Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Clearly,

There are some problems here logically, with th apparent adaptation OF women TO rape. I would like to say...there are days...there are days...there are days...

When I would use this, not as protection of rape, but as an ability to get the last word of an argument in during the obligatory intimate moments of the night to come...

Is that wrong to say? I don't know that I give a fuck. That is how I feel. OHHHHHH to have the ability to "do" someone. As a woman, as a vessel, I find most of sex a constant rape, a constant putting in of something I don't necessary want or feel like having in...

AND ANOTHER THING...IF my vagina COULD talk (and I think it should)...the pecker would need ears, because GOD knows headears are too far away most days to decipher "snorcher language" IF IF IF

If God was a women, I think, she would have built the female vessel with these little hooks that you could flip out or flip up at your will...OR at the very least, give the snorcher language and a voice, and a pecker very very sensitive ears able to decipher snorcher language...

regardless...i do have problems with this, but part of me, a very very small part of me, inside of me, very close to the tender inners of me, is jumping up and down inside of me, screaming screaming YAH YAH YAHHHHHHHH....


The words of a rape victim - "If only I had teeth down there" - have inspired the design of a new anti-rape device.

Rapex - dubbed the 'rape trap' - is a product worn internally by women. The hollow inside is lined with rows of razor-sharp hooks, which are designed to latch on to a rapist's penis during penetration. They can only be removed by a doctor.

The product will be on the shelves of South African chemists and supermarkets later this month. South African mother-of-two Sonette Ehlers developed the original prototype in 2005 but has struggled to get it patented and approved for sale, not least because of staunch opposition from feminist groups.

"Vengeful, horrible, and disgusting," was the response from Charlene Smith, one of South Africa's leading anti-rape campaigners. Lisa Vetten, of the Centre of Violence and

A device that barbs onto rapists’ penises is causing outcry. Ehlers
says: "This is like going back to the days when women were forced to wear chastity belts. It is a terrifying thought that women are being made to adapt to rape."

Some also fear that the sudden infliction of pain on the rapist could incite him to even greater violence.

Ehlers, however, is adamant that desperate times call for desperate measures. South Africa has the world's highest rate of sexual assault: a staggering 1.7m women are raped each year. She believes the product, priced at one Rand, will be particularly useful for poorer black women who walk long distances to and from work.

With state intervention frustratingly slow, Ehlers argues this ugly version of empowerment is justified. "I don't hate men," she says. "I have not got revenge in mind. All I am doing is giving women their power back."


http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/index.php?menuID=2&subID=1611

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