Good question, Lightwing, and thanks for bringing it up in an intellectually provocative manner. What I'm going to say applies only re those women who report immediately, not the ones who wait awhile before coming to the police.
This should give you some background on how yes, we've made some progress re prosecuting rape cases, but there are still hurdles to overcome. And ultimately, it starts with women/activists rather than the police, because the latter don't take rape nearly as seriously as they think they do. Yeah, some of them would like to get rid of due process ("If a woman says he did it, that's all you need; because women NEVER lie about these things") and some want rape convictions months or years or decades after the fact. The highly uncomfortable truth is that to start making sure the police are doing their job, we're going to have to give them more opportunity to either do it or don't by going to the police and being examined before she takes her next shower.
Support it or not, showers make the police's job much harder.
Then, if the police fail to provide a rape test, fail to provide a trained investigator, and fail to act promptly on DNA evidence or to investigate the alleged victim's story, THEN feminists know which PDs to target and to do something about it.
The police and feminists collude together, however unconsciously, to keep rape a largely consequence-free crime.
I'll admit I also have a dim view of cops and their attitudes towards women.
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