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posted by janrinok on Tuesday August 26 2014, @09:31PM   Printer-friendly
from the can-I-live-in-a-different-world-please? dept.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that a new nail polish called Undercover Colors changes color when it comes in contact with any date rape drug so, a woman just has to discretely dip her finger in her drink to test it for safety. "Our goal is to invent technologies that empower women to protect themselves from this heinous and quietly pervasive crime," say four male undergraduates at North Carolina State University who are developing the polish and currently asking for donations to complete their work. "​Through this nail polish and similar technologies, we hope to make potential perpetrators afraid to spike a woman’s drink because there’s now a risk that they can get caught."

However some sexual assault prevention advocates warn that the nail polish is not necessarily the best way to approach the sexual assault epidemic on college campuses. “One of the ways that rape is used as a tool to control people is by limiting their behavior,” says Rebecca Nagle. “As a woman, I’m told not to go out alone at night, to watch my drink, to do all of these things. That way, rape isn’t just controlling me while I’m actually being assaulted — it controls me 24/7 because it limits my behavior. Solutions like these actually just recreate that. I don’t want to fucking test my drink when I’m at the bar. That’s not the world I want to live in.” According to Alexandra Brodsky the argument that women simply need to be more responsible is a common response to the current conversation about sexual assault on college campuses — and one that activists say doesn’t get to the heart of the issue. "The problem isn’t that women don’t know when there are roofies in their drink; the problem is people putting roofies in their drink in the first place."

 
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  • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Wednesday August 27 2014, @12:07AM

    by Thexalon (636) on Wednesday August 27 2014, @12:07AM (#85983)

    Away from the cloistered, collegial lawns

    Whatever made you think that the cloistered, collegial lawns were safe places for women? Current estimates are that 1 out of every 20 women attending college will be the victim of a rape or attempted rate this year. (Military women have it much worse: about 1 out of 4 will be targeted at some point during her military service.)

    Men are also raped in college, usually by other men, and at a much lower rate than women.

    --
    The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
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  • (Score: 1) by KilroySmith on Wednesday August 27 2014, @12:17AM

    by KilroySmith (2113) on Wednesday August 27 2014, @12:17AM (#85986)

    1 out of every 20 women attending college will be the victim of a rape or attempted rape this year

    I never said and don't believe that colleges are safe places for women; my intentions was to suggest that the environment of a college tends to encourage utopian beliefs of the world, and the statement made reflects that type of thinking. I am probably wrong in my implication that the quoted person is a college student; but that was an intentional rhetorical device.