Wenches Protest in Ireland After Rape Legalized by Judicial Precedent: “Dressed Like a Slut, Clearly Asking for It”

Luis Castillo
Daily Stormer
November 16, 2018

A bunch of ugly, used up slags with short dyed hair and problem glasses have taken to the streets of Ireland to protest the recent legalization of rape through judicial precedent.

Their argument appears to be that sexy underwear does not indicate sexual intent.

Someone should really tell that to Victoria’s Secret – they’ve built an entire business around sexy underwear that signals sexual intent.

If a thong isn’t supposed to signal sexual availability, then these thong merchants owe a lot of women their men’s money back.

Washington Post:

A 17-year-old woman from Ireland says she was raped by a 27-year-old man she met out at a club. She said he dragged her through the mud and then had sex with her even after she asked him to stop. A witness said he saw the pair on the ground, and that the man had his hand on the victim’s throat. After the incident, the woman said, she told the man, “you just raped me.”

“No,” the defendant said he replied. “We just has sex.”

He painted a much different picture of the evening, saying that the pair had kissed and then gone outside to lie down in a muddy area nearby, at which point they had consensual sex. (No witnesses confirmed that the pair had kissed.)

The woman pressed charges, and the case went to trial. Both sides framed it as a question of consent.

“You have heard her say she did not consent. You have heard him say she did consent,” Tom Creed, a lawyer for the plaintiff, told the jury. ” If you are satisfied she did not consent and that he knew she did not consent, then you convict. She is quite clear she did not consent. She said she never had sexual intercourse before.”

Indeed – she was out at a club in lacy underwear because of what a virgin she was.

I’ll pass, thanks.

But the defendant’s lawyer took a different tact, suggesting that the teenager was lying. As evidence, she pointed to how the plaintiff dressed.

During the trial, defense attorney Elizabeth O’Connell held up a pair of thong underwear similar to what the 17-year-old was wearing the night she alleges she was assaulted.

“Does the evidence out-rule the possibility that she was attracted to the defendant and was open to meeting someone and being with someone? You have to look at the way she was dressed,” O’Connell said. “She was wearing a thong with a lace front.”

A jury of eight men and four women later found the defendant not guilty.

The lawyer’s comment drew immediate condemnation from women’s rights advocates. The Dublin Rape Crisis Centre suggested that lawyers should be banned from remarking on victims’ dress in the future.

“These kind of mythologies and stereotypes around rape come up again and again in court cases, because the defense to rape is that the sex was consensual,” Rape Crisis Centre chief executive Noeline Blackwell told the Irish Independent. “So anything the defendant can do to suggest there was consent will be used.”

Yeah, here are some things a woman can do to suggest consent:

  • Dress like a slut
  • Go partying in clubs
  • Hang out in muddy fields with men she meets in clubs

But they’re all up in arms about it anyway.

Nothing quite says “take women seriously” like flooding twitter with pictures of women’s underwear.

Classy…

The thong definitely says “rape me.” The lacy one gives more of a “I consent, so it’s not rape” vibe. Maybe I should write a guide to women’s underwear?

Would that make these slags shut up?

No, they’re clearly determined to go on forever about their underwear.

I think it’s great and all that the Irish have legalized the rape of women in slutty outfits, but they need to start restricting their right to wave around their underwear, post it on social media. Generally speaking, the fact that they can speak in public is an embarrassment for the West, both on the world stage and in the eyes of history.

They never show up to protest if a meth addict breaks into a house, beats a woman to a pulp and rapes her in her bed. They only protest when men are not thrown in jail based on accusations of rape due to lack of solid evidence, as in this case.

They do not show up to protest real rape when it happens.

They are protesting the presumption of innocence – with slutty underwear.