• hoshikarakitaridia@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Cheating on her boyfriend with you will end in cheating on you with a new guy.

    He dd the right thing, no regrets. It sucks a lot tho, and it’s hard.

      • festnt@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        how would he be raping her anyway? she was the one trying to force him to have sex with her even after he made it clear he didn’t want to

        • lepinkainen@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Drunk people and consent is a moral and legal gray area - it doesn’t matter if they initiate

            • Senseless@feddit.org
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              2 months ago

              Yeah, sure. But since she already threw up, she’s drunk enough to make it problematic.

            • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              It also depends on what is being consented to. We accept that drunk people can consent to commit crimes, but that they cannot consent to have sex.

              • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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                2 months ago

                If drunk people couldn’t consent as a rule then like 80% of Finnish one night stands would be double rapes (since both are getting raped by the other party) lol

              • kungen@feddit.nu
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                2 months ago

                And the old “I cheated on you because I was drunk”. It’s not so heartwarming that people here are belittling rape with what would be considered negligent sexual assault at the worst.

                • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  2 months ago

                  hm, yeah so if you can’t consent when drunk, then you also can’t cheat when drunk. Because it’s non consensual in both cases. (at least intentionally, so it would be a valid excuse in this case)

          • festnt@sh.itjust.works
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            2 months ago

            well if someone gets really drunk (not being drugged by others, but doing it because they want to) and commits a crime, thats still a crime they commited

            if im wrong please explain

          • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 months ago

            legal gray area - it doesn’t matter if they initiate

            is there a legal basis for this statement? There very well could be, i don’t do a lot of raping so i wouldn’t know anything about this lmao

        • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          I’m going to give a longer explanation than was already given.

          So, imagine yourself at a hospital. You’re about to have a minor surgery, and get knocked out. While you’re under, some nurse comes in and fucks you in the ass.

          Is that rape?

          Switch things up. You’re at a bar, having a good time, someone slips something in your drink. While you’re under the influence of that hit of whatever, they take you into the bathroom and fuck you in the ass, and you agreed to that, you may even like it.

          Is that rape?

          On a fundamental level, if someone is visibly drunk, or even olfactorily drunk (meaning your can smell the booze on them), they are in a state of mind that is the same as being drugged. It doesn’t matter if they are initiating contact, they are unable to give meaningful consent.

          Now, if you want to argue we need another term instead of rape, I’m okay with that. We can call it whatever. But we have statutory rape already, which exists because we recognize that even when someone is the initiator, there are states of mind and being that simply can’t make a choice to have sex in a meaningful way. So using the term rape for violating meaningful consent is fine, even when it’s an adult, and even when they initiate.

          I am also aware that there are edge cases where consenting before consuming a substance could/should count as meaningful consent. And I’m aware that there is a range of inebriation where meaningful consent is still possible. However it is nearly impossible to tell without testing what a person’s blood alcohol level is, so we’re limited. That in turn means that the standard for (at least colloquial usage) what is and isn’t inebriated rape has to be broader than it would be if we had reliable testing on the fly.

          I also agree with your point that she was ignoring consent, and being an absolutely horrible person, and if she had persisted by force or coercion and he had given in, I wouldn’t accept her being drunk as a defense against any charges brought.

          But there’s a fundamental inability to consent when drunk. How drunk? That’s something that would need to be addressed by medical science and then legislated. What’s the maximum BAC someone can give meaningful consent for other things? But that fact is there, that alcohol serves to break down the ability to consent, and sex without consent is considered rape, on at least a colloquial level, if not always on a legal level everywhere.

          • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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            2 months ago

            I want to point out two things

            1: She threw up, assuming she doesn’t have a pocket dimension in her throat she likely threw up most of the alcohol.

            2: OP was almost certainly drinking. OP makes no mention of throwing up. We can pretty safely assume OP is also drunk, and likely has more alcohol still in his system than her.

            Seems like a lot of people ITT think that consent is a one way street. He said no and was drunk, she pushed. We can at the very least admit that she sexually assaulted him, and if you think otherwise you need to rethink some things.

            • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              I already replied to your similar comment on my thread, but I’m going to repeat myself here to give this maximum visibility; vomiting does not remove alcohol from your system. You become intoxicated not when you swallow alcohol, but when the alcohol in your stomach is metabolized and enters your blood stream. If you are vomiting from alcohol, it means your body has metabolized so much alcohol that it has recognized that it is being poisoned. It is purging your stomach to prevent you from metabolizing any more poison, but it is not removing any alcohol from your system (AKA your bloodstream). Someone is just as drunk just before they threw as they were after they threw up. That person will only become sober once their liver has had time to filter the alcohol out of their system.

              Since OP is not throwing up, but the girl in his story is, it is far, far more likely that she is much drunker than him. Unless he had other symptoms of alcohol poisoning (and it seems like he would have mentioned that), it is safe to assume that her BAC is much higher than his. More broadly, you should never think that someone vomiting up alcohol is a sign that they are sobering up.

                • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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                  2 months ago

                  Yes, and to be clear, a number of factors will affect how quickly alcohol enters your system: stomach contents, body weight (not including body fat), rate of consumption. But once alcohol is in your system, you can’t just purge it by vomiting. Time is the only thing that will remove it.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              We can pretty safely assume OP is also drunk

              How? Pre-gaming doesn’t typically result in being drunk, it’s something you do to cut the costs of getting drunk at a bar. It’s usually something like 1-2 drinks, so you’d be a little buzzed, but not drunk. If he was drunk, I highly doubt he’d have the fortitude to refuse, because alcohol dramatically lowers your inhibitions. It could also be that OP doesn’t drink, he just went because he likes the girl.

              So no, I don’t think we can safely assume OP is drunk. Also, you don’t throw up alcohol until after you’re already drunk, so throwing up most of the alcohol isn’t going to sober her up.

                • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                  2 months ago

                  It can, but I’ve “pre-gamed” with people who are drinking without drinking myself. Designated drivers are certainly present if the bars aren’t within walking distance. Generally speaking, people don’t get drunk before going to the bar, because the bar won’t let you order if you’re visibly drunk, and why would they allow you to stay if you’re not a paying customer?

          • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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            2 months ago

            I think you argued that if the night ended in sex, they both would have raped each other?

            Is it rape because she would have gotten him to go against his morals for a short time?

            The story seemed to imply she wasnt physically capable of forcing sex, she was trying to appeal to his sexual urges.

            I do understand drunk people commiting crimes is a thing and they should be responsible for that, but this specific case, I don’t know it was possible for her to be the raper.

            I don’t disagree with you but its hard to reconcile that being drunk makes someone both not responsible and responsible for their actions at the same time.

            • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              No, that is not what I argued. I said that if she used force or coercion, she would have raped him.

              Coercion is the use of social, emotional, or other non physical means to cause a person to act against their will.

              Rape is not always an act of physical force. You didn’t say that it was, I’m just repeating it for general purpose.

              The night ending in sex would have meant that she sobered up, expressed her consent and intent, then he agreed to sex.

              It is kinda possible for two people to rape each other, but there’s a shit-ton of stretching of the term, plus very unlikely situations to make it so. Even then, there would be a ton of argument about it from anyone not involved.

              I think you either misunderstood, I phrased things badly, or my dyslexia + poor proofreading via tts screwed something up. I can’t find any errors, so I have to assume the first two.

              There are a ton of ways to use non physical force on someone, and most of them can not only be done while drunk, but the inhibition being depressed via alcohol could make someone more likely to use them.

              That is not the same thing as attempting to convince someone to have sex with you by using your physical appearance, the offer of sex (or specific sex acts), or even just by being an asshole and not leaving them alone. As shitty as nagging at someone for sex is, it hasn’t the same thing as rape, so long as the person being the target is capable of consent and has freedom to leave.

              • untorquer@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                Yet another factor is the power dynamic between a sober person and someone under the influence.

                • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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                  2 months ago

                  If there are no consequences to saying no, it isn’t coercive. It’s the difference between begging and saying “if you don’t, I’ll threat

                  The threat can be minor, something like “I’ll tell everyone you’re a lousy lay” all the way up to “I’ll tell everyone you raped me” or less direct like “I’ll stop paying the car payment”, or “I’ll evict you”.

                  But, as nasty as not taking no and backing off immediately is, it isn’t the same as coercion or force. Even being very pushy about it, even using physical contact isn’t coercion, though whether or not such behavior should be illegal is an interesting possibility. The difference is whether or not the target of the “seduction” can walk away freely.

                  If they can, if they can enforce their no and leave, even if they don’t exert that ability, or isn’t coercive, just douchey.

                  Now, there is another issue in there. Some people may not believe they can freely and safely exit. That’s part of why when someone says no, everything stops, period. Other people may freeze up and be unable to exit, despite having the freedom to, which is another reason we have to make sure that we not only exhibit good sexual behaviors, but teach those ethics whenever needed.

                  But as far as something being rape or not, that is the ultimate determinant, the freedom of the person to say no, and exit the situation. Legally, it may well not matter if the person nagging the other for sex is aware of the target wanting to exit, but having internal barriers preventing it. That’s something laws and juries have to deal with. But for the purpose of discussion like this, that’s the line.

            • Quacksalber@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              but this specific case, I don’t know it was possible for her to be the raper.

              In my mind, even if you lack the means to commit a crime, you still wanted to commit that crime and you tried to commit that crime.

              • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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                2 months ago

                I do agree but doesnt that then lead to the possibility that both people are assaulting each other and are also victims of each other?

                What if they both wake up upset that it happened?

            • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              2 months ago

              To find out who raped who we need an immediate BAC test of both parties, the one who is higher is the victim, the less drunk one goes to prison. We’ll call it Rape Roulette and sell it to netflix for millions.

          • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 months ago

            So, imagine yourself at a hospital. You’re about to have a minor surgery, and get knocked out. While you’re under, some nurse comes in and fucks you in the ass.

            yes, but now let’s say they need to insert a catheter in your to prevent you from pissing yourself, is this also rape? Or was this previously consented to (obviously it was, just a primer here)

            Switch things up. You’re at a bar, having a good time, someone slips something in your drink. While you’re under the influence of that hit of whatever, they take you into the bathroom and fuck you in the ass, and you agreed to that, you may even like it.

            this would be rape on pretext, similar to robbing someone at gunpoint.

            On a fundamental level, if someone is visibly drunk, or even olfactorily drunk (meaning your can smell the booze on them), they are in a state of mind that is the same as being drugged. It doesn’t matter if they are initiating contact, they are unable to give meaningful consent.

            i’m inclined to agree here, however there is a small problem here, they intentionally, and knowingly got themselves to that point of intoxication. If i do way too much street fent, nearly die, and wake up in an alley somewhere, am i responsible for what happened to me in between those points? Or not? It’s not like i stopped existing as a person. Physically, i am fully responsible for what happened in that state, psychologically, i am to some degree at the very least tangentially responsible. (there is a reason why you cant drink and drive)

            the rest of the comment is good, thorough coverage of most important things.

            • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              Quoting so it’s easier to see for me as I write.

              i do way too much street fent, nearly die, and wake up in an alley somewhere, am i responsible for what happened to me in between those points? Or not? It’s not like i stopped existing as a person. Physically, i am fully responsible for what happened in that state, psychologically, i am to some degree at the very least tangentially responsible. (there is a reason why you cant drink and drive)

              In terms of consent based events, no. If someone else takes advantage of your state, even the voluntary intake of substances doesn’t remove the obligation to obtain meaningful consent from the inebriated person by any other party.

              It also depends on the substance. Some stuff, you have way less ability to function consciously. Others, you’re changed so little as to be kinda irrelevant outside of determining the exact consequences in a complicated situation. As an example, if someone slams too much caffeine and punches somebody, that’s 100% on them in any normal circumstances. Something like weed, you run into edge cases where it might be a mitigation, but not as much since there’s less inhibition of the conscious mind compared to something like fentanyl. A pothead robs a store with their buddy, I’m not going to believe they couldn’t have refused because of the weed (under normal circumstances). If they’re barely functional from opiates, I might buy that they didn’t really know what was going on, and got swept up in things.

              That last one is a real thing I’ve run across a few times. Dudes thieving while high and claiming to only have been dragged along, and then having something shoved in their hands and be told to run. It’s believable with some drugs, less so with others.

              Like anything about human behavior and social rules, the more specific things get, the easier it is to throw down a definite yes/no regarding culpability. The more general it stays, the more you have to deal in a degree of “usually, but”.

              That is separate (in my opinion as well as in law in some places) from the inebriated person committing bad or illegal acts themselves.

              There’s also a middle ground where a person that’s inebriated may have some degree of exculpatory claim if someone used their altered state to get them to commit a bad or illegal act. They’d still be responsible, but any judgements on their acts should take it into account (socially and legally).

              Edit: also, I apologize for taking so long to respond, but I was having trouble reading for some reason, and I couldn’t use tts when I first got the notification. Dyslexia is fucking weird sometimes. I don’t usually have this much trouble lol.

              • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                2 months ago

                good comment, thanks for the response.

                Edit: also, I apologize for taking so long to respond, but I was having trouble reading for some reason, and I couldn’t use tts when I first got the notification. Dyslexia is fucking weird sometimes. I don’t usually have this much trouble lol.

                you responded within 24 hours, that’s pretty quick as far as internet responses go for my books. You probably struggled a bit due to my slightly nonsensical writing style lol.

          • festnt@sh.itjust.works
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            2 months ago

            i agree with most of that but if someone is really drunk and tries to have sex with someone else who may or may not be drunk, who is also explicitly saying they dont consent, isnt that person in the wrong, kind of like a really drunk person whos going to drive is in the wrong?

            what i mean is: commiting a crime while drunk is still commiting that crime. if im wrong please explain

          • festnt@sh.itjust.works
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            2 months ago

            thats not really helpful, could you explain to me where i was wrong?

            i dont mean to sound like “i know im right” or something. i actually just want to know

    • curiousaur@reddthat.com
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      2 months ago

      Laaame. You don’t know their situation, seriousness, or arrangements. Fuck around. Fuck as many people as you’d like. You only live once, and your junk stops working once you’ve figured it all out.

        • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          I wouldn’t go that far. If you look at what they said, they were talking about cheating, or rather helping someone cheat.

          Still a less than stellar ethical stance, but the comment they were responding to was about cheating, not consent, so I suspect that those of us that saw the ugliest possibilities in the post saw their comment with that in mind. I know I did the first time I saw the comment. It wasn’t until I came back after a response to a comment I made that I noticed the difference.

          Mind you, they then went full jerk, so they aren’t exactly a pleasant individual. But I’d rather that be the issue than something they didn’t actually say.

        • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          To be fair he is right. The girl could have given consent before they began drinking. Its possible the story actually isnt rape even if they have sex.

          Theres even a situation where the girl would be justified in being upset they didnt hook up.

          We can’t predict the future and theres not enough details here to make a specific determination on what is right and wrong.

          It is a good post to stoke discussion around consent and honesty though, just don’t take it so seriously.

    • Enkrod@feddit.org
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      2 months ago

      Anon doesn’t care she’s drunk, only that she “belongs” to someone else. Good Anon would have told her to try this again while sober and preferably single.

      • Sarmyth@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Unfortunately they don’t actually state their reasoning. They just state what they told her while trying to reason with them to go to sleep.

        You are probably right, but its just an assumption. In their position I would also be attempting to reason with them by reminding them of their existing relationship instead of “No, I don’t want to rape you. You cannot consent.”

  • Vivendi@lemmy.zip
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    2 months ago

    ITT: The top regarded minds of Lemmy argue their shitty opinions on consent and rape

    Abandon all hope ye who enter

  • Seraph@fedia.io
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    2 months ago

    The alternative is rape charges… so… yeah.

    Edit: If she’s vomiting drunk do you think she’s going to remember consenting in the morning? Or wake up, remember nothing, and think you raped her? She might remember, she might not. It’s a roll of the dice, but there’s no way I’m rolling those dice. You go argue in court how “she really wanted you” all you want.

    • stoy@lemmy.zip
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      2 months ago

      Taking this series of events at face value, it could absolutely be argued that she enthusiasticly constented (wrapping her legs around him and kissing), however, annon did absolutely right, and I would have done the same.

      • Jolteon@lemmy.zip
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        2 months ago

        Someone’s drunk enough to vomit is not exactly in a consenting state.

        • stoy@lemmy.zip
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          On the other hand, someone holding on to and kissing someone else for a long time is clearly into the other person at the time.

          Had annon been drunk, he could probably be excused for not realizing the situarion had it continued, but as he wasn’t (from what I understand) he would have been held to a higher standard

            • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              I think more people should be posting that its just unattractive to be pukey drunk. How fun could the sex even be? She might even fall asleep in the middle of it.

        • Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          You don’t need to be drunk to vomit. Often kids will slam shots very quickly and throw up before they have a chance to absorb the alcohol.

      • WolfdadCigarette@threads.net@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        If anything, anon would have been the aggrieved party. “No” doesn’t mean yes or later or maybe, it means “no.” If getting drunk absolved you of all responsibility, DUIs wouldn’t exist. Folks need to respect boundaries.

        • stoy@lemmy.zip
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          2 months ago

          I am with you right up untill he kissed her.

          Though I read that as a way to distract her and get out of the situation.

          • At a certain point of unwanted touching, you begin to wonder whether you’ve done something wrong, communicated something improperly, offered some hint at your consent. It’s a foreign sensation, a unique invasion and no two people respond exactly alike. Half an hour of molestation is a lot. It’s plenty of time to reach a trauma response. I don’t know whether anon, in this assuredly made up bait story, was in such a state but even the possibility is uncomfortable.

            • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              Okay the guy could have left way earlier, she’s not going to die, he only stayed to win Brownie points with her anyways. If he really cared for her instead of himself he would have called her boyfriend immediately and ask him to come watch her instead.

              He wanted to play boyfriend and then when she rightfully took that as an advance he noped out. He’s not a victim here, he’s just thoughtless and impulsive. This is what happens when you try to have your cake and eat it too.

              • Buglefingers@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                Hey-oh, I just wanted to say that it isn’t unreasonable for someone to take care of someone they like when they are ill in a case like this. I’m sure having a crush may have incentivise helping her but I have also stuck around and helped friends with partners in situations like that too, both men and women, and not called their SO. While hindsight may be “call the partner” 1: That’s not always possible, it really depends on circumstances (maybe partner is drinking with others? Or is on a trip, etc.). And 2: It’s quite reasonable to feel better to stay and help the person rather than wait and/or just leave it to someone else since you are present and others are not.

                Brownie points or not, it seems like the intent wasn’t to take advantage of the situation but help a person who was in a bad state. And yeah, probably because they liked them. So just leaving someone, whether you have a crush or not, in a miserable state (see: Throwing up) kinda seems like an ass move.

                The rest of the interaction I have no comment on. End result is OP leaving after they were in a good enough state to be left that way (Not gonna be throwing up anymore)

    • porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      Not really. The alternative is raping someone, but charges are extremely unlikely, hardly many rapes are actually prosecuted.

    • Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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      There are many ways this could go wrong morally or legally. Without being there, no one can know. (Which makes it dangerous legally).

      Just because she vomited doesn’t mean much. Especially, since they were “pre gaming”. Idiots in college would often slam shots or beers in drinking games, throwing up before they had a chance to really absorb much alcohol.

      Morally, it depends on the power dynamic. How drunk was he compared to her? In this case, it sounds like the OP wasn’t drunk and made the safe decision. Even if he would be morally/legally right, the situation with the bf would probably involve a ton of unneeded drama.

    • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      Not rape but it doesn’t matter.

      If she claims it was because she is worried her bf will find out OP is fucked.

  • halvar@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    I really thought there will be a plotwist at the end that somehow this is all about grilling.

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    2 months ago

    “It wouldn’t be right to rape you, you have a boyfriend,” is about what I expect from a 4Channer.

    EDIT: Holy fuck Lemmy, this comment section is a dumpster fire. First, to all the people saying he did reject her because she was drunk, not because she has a boyfriend, there’s no evidence of that; he stated twice that it was wrong because she had a boyfriend, and zero times that it was wrong because she was drunk. But whatever, if you want to believe that, whatever, I’m done arguing over your fan fiction.

    But here are some things that are 100% facts that some of you need to understand:

    1. If someone is throwing up, they are too drunk to consent to sex.
    2. If you are not throwing up, you are almost certainly not as drunk as someone who is throwing up. The person vomiting has alcohol poisoning, and unless you also have symptoms of alcohol poisoning, you are more sober than them.
    3. Vomiting does not remove alcohol from your system. Intoxication occurs when alcohol enters your bloodstream. Vomiting will prevent further alcohol from entering your bloodstream, but it will not remove any alcohol from your bloodstream, and you’ll be just as drunk as you were before you vomited.
    4. If the OP had sex with the girl in this story, it would have been rape. She was far too drunk to give consent, and based on his telling, he was not. Clearly, some of you feel differently, but your shitty opinions on consent don’t change the fact that legally, it would have been rape.
    • 🔍🦘🛎@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      If you were in that situation, would you say “no, I would be raping you”? The boyfriend excuse is a much more tactful way to get yourself out of the situation (as well as a good enough reason in its own right).

      • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        No it’s not. “Hey, I really like you, but you’ve had too much to drink and this wouldn’t be right. If you feel this way tomorrow, let me know,” is a perfectly acceptable answer. Hell, I’ve given that answer before. It’s certainly not less tactful than, “You have a boyfriend and what you’re doing is wrong.” And yeah, cheating on your boyfriend is bad, but not as bad as rape, which this would have been.

        • 🔍🦘🛎@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Keep in mind, you’re telling this to a blackout horny drunk person. In honesty, it doesn’t matter what you actually say.

          • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            OK, so if it doesn’t matter what he said, why lie? You’re kinda invalidating your initial point here.

            • 🔍🦘🛎@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Well, okay, the drunk person will still react to what you say; they just won’t remember. Having a gracious exit to the situation is preferable to, say, “OH MY GOD THERE’S AN AXE MURDERER BEHIND YOU” and running away when they turn around.

              I began with ‘have some tact’ after all.

      • Match!!@pawb.social
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        2 months ago

        The last temptation is the greatest treason / to do the right deed, for the wrong reason

      • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        His reasoning for not sleeping with her was that she had a boyfriend, so it, “wouldn’t be right.” But that girl was so drunk that sleeping with her would have been rape. He did the right thing, but his reasoning was clearly wrong, and implies that if she didn’t have a boyfriend he would have slept with her, even though she could not consent.

          • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Yeah, and I’m going to assume that what he said are his thoughts and motivations, since there is literally no evidence to assume otherwise.

            • warbond@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Assume… No evidence…

              You’re saying the right words, but coming to the wrong conclusions

              • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                LOL, no, you’re coming to the conclusion you want to without evidence. This person said twice in their story that it wouldn’t be right to sleep with this girl because she had a boyfriend. He said zero times that it wouldn’t be right to sleep with her because she was too drunk to consent to sex. Why would I come to the conclusion that he was choosing not to sleep with her because she was drunk instead of the reason he stated twice? What evidence is there for your interpretation?

                • shalafi@lemmy.world
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                  2 months ago

                  Yes. He said, to her. I swear to god, some people are so intent on outrage. Have you ever been laid? More than once or twice by pure dumb luck? Jesus, please don’t tell us about it or I’ll get non-consensualy drunk just to gag it down.

                • warbond@lemmy.world
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                  2 months ago

                  I just mean that there’s no reason to assume anything. Take the story at its literal face value, because that is the only evidence that exists. It is absolutely telling that they fail to list the most salient reason to say no, but there are so many reasons why that might be the case that it’s useless to speculate.

        • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          I can see what you’re saying, but you are making some assumptions and that’s entirely due to OP being an unreliable narrator.

          Throwing up usually purges a lot of the alcohol from your system. OP makes no mention of throwing up themselves, and I’m assuming they were drinking too. That means there’s a solid chance there’s more alcohol in OPs system than hers. You do understand that consent works both ways, yes?

            • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              Great, so they were both still drunk. Do you or do you not accept that consent works both ways?

          • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Holy shit, I was going to respond that the first sentence about how there’s no reason to think that OP’s thoughts are different than his words, but GOD DAMN do we need to address the second half of this comment.

            So, first of foremost, vomiting will not purge alcohol from your system. If you are drinking so heavily that you’ve thrown up, you are already experiencing alcohol poisoning. Your body is purging your stomach to prevent you from metabolizing any more of the poison, but it’s not removing any of the alcohol that’s already in your bloodstream. Eating bread won’t absorb alcohol, drinking black coffee won’t sober you up; there is only one thing in the world that will remove alcohol from your system, and that is time.

            Secondly, you are right, consent works both ways. If the OP had been the one that was throwing up, and the girl had taken advantage of him, then that also would have been rape. But that wasn’t what happened; one person was so drunk she was throwing up, had to be put to bed, and clearly couldn’t consent. The other person was not throwing up, was capable enough to caretake this person, and could get himself home safely. There is zero chance the poster was drunker than the girl.

            I tended bar for over ten years, so please take this advice; if you see someone is noticeably drunk, do not sleep with them. If you find yourself in a position where you think, “This person seems drunk, but I’m a little drunk too, so it’s probably OK,” you are already showing reasoning and logic (and therefore ability to consent), and the other person may not be able to do the same.

            There is a line between two adults who are attracted to each other using alcohol as a social lubricant and someone who is too drunk to know what they’re doing coming on to you, and I know that line can be blurry when you’re younger. I promise you, as you get older, you’ll have more experience, better instincts, the people around you will stop drinking to excess, and that line will get less blurry. Until then, err on the side of caution, and if there is even the slightest question as to whether someone is too drunk to consent, do not sleep with them.

            • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              Do you accept that they were both drunk and that consent works both ways?

              Jesus christ, imagine bloviating this much about a drunk person not thinking exactly what you want them to think. I cannot imagine having my head so firmly shoved up my ass.

              Edit: actually, it’s worse - you’re attempting to completely gloss over her sexual assault of him. I’d actually argue that just makes you a bad fucking person.

              • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                Well, I’m really sorry if I done something to give you the impression I give a fuck what you think. That definitely wasn’t my intention.

      • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        That’s a fair expectation, but it doesn’t change the fact that he only didn’t sleep with her because she had a boyfriend, not because she was so drunk sleeping with her would have been rape.

      • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        LOL, exactly the shit I’m talking about. Imagine thinking it’s OK to have sex with a girl who just drank so much she puked. I thought thinking like this died out in the 80s, but i guess the kids are back on date rape.

        • Doom@ttrpg.network
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          2 months ago

          or I’m an adult I’ve drank and live in the real world not the Internet like this fuckin opinion. Throwing up from drinking doesn’t indicate intoxication level, they pregamed she drank too fast and then tried to have sex with him.

          Her trying to have sex with him says she’s not too drunk. Like what the fuck? I’ve thrown up from a single shot of tequila because it doesn’t sit well with me, if I mix too much sugar and alcohol I’ll puke. Am I too drunk to consent off one shot of tequila? Grow up

              • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                Buddy, I’m 100% older than you. That’s why I don’t say shit like, “pre-game,” or throw up because I drank a shot when I had too much sugar in my tummy. I’m going to give you two pieces of advice, as someone who’s probably tended bar longer than you’ve been allowed to drink: 1) Learn to hold your liquor before your 30, because this shit stops being cute real quick and 2) don’t have sex with anyone that’s thrown up, because they’re too drunk to consent (except on the very rare occasion that they drank too much sugar and upset their wittle tum-tum).

                • Doom@ttrpg.network
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                  2 months ago

                  This is the most arrogant and out of touch comment ever holy fuck lol

                  Get a life kid