Men are not the majority of sex abusers. CDC reporting data showed that almost as many men were abused by the opposite sex as women. The CDC tried to hide the data by categorizing men as "made to penetrate" instead of the obvious category of rape. In addition, reporting from sex abuse convicts showed they were almost always abused by a female.
when asked about experiences in the last 12 months, men reported being “made to penetrate”—either by physical force or due to intoxication—at virtually the same rates as women reported rape (both 1.1 percent in 2010, and 1.7 and 1.6 respectively in 2011).
Mary Koss, famous for promoting the 1 in 5 rape myth, was a CDC consultant and recorded in an interview stating it would be "inappropriate" to categorize a male forced into sex with a woman as rape.
I don't have the study on the convicts anymore it was lost to me. In terms of other data, there is reporting DOJ data on victims of grooming/abuse in juvenile detention, with the overwhelming majority of cases being male prisoners and female staff. There's also a general article on the topic for reference.
There are financial and political incentives to erase male victims of rape, in particular those who's abuser is a woman.
Men are not the majority of sex abusers. CDC reporting data showed that almost as many men were abused by the opposite sex as women. The CDC tried to hide the data by categorizing men as "made to penetrate" instead of the obvious category of rape. In addition, reporting from sex abuse convicts showed they were almost always abused by a female.
Interesting. What source did you read?
There were several articles on the CDC's National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey (NIPSVS): https://time.com/3393442/cdc-rape-numbers/
Mary Koss, famous for promoting the 1 in 5 rape myth, was a CDC consultant and recorded in an interview stating it would be "inappropriate" to categorize a male forced into sex with a woman as rape.
I don't have the study on the convicts anymore it was lost to me. In terms of other data, there is reporting DOJ data on victims of grooming/abuse in juvenile detention, with the overwhelming majority of cases being male prisoners and female staff. There's also a general article on the topic for reference.
There are financial and political incentives to erase male victims of rape, in particular those who's abuser is a woman.