+ PhileasFogg Posted 15 hours ago Author Posted 15 hours ago 2 hours ago, soloyo215 said: Assault? Sounds a little dramatic. Unwanted advances, boundary crossing, poor judgement, harassment, not respecting personal space maybe, but assault? To me assault involves a level of aggressiveness where you need to physically defend yourself, not fend off unwelcome touch. REGARDLESS, I agree that it could be quite uncomfortable. However, if I could ask, had there been instances when you have welcomed such "approach"? I ask since this has been the topic of many conversations I've had with friends, family and in many other social settings for decades. The thing is that the vast majority of the time the person complaining does so only when they feel the touch and groping is unwanted, neglecting to recognize the other times when the same touching and groping has been welcome and wanted. Of course, I don't know you, which is why I inquire. Every time I have a conversation about this, that's my starting point. Many times we focus on the touch we don't welcome, neglecting to recognize that the same approach is used with the touch we have welcomed from other people. Just my thoughts, not law. As I said, I’m not trying to blow my personal experience out of proportion BUT, yes, lack of consent constitutes assault in most places according to my research. Maybe it’s a surprise to some - but times have changed. If you haven’t heard, “Baby It’s Cold Outside” was blacklisted by #MeToo for glamorizing date rape. And I will say that the two advances I’ve described were completely unsolicited and unwelcomed and, given their degree of intimacy, would have met the standard to constitute a crime. so, pray tell, how is anything I’ve described different from this: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-45958023.amp + Vegas_Millennial and MikeBiDude 1 1
jeezifonly Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago In a public social situation where rules of conduct aren't enforced, use humor to deflect. Nothing too bitchy, but if privately blocking his progress with your hand hasn't been heard, engage your inner Dorothy Zbornak. MikeBiDude and + PhileasFogg 2
+ nycman Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago (edited) 5 hours ago, PhileasFogg said: I’m not trying to blow my personal experience out of proportion BUT….. Edited 10 hours ago by nycman + azdr0710, marylander1940, + MikeThomas and 2 others 3 2
+ Pensant Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago I wouldn’t dream of touching somewhat like that; however, if a cute guy pinched my muscular ass, I’d invite him to continue! + BOZO T CLOWN 1
+ PhileasFogg Posted 9 hours ago Author Posted 9 hours ago 1 hour ago, Pensant said: I wouldn’t dream of touching somewhat like that; however, if a cute guy pinched my muscular ass, I’d invite him to continue! Maybe that’s the problem…they weren’t cute 😂😂🤠. But seriously, if it were a cute guy, I’m sure the signals would have been there + Vegas_Millennial 1
+ PhileasFogg Posted 9 hours ago Author Posted 9 hours ago 1 hour ago, nycman said: Tell me why this is right and proper behavior and I’ll concede that point. But so far, all I’m hearing is justification for why it’s acceptable bad behavior. And if you don’t see the difference, then I hope you don’t try it with the wrong young man or you might find yourself in cuffs of the involuntary kind 😉 MikeBiDude and + José Soplanucas 2
+ nycman Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago 6 minutes ago, PhileasFogg said: And if you don’t see the difference, then I hope you don’t try it with the wrong young man or you might find yourself in cuffs of the involuntary kind
+ Vegas_Millennial Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 7 hours ago, PhileasFogg said: Maybe it’s a surprise to some - but times have changed. If you haven’t heard, “Baby It’s Cold Outside” was blacklisted by #MeToo for glamorizing date rape. This is so sad. Do ya'll carry a consent form that must be signed and notorized before ya'll begin flirting with a stranger? Can't wait for the pendulum of society overreaction to swing back to sanity. + MikeThomas and marylander1940 1 1
+ Vegas_Millennial Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago (edited) 2 hours ago, PhileasFogg said: Tell me why this is right and proper behavior and I’ll concede that point. You're asking a group of men who hire masseurs specifically to grope them and receive groping in return, who hire and sell sex with strangers, and who discuss which steam rooms in public gyms have the most action, to condemn a flirtatious grope while you were naked in the pool! Most all here think the existing laws regarding prohibiting sex or public sex are overreaching. So while quoting what a law book says about sexual harassment/abuse might earn you points with the #MeToo crowd, you're not going to get sympathy from the majority of men here who would visit Hacienda and Island House looking for such activity. You're like a guy standing at the gym's steam room door with a whistle trying to stop any sexual activity that's going on in there. 👮♂️While the law may be on your side, public opinion on among the Company of Men is not. My favorite gay men's hotel starts with a penis measurement by the owner upon check-in. 🍆 The owner offers 1% off the price of the room per inch upon check-in. Besides offering a discount, the act of the owner fondling the customer to get an exact measurement sets the mood for the property that flirtatious touching is normal and to be expected. 🎉 BTW, "Baby It's Cold Outside" is still on my Christmas playlist. 🎄 Edited 6 hours ago by Vegas_Millennial LookingAround, marylander1940 and + JamesB 2 1
+ MikeThomas Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago When I came out in the 80s, gay bars were the place you went to meet other gay men. There was always a lot of flirting going on. Occasionally there would be some "innocent" groping. If you liked the guy, you would smile, grope back and talk. If you didn't like the guy, you would smile and let him know you weren't interested. No one felt violated. If he persisted, then you would respond with a more emphatic no. Usually it would end there. marylander1940, thomas, Njguy2 and 1 other 4
+ SirBillybob Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago (edited) The settings are tricky because the rules and standards of flirtatious engagement shift according to where on the social continuum between a church social and a backroom sex party the activity occurs. Whereas the groping unambiguously and formally represents a sexual violation without considering context, a court of law would be hard pressed to determine whether the alleged offender did not accurately and respectfully assess whether a true swipe left from the recipient had occurred in relation to the initial physical pass made that is technically illegal but may be contextually, informally tolerable at the level of expected venue etiquette. If you say that the problem was that the flirter did not get the boundary message that you politely conveyed upon his first attempt you are already conceding some degree of acceptable courtship style fluidity. While such a grey area undermines the intent of the law to err in favour of the recipient of unwanted advances, many of us position ourselves in settings where we adapt to more aggressive and physically explicit flirting that would be deemed nonconsensual elsewhere. I have technically had my boundaries violated a few dozen times this year. I must have ‘Stockholm syndrome’ because I have just booked returning to the scene of the crime. That said, a spontaneous digital rectal exam without the necessary visa paperwork greenlighting it is bad form. Edited 5 hours ago by SirBillybob + Vegas_Millennial 1
BSR Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 1 hour ago, MikeThomas said: When I came out in the 80s, gay bars were the place you went to meet other gay men. There was always a lot of flirting going on. Occasionally there would be some "innocent" groping. If you liked the guy, you would smile, grope back and talk. If you didn't like the guy, you would smile and let him know you weren't interested. No one felt violated. If he persisted, then you would respond with a more emphatic no. Usually it would end there. I am drawing lines of distinction, and I hope others on this thread are too. In my opinion, there is a helluva difference between groping someone’s clothed ass (like at a gay bar), someone’s naked ass (like at a gay clothing-optional resort) and sticking a finger up someone’s butthole without permission. I don’t care where you are or what the “culture” is, penetration without consent is way over the line, and I’m shocked it is considered acceptable, even at a gay clothing-optional pool/hot tub with a bunch of drunk, horned-up guys. I have to admit that because I’ve never been to a gay clothing-optional resort (in Palm Springs or anywhere else), groping someone’s naked ass seems too aggressive, something I would never do, but if that is indeed the culture at such spots, I guess one has choose to accept it or choose to avoid those places. Groping someone’s clothed ass, pffft, smile, tell the groper you’re not interested, and move on. MikeBiDude 1
topunderachiever Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago Prudes with Pearls are exhausting. marylander1940, + Vegas_Millennial and thomas 1 2
LookingAround Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago (edited) This happened in a clothing optional setting. Come in. Nothing to see here. This is common and even expected behavior. Of course if you say no thanks that's different. Edited 3 hours ago by LookingAround
BSR Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 2 hours ago, topunderachiever said: Prudes with Pearls are exhausting. Not sure who exactly you’re referring to, so to be clear: you think it’s OK to put your finger up someone’s asshole without consent? MikeBiDude and + PhileasFogg 2
+ Lucky Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 8 hours ago, Pensant said: I wouldn’t dream of touching somewhat like that; however, if a cute guy pinched my muscular ass, I’d invite him to continue! I wouldn't like it if a guy for whom I had shown no interest groped me. But then you encounter situations like @Pensant describes above. Who is going to complain if a hot stud gropes you?
+ sniper Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 46 minutes ago, BSR said: Not sure who exactly you’re referring to, so to be clear: you think it’s OK to put your finger up someone’s asshole without consent? That part, as I said, was clearly over the line and OP is right to be upset The others are very context dependent. And when the context in question is a clothing optional establishment where public sex is, at a minimum, not condemned, I'd say some light otherwise inappropriate touching is somewhat expected if not hoped for by many, and a "No, thank you" is a more appropriate response to an unwanted butt squeeze than "Well, I never! You ...you masher!" + MikeThomas and MikeBiDude 2
soloyo215 Posted 31 minutes ago Posted 31 minutes ago (edited) 15 hours ago, PhileasFogg said: As I said, I’m not trying to blow my personal experience out of proportion BUT, yes, lack of consent constitutes assault in most places according to my research. Maybe it’s a surprise to some - but times have changed. If you haven’t heard, “Baby It’s Cold Outside” was blacklisted by #MeToo for glamorizing date rape. And I will say that the two advances I’ve described were completely unsolicited and unwelcomed and, given their degree of intimacy, would have met the standard to constitute a crime. so, pray tell, how is anything I’ve described different from this: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-45958023.amp Even if that's a socially acceptable norm, which I don't think it is (times have changed, though people, injustices, violence, rape, prejudices and sociopolitical nonsense haven't), it still doesn't answer my question or address my point, which is, have there been instances when the "assault" to use your wording, has been welcome? In my experience, many people (including a lot of the "me too" people) complain only and exclusively when it works for their purpose, not labeling it "assault" when they like it. The "Me too" thing to me is a big fat failure. As some comedian pointed out, it became a tool for discrimination. The hashtag sign is also the pound sign. It makes more sense to call it "pound me too". It has not done a single thing to advance any rights, to end violence, to raise awareness. What it has done is creating more segregation more violence and more discrimination. Rather than a news story, there's research to support my statements (just go to Google Scholar or Pew Research and do a search on the effects of the Me Too "movement"). The Me Too Movement had migrated from a defender of the vulnerable, to a censor and then political machine that only serves to water down and detract from the Movement's original, righteous purpose. And of course, there are many of us who rely on reason and don't support any nonsensical definitions at people's convenience. So I ask again directly this time, what do you do when you like the "assault"? Is it still "assault"? Edited 27 minutes ago by soloyo215
+ José Soplanucas Posted 2 minutes ago Posted 2 minutes ago 28 minutes ago, soloyo215 said: So I ask again directly this time, what do you do when you like the "assault"? Is it still "assault"? Don't liking it implies consent? There is no assault if there is consent. Rather than assault, it would be a forward seeing move.
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