Violent pornography is “fundamentally changing” the views of young boys about sex, the home secretary has said as new figures reveal police are receiving more reports of rape from 14-year-old girls than any other age group.
In an interview with The Times, Yvette Cooper said the graphic nature of material boys are now exposed to is influencing the way they treat girls and women. She said schools and parents were failing to teach young boys what sexual behaviour was acceptable
And
The centre [The National Centre for Public Protection], led by Maggie Blyth, deputy chief executive of the College of Policing and the national police lead for tackling male-perpetrated violence towards women, will use counter-terrorism style data analysis and covert tactics to target the most serious offenders.
It will start by identifying and targeting the 1,000 men who pose the greatest danger to women and girls across the country and provide police forces with the specialist training, expertise and technical capability needed to improve investigations into violence committed by men.
Cooper wants the centre to help forces get much smarter in identifying, monitoring and targeting high-risk offenders. This will include a new national standard for using predictive and proactive technology.
And
In a speech to the Labour Party’s women’s conference in Liverpool, Cooper will say: “On my watch, if you hurt and abuse women, the police will be after you. The era of impunity is over. I want police officers to use every tool in their arsenal. And to strain every sinew to keep women safe.”
This reads as part of a planned big crack down on social media companies.
In the last week on MN there's been two threads on MN that made my eyes roll. The first was a Dad with a 12 year old autistic boy who was in some sort of chat where inappropriate images had been shared. The kid had previously been sent inappropriate images by an adult, yet Dad had no idea who the people in this second chat were. The second was a 10 year old boy on tiktok.
Now these could well have been trolls but speaking to friends who work in yr6 classrooms, this doesn't seem to be uncommon.
There's a massive lack of parenting going on. You can crack down on social media companies all you like but I don't think it will solve the core issue really cos Pandora's box is open and the sheer amount of stuff out there means it's everywhere. Its an issue within gaming and internal communication systems - it goes way beyond social media.
The other thing I find on the whole problematic is she's going to do a speech saying 'the police are on your side and will deal with this'. In the last week we've been told there's an institutional level issue with the police being perpetrators of domestic violence and turning a blind eye to the abuse of women especially if it involves one of their colleagues.
Again there's a recent thread on MN which reflects this. The thread about 'which profession would you never date' was appalling. Numerous accounts from women saying how they'd been treated by a police colleague or had a close friend or family members who had suffered.
How on earth are they going to improve things without first dealing with the institutional attitudes within the police itself?
And then to not support single sex facilities and making it explicit in law?!
Transactivism in its virulent form which we know is a problem, has arisen at the same time in parallel with incelism. This is not a coincidence and it's about time there was a wake up call about this. It's happened at the same time because it's part of the same movement. It is just a different manifestation.
It's all massively and utterly depressing.
I think the move to try and put some of this on a par with terrorism is good, BUT I think there's also going to be some massive issues with that too.
You've also got massive issue with the sentencing and reasoning behind sentencing when it comes to rape cases and child sex abuse cases. We've seen many statements from judges which frankly are jaw droppingly awful.
Even stuff like attempting to use status as 'otherwise being an upstanding citizen' as part of a defence / mitigation against sentencing needs a good harm look at.
I can't help but feel there's a certain amount of cats falling here, and pissing in the wind, with the approach being suggested. It's not consistent and it's not considered in significant areas.