WARNING: This article deals with an account of rape/sexual assault and may be triggering for survivors of abuse.
This advertisement is designed to stop you getting really, really drunk and then raped on New Year’s Eve.
The public service message to young women (the reckless drunken ones) is simple:
‘When you drink too much you lose control and put yourself at risk.’
At risk of what you ask? Rape or sexual assault.
It’s part of a series of advertisements – not just aimed at women – that encourage young people to rethink excessive alcohol intake on the biggest party night of the year.
And the aims of the campaign are admirable. Alcohol obviously does limit one’s inhibitions. It’s also bad for you, causes you to say things you don’t mean and often results in one’s head being attached to a toilet. That’s a general lesson that we should be teaching all young adults across the board.
But where this particular image in the campaign gets it completely wrong, is that it implies alcohol can cause rape.
Now, alcohol can play a role in some sexual assaults – of course it can. But the key word there is some. Because it doesn’t matter how much you drink, you will still only get raped if you come into contact with a rapist.
Because rape is just unlucky.
That is not a fact that anyone wants to hear. But it’s true.