Well, thank God for their brave and courageous work to inform us that saying ‘no’ should reduce rape crimes. The TikTok heavens will now rid Finland of all issues, ever. That’s how it works, right?
This is the most useless ‘effort’ I’ve ever seen.
Were they not aware that nonconsensual sex (AKA rape) means that women already tried saying no? That’s literally what rape means…
Additionally, I don’t think a silly dance will turn a rapist away, no matter how bland the dance and/or dancer may be. Also, pretty sure the last place I’d want my arms is outstretched to my SIDES, while swaying my freaking hips back and forth as I’m trying to rid of a rapist. SMH.
The Peoples Ledger reported:
A local government in the Finnish city of Oulu has taken “stunning and brave” steps to ensure the indigenous female population no longer suffer from the rash of sexual assaults committed on them by the migrant community- by creating a TikTok video telling would-be rapists not to touch a woman’s “no-no square.”
“Stop! Don’t touch me there, this is my no-no square,” they chanted, referring to a woman’s vagina.
Twitter user and Oulu resident Tiina Wiik took to the internet to express her displeasure.
“My home town has launched a 2.5 million euro project called Safe Oulu that aims at combating the (migrant) rape crisis,” she wrote. “This is where the money goes. Kill me now. At least, be kind and lobotomize me so I won’t have to live with this image in my head.”“The woman in glasses in the front is a former social democrat candidate,” Wiik added. “Before the grooming scandal broke the news, she denied such problem even existed and claimed migrant rape gangs are just a lie made up by racists.”
“If the rape macarena isn’t enough to stop them, there’s always the oldie-but-goodie advice from our public news network: just stretch your arm out in front of you with the palm facing the attacker, and the rapist will go away,” Wiik wrote.Finnish Police statistics report that in 2017, Afghans and Iraqis were suspected of having sex crimes committing rape at a rate 40 times higher than indigenous Finns.