As I’ve said, harassment is never okay, but creators must face feedback—especially when they use sexual assault as nothing more than 'trauma porn' to drive sales. What’s truly exhausting is when authors romanticize these acts and then play the victim when called out. They use rape because it sells, then try to dress it up with pseudo-psychological nonsense about 'shared fault' or 'forgiveness.' It’s a lie. You cannot build a healthy, functional relationship on the ruins of a crime. Trying to frame a literal criminal act as a 'cute' story of redemption isn't just illogical; it’s sick. Some lines, once crossed, leave no way back.
As I’ve said, harassment is never okay, but creators must face feedback—especially when they use sexual assault as nothing more than 'trauma porn' to drive sales. What’s truly exhausting is when authors romanticize these acts and then play the victim when called out. They use rape because it sells, then try to dress it up with pseudo-psychological nonsense about 'shared fault' or 'forgiveness.' It’s a lie. You cannot build a healthy, functional relationship on the ruins of a crime. Trying to frame a literal criminal act as a 'cute' story of redemption isn't just illogical; it’s sick. Some lines, once crossed, leave no way back.