Friday, April 23, 2010

Artist seeking to raise awareness about rape instructs: "If someone says ‘I was raped,’ believe them”

A website called Points With Purpose is run by David Ilan, an artist who creates drawings using only dots. He is currently involved in a project that will assign one dot to "a real person who has been raped or sexually abused."  His website invites persons who say they've been raped or sexually abused to share their stories with him. "I add one dot for every person who joins until the drawing is complete. The final drawing will be of a woman looking confident, proud and beautiful. By joining the project, thousands of people with a shared tragic experience will work together to form a work of art meant to show others who go through similar experiences that they too can feel confident, proud and beautiful again."

Raising awareness about rape, and false rape claims, is a laudatory effort.  Mr. Ilan's seeks to raise awareness only about rape (he apparently believes that false rape claims are exceedingly rare), by presenting a startling picture that he obviously hopes will illustrate that rape is a widespread problem. 

While Mr. Ilan's purpose is to make a point with his art, the problem is that accepting, without question, the word of anyone who says she was raped (and assigning that assertion a dot on the picture) is scarcely a reliable or scientific way to present a picture of how widespread the rape problem is.

For every rape claim reported, as we've illustrated on this site time and time again, only a relatively small percentage can be definitively called "rape." This is beyond dispute. We know that some claims reported (the numbers vary depending on the study) are outright false. And between the claims we are reasonably certain were actual rapes, and the ones we are reasonably certain were false claims, is a vast gray area consisting of a group of claims that cannot properly be classified as "rapes" -- because we just don't know.  That's the nature of a rape claim.  The claims in this vast gray middle area often suffer from evidentiary infirmities.  For example, for some such claims, while the claimant herself might think a rape occurred, her outward manifestations of assent did not match her subjective disinclination to engage in sex, so it wasn't rape -- legally, or any other way. Importantly, if we just took the word of the accusers, we would call each of those claims actual "rapes" -- but that wouldn't be accurate, or just. 

There is no reason to believe that claims made to Mr. Ilan in connection with his art project would be any more reliable than the ones made to the police.

It is troublesome that Mr. Ilan not only thinks it's proper to accept the word of the accuser for his art, he publicly advocates it beyond his art.  He spoke at a campus rally supporting women's rights yesterday:  "Ilan also urged spectators to believe someone when they share their violent experience saying that only two percent of accusations are false. 'If someone says ‘I was raped,’ believe them,' Ilan said."

Every human being who claims he or she was raped should be treated with dignity, and the claim should be investigated with objectivity.  But Mr. Ilan's admonition to automatically believe the accuser is unjust, by any measure, because it means that we must automatically believe that the man or boy she accused is a rapist.  That is the only logical outcome of  the knee jerk assumption Mr. Ilan urges.

The knee jerk assumption of guilt based on nothing more than the accusation of a lone accuser has caused disastrous results for countless innocent men and boys throughout history, as detailed on this site.  Persons who advocate an assumption of guilt would do well to study the real life cases, and the objective studies, we cite to on this website because it would give them a greater appreciation about how their assumptions victimize innocent people.  Rape lies have caused innocent men and boys to be killed and to kill themselves (from The Scottsboro Boys to modern day, even a story we reported last week); to be incarcerated often longer than their false accusers are legally permitted to be imprisoned when their lies are finally brought to light; to lose their good names, their jobs, their businesses, their life's savings, their wives, and their girlfriends; to be beaten, to be chased, to be spat upon, and to be looked upon with suspicion long after they are cleared of wrongdoing. It is often impossible for the falsely accused to ever obtain good employment once the lie hits the news: for the rest of his life, a falsely accused man will have prospective employers Googling his name and finding the horrid accusation. Virtually every falsely accused male will be affected by his ordeal. Many develop emotional problems that will plague them for the rest oft their lives; most will not be able to trust women, for at least a time and sometimes forever.

If you'd like examples of any of the above, spend a couple of weeks scrolling through this site -- you'll find plenty.  Everything mentioned in the paragraph above is from a recent false rape case.

As for Mr. Ilan's assertion that only two percent of accusations are false, this canard was long ago debunked, and it is astounding that it is still repeated by sexual assault counselors and others.  See, e.g., E. Greer, The Truth Behind Legal Dominance Feminism's 'Two Percent False Rape Claim' Figure, 33 Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 947, a scholarly law review article that painstakingly traced the two percent canard to its unreliable source.  See also, "Until Proven Innocent," the widely praised (praised even by the New York Times, which the book skewers -- as well as almost every other major U.S. news source) and painstaking study of the Duke Lacrosse non-rape case. Authors Stuart Taylor and Professor K.C. Johnson explain that "[t]he standard assertion by feminists that only 2 percent" or sexual assault claims "are false, which traces to Susan Brownmiller's 1975 book 'Against Our Will,' is without empirical foundation and belied by a wealth of empirical data." (Page 374.) 

The fact is, every impartial, objective study ever conducted on the subject shows false rape claims are a significant problem.  We've detailed these studies time and time again on this site. 

The entire rape milieu has become so terribly gender-politicized that even good faith efforts to raise awareness about rape often unwittingly denigrate the victimization of countless men, boys, and yes, even some women, by insisting that false accusations of rape are essentially a myth.  In seeking to raise awareness about rape, it is wholly unnecessary to insist false rape claims are a myth.  We can all work to eradicate both rape and false rape claims. 

But those who insist that we should automatically believe the accuser foment the same kind of rape hysteria that has been responsible for innumerable lynchings and other horrors note above.  We implore Mr. Ilan and others like him to show sensitivity to the presumed innocent and their families, by not suggesting that the trial should be over even before it has begun.

22 comments:

Anonymous said...

When he finally does connect the dots, it will look like a falsely accused man. Guaranteed.

Anonymous said...

"There is no reason to believe that claims made to Mr. Ilan in connection with his art project would be any more reliable than the ones made to the police."

Actually, there is reason to believe that they would be much less reliable.

Anyway, I'd like to shoot this bullshit artist in the face because according to a made-up statistic I just pulled out of my ass, only 2% of bullets can hurt you.

Archivist said...

Anon at 10:15: I suspect his intentions are noble. I can't tell if he's being paid for this effort, and he seems to be motivated to help people. That's a good thing. But in helping one group, he's helping to cause problems for another group. Every time I read a story where a boy is beaten, sometimes to death, over a false rape claim, it just horrifies me beyond belief -- and those reactions are the result of the mindset Mr. Ilan is advocating to believe the accuser. One of the worst, that I wrote for Glenn's site: Two Men's Lives Destroyed By False Rape Claim

AfOR said...

That's fine, every white pixel will be an FRA then.

Anonymous said...

Anyone besides me gonna make a polite, enlightening comment to this guy?

Anonymous said...

Well, David Ilan...if someone says YOU raped them....do you STILL want me to just believe them?

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...
When he finally does connect the dots, it will look like a falsely accused man. Guaranteed.

Apr 23, 2010 10:07:00 AM


A falsely accused man swinging from the end of a rope. Mr. Ilan seems to have overlooked that nasty bit of history - unless he's now saying they were all guilty.

Archivist said...

Mr. Ilan would do well to recall Dr. Marvin Lynch, the doctor who knew the truth but refused to testify in the trial of one of the Scottsboro boys. Dr. Lynch told the Judge privately: "Judge, I looked at both the women and told them they were lying, that they knew they had not been raped and they just laughed at me." Still, he couldn't bring himself to testify, telling the judge: "If I testified for those boys I'd never be able to go back into Jackson County."

You see, Mr. Ilan, back then, negative assumptions about what black boys did to white women was considered PC. You need to learn from history.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

Who will the final picture be of? Crystal Mangum?

I think this artist's intention is to get over with lots of hot women, not to do anything noble.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

And if he doesn't have enough true rape stories to fill out all of his pre-planned dots, will he then make some shit up so that he has enough to complete the picture?

Anonymous said...

Not sure why those comments were deleted...

E. Steven Berkimer said...

For anyone who cares, GeorgiaGirl is posting comments on that site. She is now saying that all "the rapists who come to this site are in denial". AFOR, Scott and those others that have been falsely accused, Please head over to that site and join me in teh discussion.

Thanks.

Anonymous said...

Maybe not a good idea, unless we all want our IP Addresses revealed.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

David Ilian is a human and so are you he is a good person who is just trying to help us out. Those of us who did get raped and who's person admited to it. You need to leave him alone and get on with your fucked up lifes

Anonymous said...

You all need to get on with your lifes and leave david alone

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Archivist said...

I have removed the comment that a reader found objectionable. We do not moderate this board except if we happen to notice a comment.

E. Steven Berkimer said...

The last 2 anon's,

While his goal is noble, by putting out flagrantly incorrect information (which has been debunked time and time again), he should expect some criticism.

Anonymous said...

David Ilian is a human and so are you he is a good person who is just trying to help us out. Those of us who did get raped and who's person admited to it. You need to leave him alone and get on with your fucked up lifes

****

I am terribly sorry if you are one of those who were raped, and whose rapist confessed to the crime.

But please don't compare that for one second to going to being falsely accused of rape and sent to prison for the rest of your life for something you didn't do. Sorry, but when dubious claims of abuse are made, we are going to react in the only appropriate away: with skepticism.