The scales of justice in Spain are tilting towards feminist tyranny and there’s no sign its slowing down. We all know what Rubiales did was wrong, he was the President of Spanish football, and he inappropriately kissed a player without consent after the Spanish women’s team’s world cup victory. However, I can’t help but notice something more sinister about this kiss of death, the feminist matriarchy has become judge, jury and executioner.
The former President of the Spanish FA was just found guilty of sexual assault by a Spanish court. While the final verdict classified Rubiales actions as a ‘low grade’ sexual assault, the media circus surrounding the case was a spectacle to behold and it raises the question, is Spain really happy with the all devouring feminist tyranny it has awoken?
While the Rubiales-Hermoso incident was obviously inappropriate, Spanish prosecutors calling for Rubiales to serve 15 years in prison hint at a sad reality for all men. While rape and sexual assault is clearly wrong, in a society that promotes casual sex without responsiblities attached, men pay a heavy price.
The court ruling stated “The Judge understands that, in view of the magnitude of the assault, a kiss, that it is a sporadic act of the accused, and that he does not require special rehabilitation for the crime, the pecuniary penalty must be chosen, which is less serious than the custodial sentence”
While Rubiales act was ‘sporadic’ the response was premeditated.After Rubiales victory, the domineering leftist narrative quickly took root. Ana Redonono, Spain’s equality minister wrote on X “When there is no consent there is assault and that is what the judge certifies in this sentence. The victim’s word is honoured, as the law stipulates.
So the victims word is gospel.
In 2021 it introduced ‘solo asi asi’, the infamous ‘only yes means yes’ sexual consent law. Solo asi asi ruled that the accused now have to prove the complaint of the accuser wrong, regardless of whether there was violence or coercion. All men who are guilty of rape or sexual assault ought to be dealt with by the justice system, but all men who are merely accused ought not to have the presumption of guilt placed on them.
So sex is free for women, but not for men. If a woman falsely accuses a man of sexual assault or rape, the accused now have the presumption of guilt, not innocence.
In a society that sees sex as cost free, men are paying an increasingly risky price within a culture that is ready to reverse the due processes of justice in the name of all ‘alleged’ victims, whether true or not.
Believing all women at all times sounds like a noble and virtuous idea, the sad reality is, it sets a dangerous precedent for injustices to occur.