im sorry that you feel that your "shot down". maybe some of these posts were made prior to my being here, but my impression is that anytime this subject comes up it is not constructive. i feel like we are being hammered on the head with a mallet that says "rape culture' on it. it has to me a somewhat accusational tone. that "we" are the problem.
maybe in a way we are, but as educators of MA we are doing the best we can. in order to do better we need information and guidance. we need dialog to help better our programs, to nudge us to rethink beliefs. i have heard you say many times that women should be teaching SD4W courses. agreed, but you can only work with what you got and until martial arts schools are run by more women the best we can do is teach men to do a better job of it. the alternative would be no one teaching anything.
I have tried to stay away from the blaming men part though in truth there is a lot that could be done in education and parenting to combat the lack of respect for women's bodies. The recent gymnastics doctor's trial, the show business revelations as well as the political ones are starting to make an impact on how bad workplace harassment and assault is. It's a problem society will have to resolve, it will take all of us. One part of that is what we do in Girl Guiding, we work with the girls ( it's a world wide campaign) to educate others and lobby government.
Campaign to end sexual harassment in schools
Attacks on women come in different 'sections' for want of a better word.
1. the stranger attack/rape in a place away from home/workplace.
2. the stranger attack in a home/workplace such as a shop ie during a burglary often non sexual
3. systematic abuse by a family member/friend, sexual and/or physical
4. systematic abuse by a partner as above can be sexual or physical or both.
5. random sexual assault by a stranger while on public transport/shop/in public/or while working in a service job like waitress/housekeeping in hotels/stewardess type job.
6. random sexual assault by a co worker/boss etc
Martial arts has to decide which of these scenarios they are best suited to help with. Teaching any abused partner to fight is mostly likely not going to work, what about the other situations?
We also have to face the fact that fighting isn't always going to be the best solution to being attacked, that a woman is often best using her instincts and going with what works for her to come out of the situation with the least damage. I have said this before but again been shot down because people believe you must fight back, even judges and juries can believe this 'she didn't fight back so it wasn't rape she must have wanted it'. sometimes, hard as it is to think about, the least resistance is the best way
. I'm not advocating not fighting as some have accused me of before, I'm advocating giving women as many tools as possible and telling them that using their gut instincts on how to deal with a situation is their best defence. If goes against most male martial arts not to fight, I've seen others write on here that if asked by a mugger with a weapon for their wallet they will give it up and others have had a go at them 'but you are a martial artist you must fight', even against a gun or knife.