The girl never made a big fuss... it can't be rape. It's many other things than rape.
-- Edited by Figs on Sunday 26th of April 2009 02:08:22 PM
e? u nuh kno nuttin...it can be rape.. see how she jump off di ting and almost kill she self to get away from him? even if she did tek off she skirt..he have nuh right to remove her panty... VIOLATIN
Plz don't try to defend the girl. Based on the 2 definitions of rape given by you it cannot be rape. I didn't see her make it clear to him that he must stop. When she jumped down that was the end of the show, he didn't jump down and continue to "forcefully" pull her panty off. Both should be charged for indecent exposure... technically.
-- Edited by Figs on Sunday 26th of April 2009 02:21:59 PM
stupse stop yuh noise.. i nuh defendin nuttin and no one. i'm jus givin my opinion on "DAGGERING OR RAPE". he assaulted her sexually ..which is a form of rape. i nuh sayin he forced intercourse but he did attepmt to do so....whateva di case may be..mi still feel it a rape..tek it or send it back
Plz don't try to defend the girl. Based on the 2 definitions of rape given by you it cannot be rape. I didn't see her make it clear to him that he must stop. When she jumped down that was the end of the show, he didn't jump down and continue to "forcefully" pull her panty off. Both should be charged for indecent exposure... technically.
-- Edited by Figs on Sunday 26th of April 2009 02:21:59 PM
stupse stop yuh noise.. i nuh defendin nuttin and no one. i'm jus givin my opinion on "DAGGERING OR RAPE". he assaulted her sexually ..which is a form of rape. i nuh sayin he forced intercourse but he did attepmt to do so....whateva di case may be..mi still feel it a rape..tek it or send it back
First you said "he assaulted her sexually ..which is a form of rape". And then u said "rape is sexual assault". Which way should it be? In my opinion, which i think is that of the law... rape is a form of sexual assualt, not visa versa. So in my opinion, this could pass as sexual assualt but not rape. Am i makin' sense?
__________________
Knowing is not enough. We must apply - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Plz don't try to defend the girl. Based on the 2 definitions of rape given by you it cannot be rape. I didn't see her make it clear to him that he must stop. When she jumped down that was the end of the show, he didn't jump down and continue to "forcefully" pull her panty off. Both should be charged for indecent exposure... technically.
-- Edited by Figs on Sunday 26th of April 2009 02:21:59 PM
stupse stop yuh noise.. i nuh defendin nuttin and no one. i'm jus givin my opinion on "DAGGERING OR RAPE". he assaulted her sexually ..which is a form of rape. i nuh sayin he forced intercourse but he did attepmt to do so....whateva di case may be..mi still feel it a rape..tek it or send it back
First you said "he assaulted her sexually ..which is a form of rape". And then u said "rape is sexual assault". Which way should it be? In my opinion, which i think is that of the law... rape is a form of sexual assualt, not visa versa. So in my opinion, this could pass as sexual assualt but not rape. Am i makin' sense?
what the f u c k it dat??? jah know star a wha dem ting deh gone to?!!!! more while mi watch ukki bit, dutty firday and dem ting deh and mi seh it's a shame more whileeeeeee mi nuh even like watch dem no more
What I watched in this video...is what this article below is all about. -- Problematic and sad
This article was just published April 13, 2009 in the news from this study. The Influence of Early Sexual Debut and Sexual Violence on Adolescent Pregnancy: A Matched Case-Control Study in Jamaica
Half of Jamaican teen girls forced to have sex - 94% of adolescent pregnancies unplanned, study reveals
Published: Monday | April 13, 2009
Forty-nine per cent of girls aged 15-17 in Jamaica's capital, Kingston, have reportedly experienced sexual coercion or violence. One-third stated that they had been persuaded or forced to participate in their first sexual experience, a study has revealed.
Though young women who had experienced sexual violence were not more likely than those who had not to become pregnant, the numbers reflect the widespread prevalence of gender-based violence in Jamaica, the authors concluded.
The study, titled The Influence of Early Sexual Debut and Sexual Violence on Adolescent Pregnancy: A Matched Case-Control Study in Jamaica, also found that 94 per cent of the pregnant teens interviewed reported that their pregnancies were unintended. These findings, the researchers said, demonstrate a strong need for increased education and services for young people in Jamaica to help reduce the country's high rates of unplanned teen pregnancy and gender-based violence.
Efforts to empower young women are key to addressing these problems, said the authors. The study found a significant link between unequal relationships and pregnancy risk: Compared with their peers who had never been pregnant, adolescents who were pregnant were more likely to have had a first sexual partner who was at least five years older, to have low self-esteem and to believe contraception is solely a woman's responsibility.
Contraceptives
Among teens who were pregnant, those who first had sex by age 14 were more likely to have had two or more partners than those who had first sex at a later age. In addition, pregnant young women were less likely to report having used contraceptives the first time they had sex than were teens who had never been pregnant. Eighty-seven per cent of pregnant teens who reported having used contraceptives at the time they became pregnant said they had relied on condoms.
To help reduce pregnancy risk, the authors recommend that programmes encourage teens to delay sex (if it is under their control) until they find a job or finish school, as well as educate sexually active young women on more reliable, hormonal contraceptive methods that can be used in c****ination with condoms.
Of the 250 pregnant women recruited to participate in the study, 182 were from one large hospital and the rest from smaller antenatal care clinics.
The study appears in the March 2009 issue of International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, formerly known as International Family Planning Perspectives.
Its authors are Joy Noel Baumgartner, Cynthia Waszak Geary, Heidi Tucker - all based in the United States - and Maxine Wedderburn, executive director of Hope Enterprises in Jamaica.
Data for the study were primarily gleaned from interviews with teen girls aged 15-17, 250 of whom were pregnant and 500 others who were sexually experienced but never pregnant.
Start out as a dance ended up as a .....nah a straight voilation that ...assault and all these tings...but you cant too blame the man still ...these are two Adult ..engaging in adult activities ..if she had n e problem with it she would have got down from he took off her skirt ..but she was o k with it ....so its not really my problem ..ahh welll
Education is one of the solutions. Women must learn to respect themselves and respect will be given back in return. They should also learn not to put themselves at these risks.
A lot of the blame fall on the women for things like this, but the men of this society need to do some serious lookin' into themselves as well.
__________________
Knowing is not enough. We must apply - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
education is one solution true however i`ve seen things like this on college campuses these are"educated"ppl,but what makes this diffrent from carnival though,jcans are jus extremist