The ongoing anti-rape protests in Delhi have provoked many responses amongst most of us, and often these are inconsistent. I see no problem with that. The statement issued by the ‘Progressive Women라이브 바카라 Groups and Individuals’ reflects the concerns many of us have about treating this incident as exceptional, or about the dangers of the spontaneous calls for violent brutal retaliation, be it castration, or the death penalty. Many of us are completely agreed on the fact of the frighteningly long history of systematic rape—as part of caste, class and state power. There have been any numbers of instances in the last decade alone that have stood testimony to this—and undoubtedly the protests in all these instances have been far more muted or localised. As indeed the deafening silence in almost all reported instances of sexual violence, brutality and rape, in Delhi alone, as recently as in the last couple of years. The girls and women attacked in these cases have come from diverse backgrounds, old and young, Indian and foreign, northeastern and working class, and most often not upper caste. And barring the odd petition, a Facebook post, or maybe a statement issued by students and progressive groups (in exceptional circumstances) there have been scant protests about these.