goldenrae
goldenrae
goldenrae

In the last 4 years there's been significant expansion in how colleges need to view sexual assualt on campuses thanks to the DCL of 2011 and this last iteration of VAWA that included the Campus Save act.

Regarding 'covering it up' a campus cannot legally do that thanks to the Cleary act. You're not going to hear the outcome of any sexual assault cases unless you are the respondent or complainant because of FERPA. There are schools that do deal with Title IX related incidents very well and some that have growth to

Oh, nonsensical false dilemma. Thank you.

I think you're thinking the invisible hand is an actual hand. The market has shown the popularity of women driven films and Hollywood still doesn't respond for a variety of reasons. Discussion in popular culture venues can help demonstrate that there is need.

You suspect, yet, you have no example of a package focusing on this. Thank you for demonstrating my premise.

Personal stories overwhelming tend to be non-political or non-religious on the show. This narrative is an outlier.

It takes fucking time to coordinate with 200 people, including distinguished alumnis, to craft a piece that is also run by campus media peeps.

Ok, so now we're arguing that they make less than service-sector and waitresses even with barriers.

And then you wrote If there were no stigma against topless dancing, competition would explode and the pay would drop down to waitress levels. So, you agree that it would, in fact, not drop to $2.50 plus tips as a waitress makes now.

And what I'm saying is even without stigma, you're not removing all barriers to a job and therefore not going to bring stripping down to the $2.50 an hour plus tips wage of wait staff.

Pardon me. I had read through from the beginning to the end and simply responded to the final one. I find the premise assuming that minus stigma the pay scale would decrease to be a bit problematic for the above mentioned reasons.

Due to looks and ageism all those who wait could not strip. You're making too broad a base assumption on the labor available.

There's also possible that among this sample of women—this is the preferred norm.

My life when it comes to dress codes. Slutty is sometimes a problem of perception.

And others don't. There isn't some feminist bot that writes responses. People have different thoughts about weight.

I hate it, personally. I don't do weight talk and I don't want to talk about how a person thinks I look 'nice' because I'm closer to a perceived notion of standardized beauty.

No, they won't. The Cleary Act mandates reporting on a much exhaustive and intricate level than Title IX.

I think you're misunderstanding a bit. What they're talking about is reporting as it relates to what is necessary under Title IX. You're also presuming the case involves a student perp, which may not be the case.

It sure is. Luckily, I now the artist.

Except this photo essay is about wealthy South Korean women where there is such a demand on beauty that it's a bit more than 'shit they just wanted.' But it's just easier to be reductive and not read an article.