Did you know that the removal of condom during sex without consent is called “Stealthing” and carries a rape conviction?

For the odd chances that some may not know what condom is, it helps prevent unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted disease
Removing condom during sex under the Sexual Offences Act is a crime

This concerns men who commits “stealthing”, otherwise known as the act of removing condom without consent during sex. What is however not clear is whether women can be guilty of this offence. If a man removes the condom without the woman’s consent, he can be found guilty of rape if proven in court. However, if a woman removes the condom on the man with the odd chance that he’s not aware it’s been removed, or the woman removes her femidom or internal condom, can she also be guilty of rape? What do you think guys?

According to the Columbia Journal of Gender and Law, a woman who contributed anonymously to a research said she had been seeing a man for a couple of weeks and refused to have sex with him without a condom, calling it “non-negotiable.”

“We were hooking up and halfways through he took his condom off. Obviously I was very upset.” She said the man told her: “Don’t worry about it, trust me.”

Ladies, what would you do if this happens to you, let’s hear your thoughts.

 

Read how Prince Harry managed mental health after death of his mother, Diana, Princess of Wales


The Prince told The Telegraph in an interview that he “shut down all his emotions” for almost two decades after losing his mother, Diana, Princess of Wales, despite his brother, Prince William, trying to talk him into seeking help.

Prince Harry with his late mother here, The princess of Wales

Describing the “quite serious effect” that losing his mother had on his personal and professional life, he tells how living in the public eye left him feeling he could be “very close to a complete breakdown on numerous occasions”.
The Prince, now 32, turned to counsellors and even took up boxing. He says he is now in “a good place”.
Prince Harry has decided to give an unprecedented insight into his past in the hope it will encourage people to break the stigma surrounding mental health issues.
He has spoken to Bryony Gordon for the first episode of her podcast, Mad World, in which she will interview high-profile guests about their mental health experiences.

The 30-minute conversation is one of the most candid insights into the innermost thoughts of a modern young member of the Royal family. The Prince, together with his brother and sister-in-law, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, have set up Heads Together, a charity which promotes good mental well-being.
Prince Harry, who was 12 when his mother died, says in the podcast that he spent his teenage years and twenties determined not to think about her.
“I can safely say that losing my mum at the age of 12, and therefore shutting down all of my emotions for the last 20 years, has had a quite serious effect on not only my personal life but my work as well,” he said.

Original Interview by The Telegraph

 

See Island where visitors are killed

A local aims for an helicopter filming the island

According to The Sun, the inhabitants of North Sentinel Island are extremely hostile to visitors and tourist that they kill them. You can see here a local aiming for an helicopter. The island is situated in between India no Burma. What a life eh!