Ms. Magazine Comes Out Against the Presumption of Innocence and the Due Process of Law

Instapundit linked to this Ms. magazine piece. (Yes, evidently they’re still publishing. Who knew?)

It starts off: “One in five college women are sexually assaulted, and only 12 percent of college rape survivors will report their rape to the police. And yet, some men accused of such assaults are playing the victim.”

First, the 1-in-5 statistic is completely made up garbage:

No crime, much less one as serious as rape, has a victimization rate remotely approaching 20 or 25 percent, even over many years. The 2006 violent crime rate in Detroit, one of the most violent cities in America, was 2,400 murders, rapes, robberies, and aggravated assaults per 100,000 inhabitants—a rate of 2.4 percent. The one-in-four statistic would mean that every year, millions of young women graduate who have suffered the most terrifying assault, short of murder, that a woman can experience.

Indeed, the Justice Department shows rates of 6 rapes or sexual assaults of women per 1000 on college campuses. That means that Ms.‘s rape estimates overstate the incidence by 42 times. That’s like saying “The average price of a fast food hamburger is around $100.”

Secondly, if men are “falsely accused of sexual assault and unjustly punished by their college’s judicial system” because their college does not observe the due process of law, then guess what? They are the victims.

Back to Ms. and their lies: “According to the FBI, only eight percent of rape reports are unfounded. And this is most likely an overestimate of false reports: the FBI counts cases as unfounded when deemed so by law enforcement officials, not when they are proven false through a trial.”

First, the FBI statistics are meaningless in relation to the campus cases under discussion, because those statistics deal with charges which were brought up under the due process of the law, not the “men are considered guilty until proven innocent” kangaroo courts universities have imposed based on politicized and misguided Obama Administration guidelines. Second, the “not when they are proven false through a trial” negates the statistic. Indeed, one gets the impression that Ms. is upset that men are found innocent in real courtrooms at all.

More Ms. blather: “While a false rape claim is undoubtedly detrimental to the accused…” Why yes, being falsely accused and branded a sex offender due to a complete lack of due process is indeed “detrimental.” How nice of you to notice.

Due process, the rule of law, the burden of proof and the presumption of innocence are rights that protect all Americans, of whatever sex, color or creed. The desire to throw them out to meet the demands of radical feminist identity politics is an abhorrent perversion of justice that should be opposed by all Americans.

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2 Responses to “Ms. Magazine Comes Out Against the Presumption of Innocence and the Due Process of Law”

  1. Not Rick says:

    No it’s 1 in 5 really – it’s your no longer valid definition of rape that’s the problem. Rape is now anytime a man has sex with a woman and she doesn’t want to do it again at the next opportunity. Or if she regrets it at anytime in the future.

    It’s also rape if you smile at a women in a creepafying manor – specifically if you don’t meet her current standards of who she wants to be seen with. Creepy sort of Rapey Like, you know.

  2. pst314 says:

    According to Ms Magazine’s feminist ideology, the legal testimony of a man is worth less than the legal testimony of a woman…and what’s more an accused man is not entitled to a proper legal hearing.

    What other ideologies does this remind us of? ;-)

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