I listened to some of the discussion on political programmes on the radio this morning. All about 'people' and 'victims', again I don't think I heard the word 'woman' or 'violence against women' once.
Yet again, even the Rape Crisis Centre representative was talking about 'people', never women.
It's almost as if there's a fear of speaking the truth about male violence against women, because it will throw up awkward conversations about men, men as perpetrators of violence against women, and what men in general are doing to fight against it.
It's easier to talk generally about 'violence' and 'victims' and 'assault' and ignore the glaringly obvious fact about who is doing the violence, and who the victims are.
It's the old 'Whatever you say, say nothing' when it comes to the scourge of male violence.
The Gisele Pelicot case has shaken this up in France, the difficult and challenging facts about violence against women being perpetrated by 'ordinary decent blokes' are starting to come out in the open.
In Northern Ireland, they are actually talking about an epidemic of 'femicide' there.
It looks like we have a way to go here before that happens here, if even in the aftermath of the McGregor case, the facts are still being blurred so as not to say anything too awkward or challenging about male violence against women.