I agree, at least somewhat. Especially for those women who are deliberately vindictive, who make things up to get back at some guy. If a woman tells lies about a man, he can be investigated - lose access to his kids, lose his job, have his entire life severely curtailed. If nothing is turned up, if the allegations are completely false, the woman faces no consequences whatsoever. That, to me, is wrong.
Given the Brown case I'm reminded of the Canadian
**** law around alcohol. It states that being inebriated makes you incapable of rationality, and thus incapable of giving consent, even if you do. It also states just as clearly that inebriation is no excuse for you having sex with someone else who is inebriated. It's intellectually absurd. And while they strive to pretend this is even handed, we all know that men don't wake up after a night of sex with such regrets they're going to go to police to complain that he was too drunk when he agreed. So it works out it's men who get arrested, and when they protest "but I was drunk too" well, that's irrelevant.
It seems like the proper way for sexual relationships to be conducted now is the way women think they should be. If you don't, then like Brown, even if what you did was legal, you're a creep and a louse and a loser. A man in his thirties trying to seduce an 18 year old!? Disgusting! Revolting! Seriously? Much is made of these womens ages as if Brown was some kind of child molester, but all he was doing was demonstrating the normal male interest in attractive young women. Now most of us look for more age appropriate women - when we're seeking relationships. But for just sex ... ah, but you're not supposed to
just want sex! Besides, most of us figure by the time we're in our mid thirties that we'd just as soon not risk making asses of ourselves by trying to get a woman who thinks you're an "old man" as one of them described him, interested. Well, unless we're rich.
But then of course, there are the cases where the woman's complaints are not taken seriously enough and people die as a result.
Rare. I think most of those cases you're referring to involved women complaining a man was a danger to them. The problem with that is there's no law against someone perceiving you as dangerous. Until you actually DO something there isn't much police can do. And even after they make an arrest, the courts almost always let people out on bail for anything short of murder.