November 16, 2018
Share

Irish women and women’s rights supporters are angry. Earlier this week, a 27-year-old man in Ireland was acquitted of raping a 17-year-old girl—but this verdict wasn’t what triggered the outrage. Rather, by the justification of the man’s defense lawyer. In the trial, his senior counsel Elizabeth O’Connell’s closing argument included literally presenting the teenager’s underwear for all the court to see. “Does the evidence out-rule the possibility that she was attracted to the defendant and was open to meeting someone and being with someone?” she asked. “You have to look at the way she was dressed. She was wearing a thong with a lace front.”

Following the court report’s publication, the head of Dublin’s Rape Crisis Centre criticized the barrister’s remarks. According to BBC, “Although she did not question the verdict, she called for reform of a legal system in which she said such suggestions were frequently made.”

Now, you already know our two-cents on this. An article of clothing is never—we repeat, NEVER—an excuse for rape. We’re not the only one who sees through the BS too. The barrister’s actions attracted online protests all over the world, and has now given birth to the viral hashtag #ThisIsNotConsent, wherein women share images of their underwear online, to give attention to this gross and demeaning act of victim-blaming which we see is especially prevalent in the court system.

https://twitter.com/CMSpookyAddams/status/1063286417105829888

https://twitter.com/_sunfIowers/status/1063282756044627968

So apparently not wanting panty lines is synonymous with consent now adays. Same on you Ireland when will we teach men not to rape and stop blaming woman for merely existing #ThisIsNotConsent pic.twitter.com/uc2nI2dAoM

— Becky Folkes (@Becky_Folkes) November 16, 2018

If I was in a court room as a victim of sexual abuse, I can’t imagine I’d ever be asked if I was wearing boxers or briefs. #ThisIsNotConsent pic.twitter.com/niS9xdR3CU

— Peter Tanham (@PeterTanham) November 14, 2018

I Believe Her Ireland, who initiated the online movement alongside Irish organizers Mná na hÉireann, told Dazed, “We are deeply angered by the suggestion by legal counsel in the recent Cork rape case that any item of clothing constitutes implied consent. We had hoped that as a society we had moved on from these archaic, victim blaming rape myths.” Adding that, “What’s upsetting is that barristers do this because they feel it works, and that juries will be swayed by it. If a jury is a representative sample of the population, then it’s clear we have some work to do to dispel this archaic myth that clothing invites rape.”

What type of underwear a woman wears can be used as evidence in a rape trial, really??? #ThisIsNotConsent @ciarakellydoc @NewstalkFM #Thongs pic.twitter.com/D49XBiJs8t

— Niall O'Loughlin (@nialloloughlin) November 13, 2018

Moreover, the group stressed how demoralizing and deeply disappointing it was that the act was made by a fellow female. Elizabeth, they said, “is part of a community where sexual assault occurs in higher rates and used the exact weaponized misogyny we encounter everyday to silence a victim.” They also noted how this incident is “symptomatic of Ireland’s culture of shame and conservative guilt,” which I think resonates with our own culture. I’m sure you’ve all had experiences of older women, a relative even, trying to indoctrinate you on the “fact” that the way you dress and present yourself can be an invitation for sexual misconduct. Well, it’s time to put a stop to that and instead, start indoctrinating men and future generations that consent—not clothing or “promiscuous behavior”—is the only valid green-light for all and every sexual relations. Let’s start treating each other as decent human beings, please.

 

Art by Marian Hukom

For the latest in culture, fashion, beauty, and celebrities, subscribe to our weekly newsletter here  

Follow Preen on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, and Viber

Related stories:
Teaching men about consent is easier than defending accusations
This exhibit shows that rape can happen regardless of what you wear
How #MeToo unites women beyond race and class for an overdue cause
What role does trauma play in the #MeToo campaign?

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Pin it 0
Share 0

Action Required!

We embed Facebook Comments plugin to allow you to leave comment at our website using your Facebook account. It may collects your IP address, your web browser User Agent, store and retrieve cookies on your browser, embed additional tracking, and monitor your interaction with the commenting interface, including correlating your Facebook account with whatever action you take within the interface (such as “liking” someone’s comment, replying to other comments), if you are logged into Facebook. For more information about how this data may be used, please see Facebook’s data privacy policy: https://www.facebook.com/about/privacy/update.

Accept    Decline

Tags
raperape culturevictim blaming

Subscribe to our newsletter

Stay in the loop


By subscribing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

ShareTweetEmailShare
B. del Rio

Peek This

Pond's serums

These night serums are your new solutions for radiant, glowing skin

Filipino actors Bridgerton

Get to know the Filipino actors in ‘Bridgerton’

pura luka vega chappell roan church

Matched her freak! Pura Luka Vega performs Chappell Roan’s ‘Good Luck, Babe!’ at ‘Church’

AI and deepfake porn is a form of sexual assault—and we need to talk about it

AI and deepfake porn is a form of sexual assault—and we need to talk about it

Preen.ph © 2020. Hinge Inquirer Publications, Inc.
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • HOME
  • ARCHIVES
  • ABOUT US
  • CONTACT US
  • ADVERTISE WITH US
Previous
Issa Pressman and Marga Bermudez share how they overcome societal judgment and love freely
Next
From now on, we’re buying pocket-sized gadgets
  • Culture
    • Women
    • Queer
    • Politics
    • Environment
    • Food
  • Style
    • Fashion
    • Beauty
    • Space
    • Shopping
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrities
    • TV & Movies
    • Music
  • Life+Money
    • Career & Money
    • Parenting & Relationships
    • Sex & Health
    • Astrology
    • Travel
  • Inquirer.net
  • Lifestyle
  • Subscribe
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Search
Start typing to see results or hit ESC to close
fashion fashion news music Culture News movies
See all results

Subscribe to our newsletter

Stay in the loop


By subscribing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.