I recently heard about the upcoming event (or set of events) Slutwalk. I realize that this is somewhat political and may have some mind-killing effects, but my main interest is in the Less Wrong reaction to the idea. From the wikipedia page[1]:
The "Toronto Slut Walk" refers to a protest held on April 3, 2011 in Toronto. Protesters walked from Queen's Park (Toronto) to the Toronto Police Headquarters located on Central Street [1]. These protesters were dressed in revealing clothing and holding signs in order to reject the belief that female rape victims are "asking for it"[2]. They marched in response to remarks made by a Toronto police officer and judge. Women are also organizing other "slut walks" around Canada and the United States[3][4], including one scheduled for August 20th, 2011 in New York City[5].
Before continuing to read, please answer the poll below as to how you feel about the idea of the "Slutwalk."
I have many friends who are involved with the Slutwalk and my first impression is that it is a good idea; that framing and terminology, if not a strong part of policy decisions, can have large effects on personal wellbeing. Also that while dressing more modestly may have some effect on sexual assault, having an authority put any onus of a crime on a victim harshly reduces the disincentive for perpetrators.
On the other hand, I have been known to be clueless before in matters of activism, and I recall that Robin Hanson has made cutting remarks about protest being about attracting mates and making a show of identifying with groups, and this certainly seems like it could fit that description to a T. So I am curious what others' reactions are.
This is a political issue, and we all know politics is the mind-killer, so I would mostly like to see what people think of this idea; specifically whether it is controversial, heavily supported, or heavily disapproved of.
I will attempt to reformat if I can figure out how to work the formatting.
EDIT: Rephrased poll options and removed references to clusters, at popular request.
References:
This event was in response to a police officer advising a group of college students. The subject was safety techniques/ways to avoid danger. The officer recommended that some of the women walking home avoid dressing in a 'slutty' manner, or something similar to that.
The students reacted to this in protest because they thought that the policeman was saying that victims who dressed a certain way were complicit in provoking others to rape them. This is obviously terrible and wrong. Victims should not be blamed for what happened to them.
However, if I were a potential victim I would minimize risk through:
Dressing conservatively
Walking in a group
Having a cell phone
Carrying mace, etc.
None of the above carry with them the implication that doing otherwise provokes people into rape, and by so doing makes the rape the victim's 'fault', but doing the above minimizes the chances of a rape occurring.
Why is it wrong to tell people on an individual basis to not dress 'slutty' in order to maximize their personal safety? It doesn't matter about 'fault', only the end result of raped or not-raped. From a consequentialist standpoint, I'm having a hard time being outraged by the policeman's comments. At the same time, I think that a 'slut walk' is a good idea because of the above, but I don't think that it should have occurred as the result of a protest against the comments made by an individual policeman.
[Edited for formatting]
It sounds similar enough to blame to provoke the same response.