4.6 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 25 March 2023
⏱️ 112 minutes
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0:00.0 | So, Berto, someone wrote in and wanted us to talk about women who perpetrate sexual |
0:13.8 | violence on other women because she has, and I'll read her email in a second, but she |
0:22.2 | wanted us to raise awareness of this issue that doesn't get talked about very much. |
0:29.0 | Wow! Are you ready for this? I don't know if I am, but I am interested. |
0:33.9 | This is the Psychology and Seattle podcast. I'm your host, Dr. Kirk Honda. I'm a therapist |
0:37.8 | and a professor. My name is Umberto Castanilla, and I prepare French mecheroons. |
0:44.6 | So as a caveat to this, I just want to say that this episode is not about men's rights |
0:51.3 | or about anti-feminism or anything like that. I could see how people might click on |
0:56.1 | this and think like, oh, this is, oh, see, women do it too. Yeah, right. I'm a staunch |
1:02.9 | feminist. I'm not the sort of feminist that's being talked about on the internet, which is |
1:07.0 | a straw, straw woman, if you will. But I'm the kind of feminist who believes that everyone |
1:15.2 | should be treated well and fairly, and so to speak, equally, men and women included. |
1:22.1 | So we both recognize that research demonstrates that most perpetrators of sexual assault are |
1:29.2 | men. In fact, in the United States, it's mostly white men. But many are women. And actually |
1:35.7 | some research suggests that among sexual violence perpetrators, there might be many, many |
1:42.0 | more women doing it than we typically understand, especially if we broaden the definition of |
1:48.3 | sexual assault, because we tend to see sexual assault, especially in the past, as like |
1:54.5 | the rape of a man on a woman, and there's a penis going inside something. But we know |
2:01.0 | now that you can be sexually assaulted without penetration, without a penis being involved |
2:07.8 | at all. And it has more to do with the act of fear and the threat and coercion and this |
2:18.0 | kind of thing. I learned about these statistics when the Me Too movement started, because someone |
2:26.8 | posted a man posted a Me Too, but like a story that they had gone through and they got |
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