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by dijit
2016 days ago
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I'm generally the person to be very critical of Sweden, but this is somewhat unfair as the definition of "Rape" in Sweden is incredibly broad, and includes people who can't give consent such as those experiencing fear. Heck in 2018 they passed a law that says "Any sex act which does not have explicit consent is rape"[0] including those where there are no threats, coercion or violence of any kind. I mockingly considered creating a "consent" app which could be signed with BankID. Sweden is also unique in that it counts every offence as an occurrence of rape- meaning that if you're "raped by your husband 12 times a year" those are 12 separate cases of rape and not 1 (like it would be in the UK). There is also speculation that in Sweden they take rape reports very seriously, which leads to more people coming forward with cases of rape. This line of thinking has been discussed before, sadly by the extreme far right.[1] [0]: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-44230786 [1]: https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-39056786 |
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I'm unsure if I'm reading the way you worded this incorrectly or not.
Are you saying people who are too scared to say no are only included because the definition is "incredibly broad"?! Do you think people too scared to say no shouldn't be included?
If so, I'd argue you must have a very narrow personal definition, which worries me.