Hi @chetan_bhagat, will keep it brief.
A crime involving a woman as the suspect is rarely treated as just another criminal case these days. It quickly turns into a broader societal debate. This happens because violent crime has long been viewed as a male domain, and women’s involvement in it is seen as a violation of traditional expectations. By contrast, when men committed acts of violence against women for generations, there was little public hand-wringing about how men should behave or what their role in society ought to be. Yet the moment a small number of women commit serious, high-profile crimes, commentators everywhere feel compelled to analyze, explain, and prescribe how women in general should think and act. In reality, the numbers do not support treating these cases as representative of anything larger. The scale of violent crime committed by women remains minuscule compared with the daily violence, harassment, and victimization that women continue to experience. These incidents are statistical outliers. They should be handled as such - without being inflated into sweeping narratives about male victimization or failures of family upbringing.
You are able to make fun of heatwaves deaths in france because they keep a record of people getting affected by it. Record of all. Privileged and people who cannot afford homes. Unlike…
Everyone knew Oliver Glasner and Andoni Iraola was leaving but they both honored their contract and respect their respective clubs and finished the season with them