Sportin' Life said:
Of course you fail to point out that the study you are quoting is of rape cases in Virginia between 1974 and 1987, and Virginia passed their 'rape shield' law in 1981, so your inference is complete bunk. I say that you failed to point that out, because you seem to be fairly clever and that fact surely crossed your mind but you decided to make your point anyways. But you know what people want to hear, and so you'll get some
Of course, in your typical clever style you neglected to point out:
1) I posted the link.
Pretty "clever" of me to hide the study like that, no?
2) I also specifically said "And
since that study the
rules "protecting" accusers have increased immeasurably ..." Gee ya think that "fails" to note that the "rape shield law" was passed? Really, do you think people are that dumb? By pointing out specifically that the law changed since the study? Are you that dense? Or did you just decide "to make your point anyway?" But what the heck, let's examine your logic: do you think the rate of false convictions
fell after the rape shield laws gave more protections to those making false claims? Really? That is a marvelous piece of logic there!
3) Then, after that, I also specifically stated
"A more recent study, by the Department of Justice, shows that "every year since 1989 ..." which brings the studies up to a more modern time frame.
Don't you suspect that objective readers will see you as trying to read too much into something thereby, in fact, intentionally misreading it or intentionally misrepresenting it yourself?
It's pretty clear on the face of the post.
You fabricated an argument that is facially false. It reinforces the findings of these studies that people feel a need to lie about rape; both in fabricated claims of rape, the high gender specificity of the people willing to lie under oath about rape, and fabricated arguments about the statistics that, if they can lie about those too, the unpleasant facts will somehow, "go away."