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Jesus....
Aight, I'm gonna try to make this as thorough and simple as I can.
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To determine if rape culture is real, the first thing we have to do is define rape culture. First thing to get out of the way: Rape culture is NOT a culture. If the basis of your argument is "You can't call this a culture," then that means that you haven't actually made an attempt to learn what rape culture is. You look at the name, see culture, and assume that it LITERALLY means a culture. You're basing your argument solely on the name of the concept, which is ignorance.
There are those who argue that the fact that the presence of rape culture in America is the product of certain social and cultural norms that once existed, such as males having a higher socioeconomic and political standings than women, but rape culture itself is not meant to refer to an actual culture.
Now, for the actual definition of rape culture: Rape culture means a setting where rape and sexual assault are normalized. Rape culture is a title given to the trivialization of rape and sexual assault. To determine if the term(rape culture) exists, we have to ask ourselves, do the concepts that the title refers to(instances of rape/sexual assault being trivialized and normalized) occur.
The answer to that is, "Yes." I bring up Donald Trump's words because that's an example of someone trivializing and normalizing acts of sexual assault. I bring up Brock Turner and other judges because those are examples of people trivializing rape. Rape is trivialized when people blame people who are raped for the clothing they are worn inside of assigning the blame to the actual rapist. Rape is trivialized when the rape of men is made into a joke instead of being addressed as something serious.
The concepts that the term "rape culture" refer to are observable as something that actually happens. Therefore, rape culture is indeed real. No, it's not a literal, actual culture, it's simply a term created to describe a specific phenomena that takes several forms. You can argue that the use of the word "culture" for the title is wrong, but that not that the concepts it refers to doesn't exist.
For starters, you're citing Wikipedia as your source, when in an academia, citing Wikipedia as a source is unreliable and avoided; I've been taught this since middle school. The only other place the wiki's definition coincides with an already existing definition of rape culture is in third wave feminist blogs and articles.
But why is it that third wave feminist's definition of rape culture no longer defines rape culture as a "culture", but as a "setting" or "environment" when compared to second wave feminist's original definition of rape culture, which is used in a vast majority of scholarly journals, that defines rape culture as a "culture", "society", or "societal influence"? Why is it when women's right activist fight against so called rape culture, that they do not target the individual microaggression's that they claim to be defined as rape culture, but try to hold American culture, the media, and society as a whole accountable for rape culture? This is a simple case of "moving the goal post" fallacy. My problem with your argument is that you base it upon a faulty definition of rape culture.
I'd personally disrobe your claims of "blaming the victim", but I believe God Stefan Molyneux does a better job of doing that then I could. I've set to the point where he begins making his argument, so I dont have to force you to watch through an hour long video. (Should it not work, the time is 1:03:09-1:05:15)