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8th September 2017
06:16pm BST

“But is there no blame now to the person who puts themselves in danger?" asked Hook.“You then, of course, read that she passed out in the toilet and when she woke up the guy was trying to rape her. There is personal responsibility, because it’s your daughter and it’s my daughter and what determines the daughter that goes out, gets drunk, passes out and is with strangers in a room and the daughter that goes out and stays half-way sober and comes home? I don’t know. I wish I knew. https://twitter.com/WhyGoBald/status/906116528889847808 "I wish I knew what the secret of parenting is but there is a point of responsibility. The real issue nowadays is the question of personal responsibility that young girls are taking for their own safety.” We beg to differ. The real issue nowadays, as it has always been, is that too many men are ignoring their responsibility not to rape women. No qualifications. No asterisks. No buts. It seems so simple, yet it's a point completely missed by George Hook in his rush to play the moral arbiter. Too often, rapists are presented as feckless rogues who have a few too many drinks and, y'know, once that happens a man is going to go out and do what he's gotta do. Stand aside, ladies, and it's your fault if something should be shown above the knee. Too often, we see that Helen Lovejoy "won't somebody think of the children?" approach, that faux concern at how low our society has sunk. It's used to mask pomposity and an arrogance that allows those rapists to play the victims of their own insatiable penises. They do it on national radio and in our newspapers, there's an outcry, then the backlash against the backlash. It's 2017 in grand form, the age of Trump, and it's why we still have to put up with George Hook's poisonous rhetoric when his microphone should have been turned silent long ago.
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