@ivykunda21 I could definitely get used to this. Twitter tailoring my tl to be a dopamine fest of random people reminding me we're the fuckin CHAMPIONS OF ENGLAND!!
That virtually never happens, and in nearly all the cases it does, the friend is merely ACCUSED (not proven) and itโs just not wanting to throw a friend under the bus.
You know, itโs called not betraying a friend. Lmao.
The original meme was about women not blocking men that they THEMSELVES claimed raped them, not a third-party claiming those men raped those women; no, it was about women themselves literally believing enough they were raped by those men to openly brand those men as rapists of them! ๐คฏ
So, in the original meme, those men were NOT merely accused by a third party.
The women were not taking someone elseโs word about those men, because assuming the women were telling the truth, they were literally the only witnesses that those men were (supposedly) rapists.
No, I donโt expect those women triggered by the original meme to have the necessary intelligence to understand the distinction, but I thought it was worth breaking down anyways. ๐คฃ
the fascinating thing about women complaining about this tweet is that the implication of it is that men actually think rape is so bad that women should, at a bare minimum, stop associating with their alleged rapist yet women think it's making light of rape.
The thing about this is that yes it is somewhat understandable, but it's Extremely Fucking Stupid. Women like this seem to think that if they can come up with an explanation for behavior, then you have to excuse the behavior. No, it's just stupid. Imagine someone getting robbed at gunpoint and then trying to "regain control" by walking the streets at night carrying money in their hand, it's just moronic dangerous behavior and anyone who cared about them would try to get them to stop, but here, you're meant to allow the behavior because it's "understandable"