Obejrzałem niedawno krótki film na Yotube (
www.youtube.com/watch?v=9fnm_xFD3cQ) traktujący o przypadku kwalifikowanego degenerata - który, pomimo stoczenia się na dno, zdołał jednak stanąć na nogi, wyjść na ludzi i zrobić doktorat z socjologii. Opowieść - summa summarum - bardzo pokrzepiająca na duchu. Bohater filmu stwierdza w pewnym momencie, iż przebywając w sierocińcu ( rzecz się działa w Australii ) był molestowany przez nastoletnie dziewczęta, odpowiedzialne w przybytku za utrzymanie czystości i higieny. Nie był on molestowany przez księży, rabinów, nauczycieli, wujków, dziadków - tylko przez starsze dziewczęta.
Temat molestowania seksualnego nieletnich uprawianego przez kobiety to temat, primo tabu - bo na kolizyjnym kursie z doktryną feminizmu, secundo, w związku z tym co wyżej - bardzo mało znany.
Tymczasem z nielicznych przeprowadzonych badań wynika, iż kobiety, którym przypisuje się out of the blue 5 % przypadków molestowań - mogą być odpowiedzialne za około 20 % całej liczby owej patologii.
Zainteresowanym problemem - podrzucam materiały na temat.
theconvers(*)s-often-differ-from-mens-72572www.news.c(*)1219325a1285a30910f84d202efcce"A study for the Home Office in the UK in 1998 indicated less than 5% of child sex offences were committed by women. This is supported by data coming out of the Royal Commission - that 5% of the alleged abusers associated with the Catholic Church were religious sisters - as well as research based on correctional services data in Australia.
The author of the UK report acknowledged the number may be lower than the reality. A 2015 study looked at virtually every substantiated child sexual abuse case reported to child protective services in the United States in 2010. It concluded more than 20% of child sexual abuse cases reviewed involved a primary female perpetrator - so estimates vary significantly."
"Estimates indicate somewhere between 90 to 95% of all sexual abuse goes unreported, and the number is probably even higher for female-perpetrated sexual abuse.
The evidence does not necessarily indicate child sexual abuse by women is increasing. But it may indicate that - due to increased media attention - more children feel comfortable to speak out without fear of stigmatisation.
Our current understanding of women who sexually abuse children is founded on very limited research. Therefore, we need to reconstruct our ideas about child sex offenders to include woman as a distinct sub-group, and undertake considerably more research to get a better understanding of the causes behind these offences."
"While female sex perpetrators may seem rare, research released this month showed it's a lot more common than previously thought.
A survey in the US found that a similar amount of women reported being raped in a 12-month period as the amount of men who were "made to penetrate" a female offender.
A new paper titled Sexual Victimisation Perpetrated by Women: Federal Data Reveal Surprising Prevalence, contradicts the idea that female sexual perpetration is rare.
Researchers used data from four main surveys, including from the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, to reach their conclusion.
Using CDC data, they found that women and men reported a nearly equal rates of non-consensual sex in a 12-month period.
It found 1.6 per cent of women in the US reported being raped in the past 12 months (1.9 million), which is a similar rate to the 1.7 per cent of men (1.9 million) who reportedly were "made to penetrate a perpetrator".