Like I said, no matter how much evidence I give you, you'll never admit you are wrong
The Stanford Rape Case Illustrated the Toxicity of White Male Privilege
Brock Allen Turner got a lenient sentence for a heinous crime because he's a poster boy for everything America loves.
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On Jan. 18, 2015, two Stanford graduate students found former Stanford swimmer Brock Allen Turner repeatedly
thrusting himself upon an unconscious, semi-naked woman behind a frat house dumpster. Turner, who later dropped out of the university, attempted to flee but the men tackled him. In March, he was found guilty on three felony counts. The prosecution argued for six years out of a 14-year maximum in state prison
rich white male privilege is the "ability to be convicted of rape and have the court basically apologize for the inconvenience." White male privilege is the ability to commit one of the most heinous crimes imaginable and yet walk away with a slap on the wrist. White male privilege is a judge having faith that a promising athlete will never rape someone again, despite the fact that the man took no responsibility for raping someone in the first place. White male privilege is raping a woman and getting empathy for how hard it must be for the rapist to carry on. The outcome of Turner's case demonstrates that in order to find justice for rape victims, we must also dismantle white male privilege.
Superior Court judge, Aaron Persky, sentenced Turner to
six months in jail, three years of probation, and lifetime sex-offender registration, saying that a longer prison term “would have a severe impact on him.”