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So what sorts of things make some men so furious that they feel the need to send women they’ve never met literal death and rape threats on the internet? It doesn’t take much, apparently. A woman suggesting that it’s not such a good idea to hit on women in elevators at 4 AM. A woman making videos suggesting that there’s sexism in video games. A woman captured on video telling some men to shut the fuck up. A woman complaining about sexist jokes at a tech conference.
Add to this: a woman campaigning successfully to have Jane Austen’s face put on the Bank of England’s ten pound notes.
Over the past week, writer and activist Caroline Criado-Perez, who organized the campaign to get Austen memorialized on the bank note, has been harassed relentlessly on Twitter by assholes and misogynists and trolls for her efforts. Some of this harassment has taken the form of literal rape and death threats. One 21-year-old Manchester man was arrested and questioned in connection with the threats.
Similar threats and harassment were directed at noted British classics professor Mary Beard and female Members of Parliament.
Here’s a sadly typical example of one of the threatening comments sent to Criado-Perez from an account that Twitter temporarily banned — then reinstated.
https://twitter.com/CCriadoPerez/status/362499703285358592
And a more graphic example:
https://twitter.com/ianmcqui/status/361587787511779328
And some even more graphic threats directed at female MPs.
https://twitter.com/JonathanHaynes/status/361967658087890945
https://twitter.com/JonathanHaynes/status/361964227516309504
For many more examples of messages sent to Criado-Perez and others, see Catalina Hernández’ blog I Will Not Put Up With This: here, here, here, here, here, here and here.
And if you had any doubt about how little in the way of repercussion most of these harassers expected to get for their threatening tweets, some tweeted using what are presumably their real names. Here are some comments from one Ivan Garcia of San Diego, as collected by Hernández.
And here is his blog, where this fan of jazz, video games and threatening rape shares his poetry with the world.
The harassment obviously raises a lot of issues,most notably: Why the fuck does this keep happening? And: What’s the best way to deal with this sort of harassment — and these sorts of harassers?
Twitter has promised to add a “report abuse” button; some activists see this as a step in the right direction, while others worry that the “report abuse” button will be itself abused to shut down critics of harassment. Twitter’s record in dealing with harassers has not exactly been a great one; just ask Anita Sarkeesian.
British journalists and assorted bloggers have been trying to sort through some of these issues over the past few days. Here are some links to some of the more interesting pieces, from a variety of perspectives. (Well, I’m not including the pro-rape threat perspective.) Links aren’t necessarily endorsements.
First, for a little more background, see:
Twitter under fire after bank note campaigner is target of rape threats
Caroline Criado-Perez Twitter abuse case leads to arrest
And here are some posts and pieces looking at the issues:
A ‘report abuse’ button on Twitter will create more problems than it solves, by Sharon O’Dea
A button will not, alone, rid Twitter (or the wider world) of mysogyny and abuse. These are complex issues that will take more than a button to resolve. But ‘report abuse’ buttons have been known to be widely abused on other networks. ….
Introduction of a similar mechanism on Twitter ironically creates a whole new means by which trolls can abuse those they disagree with. The report abuse button could be used to silence campaigners, like Criado-Perez, by taking advantage of the automatic blocking and account closure such a feature typically offers. In that way, it could end up putting greater power in the trolls’ hands.
Why does it always come back to rape? by Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett and Holly Baxter of the Vagenda Magazine, in the New Statesman
Rape is the popular choice when women become more visible than they apparently should be, and that’s because it’s easy. …. Whatever their opinion, however they conducted their arguments, however well-researched and nuanced their replies to criticism are, they’re women and male trolls could rape them and that’s what really matters. …
[Academic] Mary Beard got called a “dirty old slut” with a “disgusting vagina” just as [Member of Parliament] Stella Creasy was being tweeted “YOU BETTER WATCH YOUR BACK… I’M GONNA RAPE YOU AT 8PM AND PUT THE VIDEO ALL OVER THE INTERNET”. …
The message is that women’s vaginas are, literally, always up for grabs. If they’re young, the rape threats will come thick and fast; if they’re older, maybe the trolls will settle for insulting their vaginas and telling them that they were “sluts” in the past.
If Every Male Troll Took a Walk in Women’s Shoes, Would He Finally Feel Our Outrage? by Elizabeth Plank
Withstanding rape threats has become a right of passage for female writers or personalities, just as making them as become a right of passage for cowardly and anonymous misogynist trolls. If you’re a woman who happens to possess opinions, and write about feminist issues (god forbid!), chances are you will be violently trolled. … the issue is not that women receive more criticism than men, but rather that it comes in more violent and vitriolic forms. Men will be attacked for their opinion, whereas women will be threatened because they have opinions.
[O]ne study showed that female usernames in chat forums received 25 times more abuse than male ones. In an experiment conducted by the University of Maryland, researchers found that “Female usernames, on average, received 163 malicious private messages a day.” So all else equal, if you’re a woman online, you’re going to be on the receiving end of more hate.
I believe it. I get a lot of shit from misogynists for running this blog — and the occasional threat — but what I get is nothing compared to the harassment similarly controversial feminist bloggers who happen to be women have gotten.
What women-hating trolls really believe, by Emma Barnett
First troll up was Peter from Whitechapel. …
“She was asking for it,” he told me. According to this nitwit, if you campaign about issues such as keeping a woman on English banknotes, you should “expect to receive rape threats”. I delved further.
“If you put your head above the parapet, like she has, then you deserve this type of abuse. It’s what you get when you are a woman shouting about something,” Peter told me, starting to get a little irate. …
Then Gary from Birmingham decided to call in [and] told me in no uncertain terms that “feminists like Caroline were undermining what it is to be a man” and needed “sorting out”.
“Men are predators,” he explained calmly. “And this [rape threats] is what we do.”
And here, after all this awfulness, is a piece that manages to be funny about it all: How to use the internet without being a total loser.
Yeah, I read a hell of a lot of Piers Anthony’s Xanth stuff in junior high, I mean, puns are funny when you’re 13, right? And then I just never picked up anything else of his until the thrift shop near my university had their annual book clearing sale my last year there. Everything was around 10 cents or less, so I picked up a huge pile of anything that looked amusing or vaguely nostalgic, and holy mother of misogyny, what was this crap even. I trashed all the PA books I’d bought there instead of releasing their misogynistic awful crap back into the thrift store world. It was certainly a winter of realizing that a large segment of what I’d loved as a kid was awful, awful stuff.
I actually read most of the Left Behind series, back when I was in my teenage fundie phase. *shame*
I just remember wondering if people left all their clothes behind when they were raptured, wouldn’t they also leave tampons, prosthetics, etc.? Or was that too icky for fundamentalist minds to consider?
@Amnesia: When people disappear off a jetliner in the beginning of Steven King’s The Langoliers, they leave inorganic materials behind, like artificial joints and dentures and things. There’s even a dildo on one seat. I don’t want to know.
The thing is, everyone who disappears was asleep; those left behind were all awake, for one reason or another. Makes a lot more sense than Rayford Steele’s “fully loaded 747.”
Amnesia: Now, now. If you’ve read the original text those things are based on, you’ll know that a menstruating woman is ‘unclean’, and that infirmity is a mark of God’s displeasure. So clearly, anyone with any of that stuff wouldn’t qualify for the Express trip to Heaven.
Oh god, I remember reading something … somewhere … that asked if that would happen. Was that Life In Hell?
I don’t know, I’ve seen some REALLY badass prosthetics. I figure, if an afterlife does happen, people get the adaptive technology or bodily configuration that best suits them. (I mean, if I found myself in the afterlife and suddenly my vision was perfect, I might honestly find that kind of overwhelming and WEIRD.)
-patpat- It’s okay, Amnesia, I was really really into the Left Behind YA novels in junior high, and I wasn’t even an evangelical Christian. My family’s Catholic, and my mom hated me reading those books (surely some of the appeal stemmed from that, now that I think about it…), but she couldn’t take them away because my Nana bought them for me.
Worst dystopian SF novel I’ve ever read was Atlas Shrugged. A better one is Ira Levin’s This Perfect Day. It depicts a computerized future society that is superficially utopian, but everyone is medicated into docility. This is depicted as a bad thing, for various reasons.
The Left Behind series would be amusing, if it were not for the existence of people who sincerely hope for it to come true.
I’m pretty sure I also saw it in a Life In Hell strip. Hah! It’s all Matt Groening’s fault, then.
Ugh, Atlas Shrugged. I HATED THAT BOOK SO MUCH! *screams* Oh, the time I wasted reading it that could have been spent color-coding socks!
I used to collect by cover author, so most of the really bad stuff I’ve read is just no-name mass market paperback. Most of the big-name stuff does have a basic level of competence that the slush pile doesn’t even reach.
But the worst? Save the Pearls, naturally.
I just Googled Save the Pearls. I really wish I hadn’t
OSC, Terry Goodkind, Piers Anthony… Oh, God, I read them all… *weeps*
Falconer, that’s the Homecoming Saga.
Oh, god, when they actually got where they were going and set up a society that devolved into a patriarchal dystopia so fast… and it was only later that I realized he meant it to be a uptopia…
Tooimpureangel: We sporked it here. I miss the days when there were lots of people on the fora 🙁
Damn, Quark was boring. So glad I missed the eleventy billion pages that were all about how awful people were for swearing at her unfolding in real time.
On the much more interesting book conversation – Atwood is amazing. With Banks I found his sci-fi very dull but his more conventional novels great other than the occasional moments of clueless sexism. I’m not calling it misogyny because I don’t think he had any intention of demeaning women or held any particular animosity towards us, he just didn’t get it on a fairly fundamental level, which is a shame since in general he wrote so well. This is why I ended up throwing The Business across the room at the end – most of the book was good and then the decision that he had the main character make at the end was so completely out of character and so motivated by his rather stupid assumptions about women. It’s rare that I get frustrated enough to abuse a book, but that one managed it.
Piers Anthony… I’m glad that the rather “hey teenagers, I’m totally talking down to you” language put me off well before he got to this book, because really? How did this get past his editor?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Color_of_Her_Panties
RE: katz
Speaking of dystopia, I wrote a thing for your prompt! (Disregard if you’ve already seen; I have no idea what GooglePlus is like for notifying of you of comment responses.)
Dystopian novels! Has everyone here read “We”? It’s the one that gets ignored out of the classic set that includes 1984 and Brave New World, but it’s actually pretty interesting to compare with the others since it’s the only one written from the perspective of having lived through the Russian Revolution.
LBT: I saw that and I am so going to have to sponsor it if nobody else does.
Me, too. ALL THE SUSPICIONS CONFIRMED. God damn.
IT WAS ORSON SCOTT CARD ALL ALONG
Silly me, I thought Color was the first Xanth book. Probably by that time he’d leveled up and learned protection from editors.
No … I read the graphic novel We3.
Man, was it graphic. It’s about three animals, a rabbit, a cat and a dog, who were turned into military drones, and escape when their program is terminated. They are horribly beweaponed, they kill people (they are fighting for survival), and they earn their motherfuckin’ happy ending. BUT IT IS NOT KIDDY COMICS.
I will ROT13 the ending here so you can learn what happens without actually watching soldiers get mutilated:
Fb gur guerr navznyf jrera’g gur bayl qebarf. Gurer’f n ovttre qbt, yvxr n znfgvss, jub’f eryrnfrq gb uhag gur svefg guerr qbja. Gur enoovg fnpevsvprf vgfrys gb zbegnyyl jbhaq guvf ovttre qbt naq gur png naq gur ureb-qbt gnxr vg qbja. Gura gurl trg pnhtug va na nonaqbarq ohvyqvat, juvpu oybjf hc, nccneragyl xvyyvat gurz … ohg vg’f erirnyrq gurl tbg bhg bs gurve nezbe naq jrer nqbcgrq ol n ubzryrff zna, jub ybirf gurz gb cvrprf.
Go to rot13.com, copy-paste, and click the Cypher button if you want to spoil the series.
It’s the same team that did the awesome All-Star Superman which is awesome (and not at all like the totally crap All-Star Batman & Robin, The Boy Wonder which is total crap and includes Superman and Black Canary for some reason).
Is anybody else having trouble with Gravatars not loading in?
RE: katz
Sweet as. Just remember, the free writing bonus perk only lasts until August 14th.
RE: Falconer
Oh god, We3. A good comic, definitely shows off Quitely’s strengths as an artist, but BAWWWW.
When I put that down I had to go cuddle Beloved and the growing babbies in her tummy.
This was awkward because she was reading Whofic and was all I told you you’d regret it.
And I thought I had cried ALL THE TEARS after watching the Plague Dogs film.
(Just looked it up to make sure I had the right film. The poster promises THE ADVENTURE OF A LIFETIME. Assholes.)
Just remembered — only We3 could make the phrase “uh oh” into Crowning Words of Awesome.
“The Color of Her Panties” has to win some kind of prize for title/cover-art dissonance.
How much overlap can there possibly be between people who would pick up a book with “panties” in the title and people who would pick up a book with a roc and a hippogriff on the cover? Who thought this cover design was a good idea?