This post comes about from a coalescing of two things I've seen in the last week. The first was a picture; the second was a video.
This picture (source) |
This video
"I don't live in France, why would I have armpit hair?"
"That's nasty."
"Eeuw!"
"I would never date a girl who didn't shave her armpits."
"Women are supposed to be smooth."
It's not a polarizing topic. Pretty much everyone agrees, "that's disgusting". People shout this opinion freely. It's a cultural opinion: "American women shave their armpits." Men and women, boys and girls, are pretty much united over this opinion: (Female) armpit hair is gross. They feel comfortable telling women to continue using a razor to scrape the hair off of their armpits, because that's how it's "supposed" to be.
Y'know. "Natural". (Source) |
We feel comfortable telling women they can't grow the hair their body naturally grows, but we don't feel comfortable saying rapists shouldn't exist. A 14 year old boy can tell a grown woman she shouldn't grow armpit hair, but we don't see the same freedom of expression when it comes to condemning rapists.
(Source) |
Now, that was 30 years ago. Times were different. I wasn't even alive. But my parents were, and yours probably were, too. Just thirty years ago, 50% of men said they would rape a woman if they could get away with it. The numbers today are not much better, with 1/3 of men still saying they would force a woman to have sex if they would get away with it (source). We don't have a cultural trait of hating rape. How could we? One sixth of us would commit rape, given the chance.
We live in a country and a time where it's definitively not okay for a woman to not shave, but it's considered within the range of "normal" for people to hurt, abuse, and assault each other. We're supposed to speak out against female body hair, but it's not expected to speak out against rape.
(Source) |
What a beautiful world it would be.
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