Quote Originally Posted by Grendel View Post
Wrong, where does our moral core come from? It's internalized from society. In ordinary people, this happens at such an early age that it becomes an instinct. Ultimately, it's programmed in - the moral core doesn't just pop out of the ground on its own unless something else actively instantiates it there.
Social conditioning - that's forced upon people. So even "moral" people only grew up that way because they were forced into that mentality.
You have feelings, the other person has more or less the exact same feelings as you do. Treating the same things differently is having double standards, which is contradictory. You can rationally understand this without much social context. People rationalize bad behavior by placing their own needs and feelings above others'. Or they could try to lower the other person's importance.

Quote Originally Posted by Grendel View Post
Men got a cock, women typically don't.

You don't have a body and a mind, you are a body! So you couldn't change male behavior unless in the process you eliminated what made them male.

So to even address the very question of why men do some things and women do others is enough to invalidate the inquiry at the very outset. It's a useless question.
Then that answer is "they rape because they're men". If you think the question is useless, then no new knowledge is created, which makes it even more useless.

I don't think it's possible to rape or violate the other person if you recognize that the other person has feelings or consciousness, and by having those feelings that person does not want bad things happening to them.

You could say that men are more "forceful", and hence they're more likely to commit crimes. But even then, it's the moral perspective that decides an action to occur or not occur. The force could be used for either good or for evil. People who commit crimes lacked a moral perspective.