The AFP has provided a glimpse inside one of Norway’s “No Means No” sexual behavior classes which officials determined is necessary to offer to Muslim migrants after a series of rapes. Instructors of the course have to address issues like why using violence to get sex is not okay and that a woman showing her shoulders or kissing a man or asking a man to hang out is not an invitation to sex.
Despite pro-immigration European leaders’ attempts to cover up the alarming rise of sexual assault and rape in several migrant-heavy areas, over the last few weeks stories have been breaking right and left about the massive problem countries like Germany, Finland, and Norway have created for themselves.
The “clash of cultures” brought on by the importation of millions of Muslims (1.1 million into Germany last year alone) is destroying the left’s multicultural dream and in the most horrific way imaginable—as Cologne and Helsinki, among several other cities, discovered New Year’s Night. In Cologne, 766 police reports were filed on New Year’s, 497 of them for sexual assault. Most of the complaints cite Arabic and North African men.
Norway’s anti-sexual assault and rape program was started a few years ago by a private company called Hero, which launched it “after a series of rapes committed by foreigners” between 2009 and 2011. As AFP notes, the program is particularly “topical” now.
“The idea behind this course is to talk about risk situations that can arise when it comes to rapes and sexual assaults,” the group’s leader, with the help of an Arabic translator, told the dozen or so Syrian and Sudanese asylum seekers. “We need your help so that we can together detect these situations.”
AFP provides a few of the topics discussed in the class, including: “What is the difference between love and sex?” “Can the use of violence be legitimate?” and “How do you know if a woman is consenting to sex?”
A few excerpts from the report:
“She kissed him — it’s an invitation to have sex.” The asylum seeker’s answer hangs in the air. The instructor’s smile falters, and an explanation is required. […]
“If she wants come to my place, that means she’s consenting,” says one Syrian.
“But if she’s drunk, how can I be sure that she wants to sleep with me?” asks a Sudanese man.
“If she says no, I don’t do anything against her will,” insists a third. […]
“But I have friends, they come from a different culture, from a strict family. For them, any part a woman shows (is) a sign she wants to have sex,” he says. […]
“If a girl kisses me, I figure she wants to sleep with me,” says another.
“We invite the residents, both women and men, to have a dialogue about cultural norms and to take responsibility if they see something,” Hero’s director Tor Brekke explained. “It’s not a magic formula, it’s just mostly about making an arena for dialogue.”
The “rape crisis” in Europe is forcing the Left to choose between women’s rights and its dream of a multicultural utopia, and, so far, women are losing. As columnist Philip Mark McGough wrote recently, “After Cologne, feminism is dead. Europe must now focus on the more important issue of women’s rights.”