Backlash against polish................

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Moomin

Player Valuation: £90m
No, not the hard working eastern europeans. The stuff women stick on there nails to look pretty.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-28958365

I read it and thought well done young men on trying to help, but unfortunately they are to young to realise that women are ungrateful bitches.


Four male college students at the North Carolina State University are developing a new kind of nail polish that changes colour in the presence of date-rape drugs, like GHB and Rohypnol.
The goal of their company, Undercover Colors, is "to invent technologies that empower women to protect themselves," specifically against sexual assault, they said on their Facebook Page.
"With our nail polish, any woman will be empowered to discreetly ensure her safety by simply stirring her drink with her finger," they said. "If her nail polish changes colour, she'll know that something is wrong."
Undercover Colors initially garnered praise, with hundreds of thousands of likes and shares across Facebook and Twitter.
"There are already bulky devices that can be used to test drinks for date rape drugs," writes Adam Clark Estes for Gizmodo .
"But it's not necessarily easy to carry these things around on a night out and whip them out at bars."
However, the inevitable internet backlash came from a surprising source - anti-rape advocates.
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"I'm appreciative that young men like want to curb sexual assault, but anything that puts the onus on women to 'discreetly' keep from being raped misses the point," writes Jessica Valenti for the Guardian.
"We should be trying to stop rape, not just individually avoid it."
Valenti argues that promoting products like Undercover Colors is not only ineffective, but also can lead to "victim-blaming," if women don't take all the suggested precautions.
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"Women are already expected to work hard to prevent themselves from becoming the victims of sexual assault," writes Tara Culp-Ressler for Think Progress.
"Now, remembering to put on anti-rape nail polish and discreetly slip a finger into each drink might be added to that ever-growing checklist-something that actually reinforces a pervasive rape culture in our society."
Additionally, date-rape drugs are not necessarily a factor in the majority of sexual assaults as much as alcohol.
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Writing for Jezebel, Erin Gloria Ryan says that improving education around sexual assault could prove more beneficial than colour-changing manicures.
"Teach men that having sex with women too incapacitated to consent is rape," she writes.
You can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending
 


I find the reaction appalling to be honest. These guys are genuinely trying to help women feel safer. Yes, we know that rape will only be stopped if the root cause is prevented and people who have that mindset are 'corrected' or educated.

However, that's never going to happen. Never. There are some sick people out there.

With this nail polish, at least women have the opportunity to feel a little safer and know that they can act should they have concerns about a certain individual. Surely that is commendable?

To be frank, it just seems utterly incredulous that they should be subjected to a reaction like that.

I don't want to call these women obnoxious, but I can't think of anything else.
 
Seems like the people trying to make this nail polish are doing it with the best intentions

It's a bit unfair if they're getting stick for doing something which is, at heart, a postitive thing. It gives women, and indeed gay men, one more thing they can use to try and help keep themselves safe

It doesn't have to be a negative, as some of these writers have placed it as being
 
It's a genuine attempt to help from a few well intentioned people. Surely you'd want to do everything you reasonably can to stop it happening to you? Why does somebody somewhere have to have a problem with progress all the time?
 
It's a genuine attempt to help from a few well intentioned people. Surely you'd want to do everything you reasonably can to stop it happening to you? Why does somebody somewhere have to have a problem with progress all the time?

I can understand the sentiment from the anti rape gallery, I really can

They've interpreted this as people saying it's the responsibility for women to not get raped, when it's really the responsibility of men not to do the raping

I can understand that opinion, I really can, but I personally think they've got this all wrong. There are bad people in this world and if something can be done to help combat those bad people, I think the people trying to help should be viewed in a sympathetic light and not lambasted for trying to help
 

It's a genuine attempt to help from a few well intentioned people. Surely you'd want to do everything you reasonably can to stop it happening to you? Why does somebody somewhere have to have a problem with progress all the time?

It's the internet. You could literally cure all diseases, end all crime and create free resources for everyone and someone would come up with an argument about how horrible you are.
 
I can understand the sentiment from the anti rape gallery, I really can

They've interpreted this as people saying it's the responsibility for women to not get raped, when it's really the responsibility of men not to do the raping

I can understand that opinion, I really can, but I personally think they've got this all wrong. There are bad people in this world and if something can be done to help combat those bad people, I think the people trying to help should be viewed in a sympathetic light and not lambasted for trying to help
No pro-rape organisation I notice. It's a stupid stance tbh. Some people have created what they think is a useful and convenient thing to minimise risk of something awful and get it thrown back in their faces by some twitter famous morons who seem to think further protecting themselves is an additional burden.
 

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