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My brain is exploding with you. I feel sorry for that little girl that she wanted the attentions of the older friends, but that does not mean she was asking for it and that should not be implied in a journalism piece. Obviously this little girl- and she is that, a little girl- has a broken place inside of her that she is trying to fill. Very infuriating- those boys were not "drawn into" anything by the eleven year old. Their choices are on their heads, because not assaulting her was always an option.
That is horrifying and frightening. I can't even behin to wrap my head around it. I agree that you should send a copy of this to the editor. Well said.
This is crap. Really, the raptists have to live with the horror of raping a girl all their lives! Gasps, that is sooooo sad, oh my, what if they can't stand it, get depression and commit suicide?Seriously, what's wrong with the residents there and the journalists? Shouldn't these "sympathetic" words be said to the victim, the girl, and not the rapists? I think you really should send a copy of this to New York Times, cause what they are printing is - excuse my language - bull sh**!
And so, some ask, where is the future of feminism headed, when "journalists" are allowed to publish garbage like this?
Exactly, just why can men treat women as a lesser being just because we're not as strong as they are?
Unfortunately that kind of sexist thinking is so ingrained that most people would read it and not even consider just how ridiculous and horrifying it is!
I'm sorry Christians, but I've gotta say some of these ingrained sexist thinkings came from the Church. It's Eve who was tempted and ate the apple first. Women are weak and can not rule. Women are the temptress and it is because of them, that the kingdom falls to dust... And so on and so on. Ironically, yesterday was International Women's Day.
it just goes to show that no matter how low men can stoop they can always manage to find a way of blaming the woman for their actions.. or in this case a little girl!! Did you notice how the article never asked 'where was her FATHER?' no it's the mothers fault and the daughters fault, cause an 11 year old girl made 18 men rape her.. get real!!All eighteen men should be tried as adults.. and then the parents (mum & dad) should be made accountable for the where abouts and actions of their sons!!
disgusting!
I agree ... it's absolutely unbelievable that an article like that would be printed in ANY newspaper, regardless of whether it is the New York Times or some obscure small-town paper.
That type of reporting is horiffic and what's scarier is that someone allowed that drivel to be published. How sad! This is truly bad form for the NYT.
I hope people won't just buy all the crappy words and sentences they are printing on the papers. I mean, I'm 14, and if I know what's wrong with this article, which is like, everything, then why would the residents and the press think otherwise? Are their IQ below a 14-year-old? It's quite sad how people can be blinded like this, not knowing black from white.
The article mentions the "whereabouts of the victim and her mother were not made public." Perhaps the father is not in the picture and perhaps the mother was at work during all of this. And who knows? Maybe the mother never suspected these boys capable of such a thing. She could have seen them as adopted older brothers for her little girl. Sometimes it's so difficult to be an outsider looking in (After all, we only know how the reporter has described the situation). It amazes me how quickly people can judge others, as many seemed to judge this girl by her appearance. I don't know this eleven-year-old and what her interest was in the older boys. But only a fool would question who was at fault here. I'm surprised that more in the community didn't comment on the videos going around and that these boys have some serious issues, the ones that the article implies many wish protect. It's hard to imagine what this women is looking for:
“It’s devastating, and it’s really tearing our community apart,” she said. “I really wish that this could end in a better light.”
Could it end any better than providing justice and safety for the girl? It also wouldn't hurt for the community to set aside prejudices and learn to support one another so that travesties like this would be less likely to occur in the future.







