At the mean, our society (north-america in this case) informally still considers that when a woman complains ( / cries / seeks comfort / otherwise attempts to get over in some manner that involves other humans) about getting raped instead of “dealing with it / getting over it on her own”, she probably deserved it, or is a weakling, or some other strong negative affect.
Well, as far as I’ve heard that happens to an even greater extent when a man complains about getting raped (outside the prison system).
Well, as far as I’ve heard that happens to an even greater extent when a man complains about getting raped (outside the prison system).
That seems over-optimistic to me—as far as I can tell, a lot of Americans (at least) believe that male prisoners deserve to get raped. Female prisoners get raped by male guards, but that isn’t on the public radar at all.
Rape isn’t something that “just happens” in prison. It’s something that we, as a society allow to happen—in a similar way to the fact that the US Bureau of Prisons doesn’t allow conjugal visits or running your business in prison.
We have a moral responsibility for what happens in prisons, whether we cause it, allow it, or prevent it.
My point was that the male-on-male rape in prisons is considered something most men would want to avoid, unlike female-on-male rape. Obviously prison rape is a Bad Thing.
Effective disincentives can have secondary consequences that make them Bad Things overall, even if they have a small positive net utility in specific contexts.
Example: Tribal law in Afghanistan might actually have a {real} deterrent effect on thievery, but it comes with a world of heinous secondary consequences, so altogether it is a Bad Thing.
Prison rape is presumably similar. Remember, a decision’s net utility is equal to its TOTAL future utility gains and losses.
Suppose you have a bunch of different utility equations, each of which contributes to the total system. You plug in “prison rape” and get the following set of conjugals to sum into your dot product:
-10, −5, −33, −1075, +2, −4, −22, −15
If your alternatives are hovering around a total of +5 to +20, then saying “but look at that +2!” (i.e., “look at that disincentive to risking jail time!”) doesn’t seem particularly relevant, considering its surrounded by a larger collection of absurdly weighty negatives.
The key word is legitimate—which I deny is appropriate in the context of prison rape.
Sure, making prisons less pleasant may decrease crime—although behaviorism suggests immediacy and salience are more important. Nonetheless, talking about societal benefits of particular prison arrangements is a kind of societal endorsement of those arrangements.
(Edit:) After all, talking about the incentives of life threatening injuries from serious car accidents towards safer driving is creepy. I think there is very reasonable and widespread moral disapproval of the practice.
Sure we do. Have you ever heard of “Red Asphalt”? It was an entire series of rather disgusting videos produced in the 80′s to show teenagers who were about to get their drivers’ licenses. It didn’t just talk about the incentive of life-threatening injuries; it exploited them.
I never saw them, and apparently succeeded in scrubbing their existence from my mind—probably based on my disapproval of the creepiness of the message. Still, you make a good point—I’ll edit.
Original message so ialdabaoth’s response makes sense:
After all, we don’t talk about the incentives of life threatening injuries from serious car accidents towards safer driving. We could, but we don’t.
This may be pedantic, but even your edited statement strikes me as false. There SHOULD be reasonable and widespread moral disapproval of the practice, but in point of fact there isn’t, really. (Nor with drugs, actually). “Scared Straight” is still a STRONGLY favored tactic for most authoritarian regimes in the United States. “Sex Ed”/Health classes love showing disgusting pictures of advanced STD cases; high school principles love inviting DARE officers to come arrest kids and drag them to jail to teach them how horrific it would be to get caught; our culture really does approve of this entire style of argument. It’s as pervasive as it is irrational, and is actually part of the interlocking kyriarchial systems that status-based primates tend to fall back on when thinking is hard.
My sense is that >35% of Americans would agree that using graphic car crash images in a safe driving class was inappropriate. Of course, that doesn’t necessarily mean that people would generalize the moral principle in any coherent way—or even realize that DARE is a parallel at all.
Do you think I’m overly optimistic in my estimation?
After collecting additional data (just one date point, but I trust my wife), I’m forced to concede that I was wildly overestimating the percentage of Americans who would disapprove. My new estimate is well into “Aliens are real” / “Elvis is alive” territory.
I’d still feel better if there were formal studies we could both point to, to verify or refute our assumption (and hopefully to shed some light on why it happens).
My instinct is that it has to do with favor for authoritarian parenting and similar primate dominance hierarchies, but I’d need to do way more research to be able to speak with any kind of confidence on the matter.
After all, talking about the incentives of life threatening injuries from serious car accidents towards safer driving is creepy.
Eh? The possibility of life threatening injuries from serious car accidents is the primary reason for requiring people to acquire and prove their competence before being allowed to drive on the public roads. What’s creepy about that?
After all, talking about the incentives of life threatening injuries from serious car accidents towards safer driving is creepy. I think there is very reasonable and widespread moral disapproval of the practice.
Dunno, thinking of serious injury risk as an incentive seems implicit in the idea of risk compensation, which is quite popular:
Notable examples include observations of increased levels of risky behaviour by road users following the introduction of compulsory seatbelts and bicycle helmet [sic] and motorists driving faster and following more closely behind the vehicle in front following the introduction of antilock brakes.
It’s a serious sort of torture, and a possible death sentence. It happens to younger and weaker prisoners, not to whoever law-abiding citizens think ought to be punished the most. And it means that rapists get away with it.
Also, the justice system isn’t all that reliable about determining guilt and innocence.
Uh … yes? Does that somehow change what I said? Prison rape (M-on-M) is still viewed differently to F-on-M rape by most people. Rape is always bad, obviously. That’s kind of the point. Most people don’t realize men don’t want to be raped (by women) but do realize that men don’t want to be raped in jail (by men.)
F-on-M rape codes the way it does in part because of societal gender expectations. Causal direction is difficult to disentangle, but there is some reason to think that people would be more aware of the reality of F-on-M rape (and supportive of victims) if gender expectations were different.
I touch on something relevant to that here. Basically: “It’s silly for a man to complain about getting raped, because it’s simply logically and physically impossible for a man to get raped by a woman.” The causes are very different, AFAICT.
Well, as far as I’ve heard that happens to an even greater extent when a man complains about getting raped (outside the prison system).
That seems over-optimistic to me—as far as I can tell, a lot of Americans (at least) believe that male prisoners deserve to get raped. Female prisoners get raped by male guards, but that isn’t on the public radar at all.
At least it’s considered a coherent possibility and a disincentive to actions that risk jail time.
Rape isn’t something that “just happens” in prison. It’s something that we, as a society allow to happen—in a similar way to the fact that the US Bureau of Prisons doesn’t allow conjugal visits or running your business in prison.
We have a moral responsibility for what happens in prisons, whether we cause it, allow it, or prevent it.
My point was that the male-on-male rape in prisons is considered something most men would want to avoid, unlike female-on-male rape. Obviously prison rape is a Bad Thing.
That sentences doesn’t go together well with:
Effective disincentives can have secondary consequences that make them Bad Things overall, even if they have a small positive net utility in specific contexts.
Example: Tribal law in Afghanistan might actually have a {real} deterrent effect on thievery, but it comes with a world of heinous secondary consequences, so altogether it is a Bad Thing.
Prison rape is presumably similar. Remember, a decision’s net utility is equal to its TOTAL future utility gains and losses.
Suppose you have a bunch of different utility equations, each of which contributes to the total system. You plug in “prison rape” and get the following set of conjugals to sum into your dot product:
-10, −5, −33, −1075, +2, −4, −22, −15
If your alternatives are hovering around a total of +5 to +20, then saying “but look at that +2!” (i.e., “look at that disincentive to risking jail time!”) doesn’t seem particularly relevant, considering its surrounded by a larger collection of absurdly weighty negatives.
EDIT: {real} was originally {legitimate}
The key word is legitimate—which I deny is appropriate in the context of prison rape.
Sure, making prisons less pleasant may decrease crime—although behaviorism suggests immediacy and salience are more important. Nonetheless, talking about societal benefits of particular prison arrangements is a kind of societal endorsement of those arrangements.
(Edit:)
After all, talking about the incentives of life threatening injuries from serious car accidents towards safer driving is creepy. I think there is very reasonable and widespread moral disapproval of the practice.
Sure we do. Have you ever heard of “Red Asphalt”? It was an entire series of rather disgusting videos produced in the 80′s to show teenagers who were about to get their drivers’ licenses. It didn’t just talk about the incentive of life-threatening injuries; it exploited them.
I never saw them, and apparently succeeded in scrubbing their existence from my mind—probably based on my disapproval of the creepiness of the message. Still, you make a good point—I’ll edit.
Original message so ialdabaoth’s response makes sense:
This may be pedantic, but even your edited statement strikes me as false. There SHOULD be reasonable and widespread moral disapproval of the practice, but in point of fact there isn’t, really. (Nor with drugs, actually). “Scared Straight” is still a STRONGLY favored tactic for most authoritarian regimes in the United States. “Sex Ed”/Health classes love showing disgusting pictures of advanced STD cases; high school principles love inviting DARE officers to come arrest kids and drag them to jail to teach them how horrific it would be to get caught; our culture really does approve of this entire style of argument. It’s as pervasive as it is irrational, and is actually part of the interlocking kyriarchial systems that status-based primates tend to fall back on when thinking is hard.
Hmm . . .
My sense is that >35% of Americans would agree that using graphic car crash images in a safe driving class was inappropriate. Of course, that doesn’t necessarily mean that people would generalize the moral principle in any coherent way—or even realize that DARE is a parallel at all.
Do you think I’m overly optimistic in my estimation?
I very, very much do. Want to help devise a sociology experiment to find out?
After collecting additional data (just one date point, but I trust my wife), I’m forced to concede that I was wildly overestimating the percentage of Americans who would disapprove. My new estimate is well into “Aliens are real” / “Elvis is alive” territory.
Sigh.
I’d still feel better if there were formal studies we could both point to, to verify or refute our assumption (and hopefully to shed some light on why it happens).
My instinct is that it has to do with favor for authoritarian parenting and similar primate dominance hierarchies, but I’d need to do way more research to be able to speak with any kind of confidence on the matter.
Eh? The possibility of life threatening injuries from serious car accidents is the primary reason for requiring people to acquire and prove their competence before being allowed to drive on the public roads. What’s creepy about that?
Dunno, thinking of serious injury risk as an incentive seems implicit in the idea of risk compensation, which is quite popular:
Try replacing “legitimate” with “real”, which is how I interpreted it.
will do, thanks.
That does make the sentence true, and morally less objectionable. But “legitimate” is not usually a synonym for “real,” particularly in this context.
Huh. It didn’t occur to me to interpret it any other way until you mentioned it, TBH. I guess because they’re manifestly agreeing with me.
The whole political science concept of legitimacy is under appreciated in this community.
This discussion is about perceptions of rape, specifically men being raped. Hence “At least it’s considered a coherent possibility”.
It’s a serious sort of torture, and a possible death sentence. It happens to younger and weaker prisoners, not to whoever law-abiding citizens think ought to be punished the most. And it means that rapists get away with it.
Also, the justice system isn’t all that reliable about determining guilt and innocence.
Uh … yes? Does that somehow change what I said? Prison rape (M-on-M) is still viewed differently to F-on-M rape by most people. Rape is always bad, obviously. That’s kind of the point. Most people don’t realize men don’t want to be raped (by women) but do realize that men don’t want to be raped in jail (by men.)
F-on-M rape codes the way it does in part because of societal gender expectations. Causal direction is difficult to disentangle, but there is some reason to think that people would be more aware of the reality of F-on-M rape (and supportive of victims) if gender expectations were different.
Did you reply to the wrong comment?
I meant at least outside the prison system.
I touch on something relevant to that here. Basically: “It’s silly for a man to complain about getting raped, because it’s simply logically and physically impossible for a man to get raped by a woman.” The causes are very different, AFAICT.