Teaching men not to rape is appropriate. Because the lesson is about teaching boundaries, consent, respect, and valuing women as equals in a society of longstanding female oppression. The aim is to teach men to challenge the everyday, normalized messages of superiority over women that is ingrained through subverted messages of “being strong” “dominating” “in charge.”
Teaching Muslims (or whatever stereotyped group) not to blow things up is just an inaccurate comparison, because 1. It would be teaching MEN not to blow things up and 2. Because these men are RADICALIZED AND TAUGHT THAT THROUGH VIOLENCE THEY ARE POWERFUL. Similar use of strength and dominance mindset.
As an aside, the fact that rape and violence is committed most often by men does not negate that women can be perpetrators. It just points to a larger societal trend and addressing the larger trends is more effective in shifting the overall outcomes
Teaching Muslims (or whatever stereotyped group) not to blow things up is just an inaccurate comparison, because 1. It would be teaching MEN not to blow things up and 2. Because these men are RADICALIZED AND TAUGHT THAT THROUGH VIOLENCE THEY ARE POWERFUL. Similar use of strength and dominance mindset.
As an aside, the fact that rape and violence is committed most often by men does not negate that women can be perpetrators. It just points to a larger societal trend and addressing the larger trends is more effective in shifting the overall outcomes