Girls who wear revealing clothing are “asking for trouble,” according to a third of secondary school boys in Scotland.
A survey of more than 13,000 pupils aged 11 to 18 has sparked calls for urgent action to address misogynistic attitudes among adolescents — with the results exposing a gulf between the perspectives of male and female teenagers.
The research was conducted by academics at the University of Glasgow at schools spread across Scotland.
It found 24 per cent of boys believed the term “sexual harassment” did not apply if their intention was to joke around. This compared with seven per cent of girls.
Half the boys who participated also agreed, or strongly agreed, that “overall, there are more things that boys are better at than girls”. This is despite 93 per cent believing both sexes would enjoy “equal opportunities” in their lives.
The five authors of the study said that as in the TV drama Adolescence, which explores the destructive impact of social media on teenage relationships, their findings should be discussed in classrooms.
“Most boys do not hold these negative views, but there is an urgent need to address the fact that a sizeable minority do,” they wrote in a letter to a British Medical Journal publication.
Kirstin Mitchell, professor of social sciences and public health at Glasgow University, worked on the study. She stressed that with 13,372 participants, it gave an indication of the “general culture” behind serious incidents of violence against women and girls.
She said 33 per cent of boys agreeing or strongly agreeing that skimpy outfits meant girls were asking for trouble was “particularly troubling”.
“That is the kind of attitude which is underlying when incidents of sexual harassment do happen,” she said. “These are the sort of norms that underpin victim blaming.”
The survey found 32 per cent of boys would judge a girl more than a boy for having sex with lots of people, while 12 per cent of girls shared this viewpoint.
“I feel this is sort of age-old sexual double standard,” said Mitchell. “It seems very entrenched.”
Asked whether they agreed with the statement “boys who behave like girls are weak”, 43 per cent of male participants said they did. In contrast, 13 per cent of girls shared this perspective.
Mitchell said: “This makes me feel quite sad because it almost suggests that boys are operating on this idea that girls are looking for strength and for, you know, boys to be strong and powerful and unemotional. And it’s not necessarily what girls are looking for.
“If they were able to show their emotions and show vulnerability, girls might find that more appealing than the sort of more macho behaviours.”
The survey was conducted to obtain a picture of the culture in 37 Scottish secondary schools which are participating in a programme called Equally Safe in Schools, run by Rape Crisis Scotland to tackle gender-based violence.
Mitchell and research fellow Carolyn Blake said their results were similar in all the schools visited, regardless of whether they were rich or poor, rural or urban.
Blake said: “I think some teachers have maybe expected the data to be worse than it is, and some have been a bit shocked that it is worse than they thought it would be. But we always reassure them that all schools have these issues and we don’t see huge variation between schools.”
The proportion of boys who did not believe they should realise girls were their equals was 17 per cent. Mitchell noted some pupils may have thought about physical strength when answering questions about young males outperforming their female counterparts. However, she added measures such as exam results tended to show girls were more successful.
The letter was published in The Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.
Responsible_Loss8246 on
I think there’s a fine line between “asking for trouble” and “being sensible”.
Yes, of course, in an ideal world people should be able to wear what they like without being harassed or attacked. However, we do not live in an ideal world. Murderers, rapists, harassers, abusers, and so on, exist.
Reducing these kinds of people in society and preventing these sorts of attacks is definitely something that we should continue to do. However, I think it’s important to tell everyone, not just women and girls, to exercise caution and use some common sense in certain situations.
If I’m in London, I’m not going to be flashing my phone and other expensive items, for example. Instead of walking through that dodgy area at night on my own, maybe I’ll take the long way round, things like that.
Historical_Owl_1635 on
> “Most boys do not hold these negative views, but there is an urgent need to address the fact that a sizeable minority do”
Most boys not holding these negative views but treating all boys like they do anyway is very much part of the problem.
It almost becomes a self fulfilling prophecy, you keep telling the good kids how bad they are all you’re going to do is radicalise them into following figures like Tate.
Deadliftdeadlife on
I’d also say a guy flashing his Rolex in a rough part of town is asking for trouble
Doesn’t mean I think he deserves it when he gets mugged
Until we live in a crime free utopia we all make choices about how we keep ourselves safe. Making poor choices will make you less safe.
AdaptableBeef on
>She said 33 per cent of boys agreeing or strongly agreeing that skimpy outfits meant girls were asking for trouble was “particularly troubling”.
>“That is the kind of attitude which is underlying when incidents of sexual harassment do happen,” she said. “These are the sort of norms that underpin victim blaming.”
I think there’s a difference between “asking for trouble” and “deserving it”, which is the usual victim blaming approach. I think someone leaving their bike unlocked is asking for trouble but that doesn’t mean I think they deserve to have it nicked or that it’s their fault when it is.
jensationallift on
I was on a sexual harassment training course and one of the guys on the course said that “women shouldn’t dress in revealing clothes if they don’t want to be sexually harassed” the person leading the course said “well, no just because someone is dressed a certain way doesn’t give people the right to harass them”. So he guy then said “oh right I didn’t know that”.
bio4m on
Society in general seems to be regressing, views and behaviour that would have been more common in the 60’s and 70’s are picking up steam now.
As someone who grew up pre-internet, it seemed like the world was heading to a more open and accepting place, but it seems like social media has pushed things in the opposite direction somehow
[deleted] on
[deleted]
slainascully on
If this was from a Muslim council saying girls should wear hijabs, this sub would be foaming at the mouth and calling it a symptom of a misogynistic culture.
Women know. Most of us first started getting harassed in school uniforms. We get harassed in jeans and t-shirts. So at some point you think ‘fuck it’ and wear what you want. But somehow boys aren’t ever accused of not being sensible when they walk around with shorts and no shirt on.
irving_braxiatel on
Whenever something about gender comes on this sub, I’m reminded of that Margaret Atwood quote – men are afraid of being made fun of, women are afraid of being killed.
But of course, what does Margaret Atwood know about feminism, compared to Random Man on Reddit?
Relative-Chain73 on
What do the two thirds say? Are they enablers for the third that say girls are asking for trouble?
Toastlove on
>a third of boys saying girls in revealing clothes ‘asking for trouble’
This needs to be addressed, boys need to do better to end this epidemic of misogyny, didn’t anyone what adolescence?
>Up to 47% of sexual offence charges in London last year were foreign nationals
You can’t interpret the figures that way, there’s actually a lot more nuance to them and you cant tar everyone with the same brush.
gar1848 on
[ Removed by Reddit ]
Potential_Hornet_223 on
This is the influence of Andrew Tate et al coming into effect. Our society will never stop hating women because some men are too afraid to hold each other to account to stop this shite from spreading.
luckystar2591 on
This is a project that gathers pictures of the clothes of what people were wearing when they were SAed. Notice it’s not revealing clothing.
If men want to attack, they’ll do it. Saying it’s because of a short skirt and that the women could have done anything about it is a lie.
In unusual or unknown public places I’ve always thought that I want to be the ‘grey man’ as in – don’t dress to impress, or draw unnecessary attention to yourself. It’s something that they teach you in basic kidnap / counter-surveillance training – it works.
It’s not saying that anyone should or should not dress in any particular way, but it says if you do draw attention to yourself, you draw attention from equally good and bad actors.
It’s the same argument for driving defensively, look after yourself, be calm, have an exit strategy.
hadawayandshite on
Does anyone have access the the data? Or more depth on the results- I’m wondering 2 things
1) What % of the girls said the same thing (I’ve come across more women critical of other women’s dress than I have men)
2) what are the age breakdowns? If 11 year old boys think ‘boys are better at everything’ but then grow out of it by the time they’re 16…I probably care less than if it’s the 18 year olds
Different-Employ9651 on
They should be directed to the exhibition of clothes women and girls were wearing when raped.
The items range from nappies and baby grows to tracksuits, jeans and vest tops, with a whole lot of outfits in between.
Third of boys say they will sexually assault girls because of how they are dressed.
filbert94 on
Genuinely I’d like to see an experiment where you take a lad in a Newcastle shirt, put him in Sunderland and then ask people if he’s “asking for trouble”.
Would the responses be different?
rev-fr-john on
So we need to educate boys to a much higher standard than we have been.
oportoman on
Great clickbait headline – “asking for trouble” – is that what one participant said? How many actually used that language? Was it used in a question that was asked? It’s a phrase that’s guaranteed to get attention, ironically.
This_Wolverine9678 on
A third of boys need a slap round the ear from their mothers
hungcarl on
What has it taken so long to realise it? as an east asian, no parents allow it. You are responsible for what you have done.
Ok_Landscape_3958 on
Unpopular opinion, but if we locked up all males between 15 and 30 violent crime rates would drop to a minimum. The problem has always been young males.
Ecstatic_Lion4224 on
If I recall correctly there was a study a few years ago to say the majority of rape victims were wearing jeans at the time of the assault.
Women in some countries are fully covered but those countries are also known to have high sexual assault rates. (Ironically, if those cultures’ men come to Britain, we grumble that their attitude to women is incompatible with ours while we say ‘women wearing revealing clothes are asking for trouble..” but I digress.)
There are also cultures where women daily go about their business full tits out and their men don’t find it that interesting as they see it every day.
Point is, the clothes don’t matter. Whether you are a rapist is what matters. Two thirds of boys don’t say that girls wearing revealing clothing are ‘asking for trouble’ so let’s focus on converting the attitudes of the third who do, rather than ragging on women to cover up when it won’t make a damn of difference to how safe or not they are.
DefinitelyARealHorse on
Bloody paywalled article.
Can anyone add more context? “Boys” suggests they’re referring to under 18s. Who we know don’t exactly have a balanced view of sex.
Wiseard39 on
Boys need to realise they have no right to abuse girls. Work on their self-control and respect.
Pocket_Aces1 on
What you’re wearing shouldn’t mean you get harassed. It’s utterly stupid reasoning for you to be a cunt to put it bluntly.
Tho I will say, if you’re going out in skimpy/revealing clothing, don’t get annoyed at people looking at you. And I’m saying looking – not catcalling, not following them, nothing like that. You have no expectation of privacy in public, just how people would look at me as a fat bloke walking around topless and in short shorts (I don’t but you get the point). So that’s on you.
missingpieces82 on
Men are always going to find women in revealing clothes attractive. We’re genetically programmed to be attracted to certain things.
The difference is, understanding that harassment or abuse in any circumstance isn’t right under any circumstance, and that if a woman chooses to wear something tight fitting or revealing, they should be able to, without “expecting” abuse.
It’s going to be plainly obvious to a woman that they’ll get looked at and that men will be attracted to them. In the same way that a man with a six pack and muscles (ahem – Chris Hemsworth) in a tight tshirt will also attract women. But it isn’t an “invitation” for rapists and misogynists.
Toucan_Lips on
If trouble includes hypothermia then I sort of agree
Positive_Barnacle298 on
I was 14 in my school uniform the first time I was raped by a grown man…
Call me a one off, but my own anecdotal evidence from the help groups I’ve been involved with, for sexual abuse victims specifically, not one other person was assaulted because they were wearing revealing clothing. Every single victim was a victim because of the perpetrators selfishness, deviousness and violence.
If you can’t control your behaviour, go lock yourself away until you can be around the rest of civilised society. Consuming violent sexual content from a young age ruined so many teens from my generation. Everyone seems to have forgotten the concerning data on young women having consensual sex, but it involving some form of violence.
I ended up in the adult entertainment industry, older men overwhelmingly were less violent. I coincidently wore way more revealing clothing than I ever have and was assaulted far less than when going day drinking at my local town! Just last month a guy was stroking my hair and my backside while me and my girlfriends were dancing.
Same day, a bloke tried holding onto me when clearly I was pushing him off from him slobbering all over my ear and neck.
There’s so much more I could say, but it’s just disheartening that people can’t exists because of male violence. Anyone can be a victim of it. But it’s so common for men to be aggressive that too many are ignoring that it’s the root problem. Entitled ‘alpha’ behaviour.
Routine_Song61 on
I don’t agree with that statement. Although I like some class. When the V is cut out so deep I can nearly see nipples, it takes away the attractiveness/fun for me.
Additional_Pickle_59 on
Make good choices but don’t expect others to do the same
Deaf_Paradox on
And what demographic were those third of boys, all share the same name at a guess.
helpnxt on
Children parroting the talking points they hear online from certain influencers.
boomerangchampion on
I can’t read the article. Are one third of boys saying “revealing clothes are unfortunately likely to bring trouble”, or are they saying “revealing clothes mean I can cause trouble”?
Because if it’s the former that’s not exactly an unhinged view.
Environmental_Move38 on
Who are these people and what are their backgrounds.
LuinAelin on
I remember that exhibitions thing that showed what people were wearing when raped. Most were not something revealing
MD564 on
Looking through these comments it’s obvious to see where they get the mentality from.
I also find it hilarious that this same sub likes to harp on about immigrants being a danger to women, including the culture they apparently inflict on everyone, and yet men here are implying women dressing immodestly are “asking for it”.
It’s almost as if the problem has never been about immigration to begin with.
40 commenti
Girls who wear revealing clothing are “asking for trouble,” according to a third of secondary school boys in Scotland.
A survey of more than 13,000 pupils aged 11 to 18 has sparked calls for urgent action to address misogynistic attitudes among adolescents — with the results exposing a gulf between the perspectives of male and female teenagers.
The research was conducted by academics at the University of Glasgow at schools spread across Scotland.
It found 24 per cent of boys believed the term “sexual harassment” did not apply if their intention was to joke around. This compared with seven per cent of girls.
Half the boys who participated also agreed, or strongly agreed, that “overall, there are more things that boys are better at than girls”. This is despite 93 per cent believing both sexes would enjoy “equal opportunities” in their lives.
The five authors of the study said that as in the TV drama Adolescence, which explores the destructive impact of social media on teenage relationships, their findings should be discussed in classrooms.
“Most boys do not hold these negative views, but there is an urgent need to address the fact that a sizeable minority do,” they wrote in a letter to a British Medical Journal publication.
Kirstin Mitchell, professor of social sciences and public health at Glasgow University, worked on the study. She stressed that with 13,372 participants, it gave an indication of the “general culture” behind serious incidents of violence against women and girls.
She said 33 per cent of boys agreeing or strongly agreeing that skimpy outfits meant girls were asking for trouble was “particularly troubling”.
“That is the kind of attitude which is underlying when incidents of sexual harassment do happen,” she said. “These are the sort of norms that underpin victim blaming.”
The survey found 32 per cent of boys would judge a girl more than a boy for having sex with lots of people, while 12 per cent of girls shared this viewpoint.
“I feel this is sort of age-old sexual double standard,” said Mitchell. “It seems very entrenched.”
Asked whether they agreed with the statement “boys who behave like girls are weak”, 43 per cent of male participants said they did. In contrast, 13 per cent of girls shared this perspective.
Mitchell said: “This makes me feel quite sad because it almost suggests that boys are operating on this idea that girls are looking for strength and for, you know, boys to be strong and powerful and unemotional. And it’s not necessarily what girls are looking for.
“If they were able to show their emotions and show vulnerability, girls might find that more appealing than the sort of more macho behaviours.”
The survey was conducted to obtain a picture of the culture in 37 Scottish secondary schools which are participating in a programme called Equally Safe in Schools, run by Rape Crisis Scotland to tackle gender-based violence.
Mitchell and research fellow Carolyn Blake said their results were similar in all the schools visited, regardless of whether they were rich or poor, rural or urban.
Blake said: “I think some teachers have maybe expected the data to be worse than it is, and some have been a bit shocked that it is worse than they thought it would be. But we always reassure them that all schools have these issues and we don’t see huge variation between schools.”
The proportion of boys who did not believe they should realise girls were their equals was 17 per cent. Mitchell noted some pupils may have thought about physical strength when answering questions about young males outperforming their female counterparts. However, she added measures such as exam results tended to show girls were more successful.
The letter was published in The Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.
I think there’s a fine line between “asking for trouble” and “being sensible”.
Yes, of course, in an ideal world people should be able to wear what they like without being harassed or attacked. However, we do not live in an ideal world. Murderers, rapists, harassers, abusers, and so on, exist.
Reducing these kinds of people in society and preventing these sorts of attacks is definitely something that we should continue to do. However, I think it’s important to tell everyone, not just women and girls, to exercise caution and use some common sense in certain situations.
If I’m in London, I’m not going to be flashing my phone and other expensive items, for example. Instead of walking through that dodgy area at night on my own, maybe I’ll take the long way round, things like that.
> “Most boys do not hold these negative views, but there is an urgent need to address the fact that a sizeable minority do”
Most boys not holding these negative views but treating all boys like they do anyway is very much part of the problem.
It almost becomes a self fulfilling prophecy, you keep telling the good kids how bad they are all you’re going to do is radicalise them into following figures like Tate.
I’d also say a guy flashing his Rolex in a rough part of town is asking for trouble
Doesn’t mean I think he deserves it when he gets mugged
Until we live in a crime free utopia we all make choices about how we keep ourselves safe. Making poor choices will make you less safe.
>She said 33 per cent of boys agreeing or strongly agreeing that skimpy outfits meant girls were asking for trouble was “particularly troubling”.
>“That is the kind of attitude which is underlying when incidents of sexual harassment do happen,” she said. “These are the sort of norms that underpin victim blaming.”
I think there’s a difference between “asking for trouble” and “deserving it”, which is the usual victim blaming approach. I think someone leaving their bike unlocked is asking for trouble but that doesn’t mean I think they deserve to have it nicked or that it’s their fault when it is.
I was on a sexual harassment training course and one of the guys on the course said that “women shouldn’t dress in revealing clothes if they don’t want to be sexually harassed” the person leading the course said “well, no just because someone is dressed a certain way doesn’t give people the right to harass them”. So he guy then said “oh right I didn’t know that”.
Society in general seems to be regressing, views and behaviour that would have been more common in the 60’s and 70’s are picking up steam now.
As someone who grew up pre-internet, it seemed like the world was heading to a more open and accepting place, but it seems like social media has pushed things in the opposite direction somehow
[deleted]
If this was from a Muslim council saying girls should wear hijabs, this sub would be foaming at the mouth and calling it a symptom of a misogynistic culture.
Women know. Most of us first started getting harassed in school uniforms. We get harassed in jeans and t-shirts. So at some point you think ‘fuck it’ and wear what you want. But somehow boys aren’t ever accused of not being sensible when they walk around with shorts and no shirt on.
Whenever something about gender comes on this sub, I’m reminded of that Margaret Atwood quote – men are afraid of being made fun of, women are afraid of being killed.
But of course, what does Margaret Atwood know about feminism, compared to Random Man on Reddit?
What do the two thirds say? Are they enablers for the third that say girls are asking for trouble?
>a third of boys saying girls in revealing clothes ‘asking for trouble’
This needs to be addressed, boys need to do better to end this epidemic of misogyny, didn’t anyone what adolescence?
>Up to 47% of sexual offence charges in London last year were foreign nationals
You can’t interpret the figures that way, there’s actually a lot more nuance to them and you cant tar everyone with the same brush.
[ Removed by Reddit ]
This is the influence of Andrew Tate et al coming into effect. Our society will never stop hating women because some men are too afraid to hold each other to account to stop this shite from spreading.
This is a project that gathers pictures of the clothes of what people were wearing when they were SAed. Notice it’s not revealing clothing.
If men want to attack, they’ll do it. Saying it’s because of a short skirt and that the women could have done anything about it is a lie.
https://sbaproject.org/what-were-you-wearing/
In unusual or unknown public places I’ve always thought that I want to be the ‘grey man’ as in – don’t dress to impress, or draw unnecessary attention to yourself. It’s something that they teach you in basic kidnap / counter-surveillance training – it works.
It’s not saying that anyone should or should not dress in any particular way, but it says if you do draw attention to yourself, you draw attention from equally good and bad actors.
It’s the same argument for driving defensively, look after yourself, be calm, have an exit strategy.
Does anyone have access the the data? Or more depth on the results- I’m wondering 2 things
1) What % of the girls said the same thing (I’ve come across more women critical of other women’s dress than I have men)
2) what are the age breakdowns? If 11 year old boys think ‘boys are better at everything’ but then grow out of it by the time they’re 16…I probably care less than if it’s the 18 year olds
They should be directed to the exhibition of clothes women and girls were wearing when raped.
The items range from nappies and baby grows to tracksuits, jeans and vest tops, with a whole lot of outfits in between.
What women wear is not the problem.
That men feel entitled to rape them is.
https://youtu.be/6hs9TgoTHzI?si=2Z7ES-MZiOIWx79Z
Edited to add link to said exhibition.
Third of boys say they will sexually assault girls because of how they are dressed.
Genuinely I’d like to see an experiment where you take a lad in a Newcastle shirt, put him in Sunderland and then ask people if he’s “asking for trouble”.
Would the responses be different?
So we need to educate boys to a much higher standard than we have been.
Great clickbait headline – “asking for trouble” – is that what one participant said? How many actually used that language? Was it used in a question that was asked? It’s a phrase that’s guaranteed to get attention, ironically.
A third of boys need a slap round the ear from their mothers
What has it taken so long to realise it? as an east asian, no parents allow it. You are responsible for what you have done.
Unpopular opinion, but if we locked up all males between 15 and 30 violent crime rates would drop to a minimum. The problem has always been young males.
If I recall correctly there was a study a few years ago to say the majority of rape victims were wearing jeans at the time of the assault.
Women in some countries are fully covered but those countries are also known to have high sexual assault rates. (Ironically, if those cultures’ men come to Britain, we grumble that their attitude to women is incompatible with ours while we say ‘women wearing revealing clothes are asking for trouble..” but I digress.)
There are also cultures where women daily go about their business full tits out and their men don’t find it that interesting as they see it every day.
Point is, the clothes don’t matter. Whether you are a rapist is what matters. Two thirds of boys don’t say that girls wearing revealing clothing are ‘asking for trouble’ so let’s focus on converting the attitudes of the third who do, rather than ragging on women to cover up when it won’t make a damn of difference to how safe or not they are.
Bloody paywalled article.
Can anyone add more context? “Boys” suggests they’re referring to under 18s. Who we know don’t exactly have a balanced view of sex.
Boys need to realise they have no right to abuse girls. Work on their self-control and respect.
What you’re wearing shouldn’t mean you get harassed. It’s utterly stupid reasoning for you to be a cunt to put it bluntly.
Tho I will say, if you’re going out in skimpy/revealing clothing, don’t get annoyed at people looking at you. And I’m saying looking – not catcalling, not following them, nothing like that. You have no expectation of privacy in public, just how people would look at me as a fat bloke walking around topless and in short shorts (I don’t but you get the point). So that’s on you.
Men are always going to find women in revealing clothes attractive. We’re genetically programmed to be attracted to certain things.
The difference is, understanding that harassment or abuse in any circumstance isn’t right under any circumstance, and that if a woman chooses to wear something tight fitting or revealing, they should be able to, without “expecting” abuse.
It’s going to be plainly obvious to a woman that they’ll get looked at and that men will be attracted to them. In the same way that a man with a six pack and muscles (ahem – Chris Hemsworth) in a tight tshirt will also attract women. But it isn’t an “invitation” for rapists and misogynists.
If trouble includes hypothermia then I sort of agree
I was 14 in my school uniform the first time I was raped by a grown man…
Call me a one off, but my own anecdotal evidence from the help groups I’ve been involved with, for sexual abuse victims specifically, not one other person was assaulted because they were wearing revealing clothing. Every single victim was a victim because of the perpetrators selfishness, deviousness and violence.
If you can’t control your behaviour, go lock yourself away until you can be around the rest of civilised society. Consuming violent sexual content from a young age ruined so many teens from my generation. Everyone seems to have forgotten the concerning data on young women having consensual sex, but it involving some form of violence.
I ended up in the adult entertainment industry, older men overwhelmingly were less violent. I coincidently wore way more revealing clothing than I ever have and was assaulted far less than when going day drinking at my local town! Just last month a guy was stroking my hair and my backside while me and my girlfriends were dancing.
Same day, a bloke tried holding onto me when clearly I was pushing him off from him slobbering all over my ear and neck.
There’s so much more I could say, but it’s just disheartening that people can’t exists because of male violence. Anyone can be a victim of it. But it’s so common for men to be aggressive that too many are ignoring that it’s the root problem. Entitled ‘alpha’ behaviour.
I don’t agree with that statement. Although I like some class. When the V is cut out so deep I can nearly see nipples, it takes away the attractiveness/fun for me.
Make good choices but don’t expect others to do the same
And what demographic were those third of boys, all share the same name at a guess.
Children parroting the talking points they hear online from certain influencers.
I can’t read the article. Are one third of boys saying “revealing clothes are unfortunately likely to bring trouble”, or are they saying “revealing clothes mean I can cause trouble”?
Because if it’s the former that’s not exactly an unhinged view.
Who are these people and what are their backgrounds.
I remember that exhibitions thing that showed what people were wearing when raped. Most were not something revealing
Looking through these comments it’s obvious to see where they get the mentality from.
I also find it hilarious that this same sub likes to harp on about immigrants being a danger to women, including the culture they apparently inflict on everyone, and yet men here are implying women dressing immodestly are “asking for it”.
It’s almost as if the problem has never been about immigration to begin with.