Violent porn is mainstream. Women getting slapped, choked, forced is what most porn is about nowadays.
Women have been killed so frequently by men using the ‘rough sex gone wrong’ euphemism that there has been a law introduced against it.
I tell you what the solution is. Zero tolerance. Zero tolerance every time one of your mates say, ‘I’d like to smash her back doors in’ ‘look at the tits on that’ ‘jailbait‘ or any other objectifying statement you can think of. Or calls a woman a stupid bitch or says she’s breaking your balls or you’re on a ball and chain if you treat your partner with respect.
All of that stuff. It’s the steady drip drip of objectification, of thinking of women as not quite human. Of othering us. Everyday sexism is the bedrock upon which men like Couzens rise.
I get that. The zero tolerance thing, I mean. I've steadily become the more po-faced one who, when a "dodgy" joke is cracked, will straight-facedly point out why I don't think it's funny, etc. It has been a long time since I've heard anyone in my orbit make any of the more violent statements you describe, but if they did, I'd be starting out with "Seriously? Fuck off with that attitude.", and it wouldn't end there.
Anecdote: my 17 year old step-granddaughter came to visit one sunny Saturday, and someone was heard to make some kind of sexual remark about her. He was immediately accosted by at least two of the people I know and put very clearly in the picture. I am glad that things like that do happen, even if they need to happen more.
As far as objectification goes, I had to really hammer home to my ex that it really wasn't helpful to always focus on SGD's appearance ("oh, you look so beautiful") - not for her own emotional wellbeing, nor in terms of the messages that kind of thing sends, particularly the conflation of affection and objectification in her mind. It's an insidious problem, which inevitably ends up playing out in the behaviours of men, but we all need to be rooting it - and calling it - out, whoever's perpetrating it.
The thing I've found is that, once you've had the courage to nail your colours to the mast, it really does start to make a difference. There will always be the diehards, giving it the "oh, better not say anything,
existentialist's around" thing, but I think that there's always a much more easily-swayed middle ground who are probably quite uncomfortable with the sexist rhetoric, but don't quite have the courage of their convictions. Any of us can be the one to take the first step.
Apologies, I think we're heading off into debate, which probably warrants a separate thread. </derail>