Exactly my point.

You will find no crimonolgical data that link a woman's appearance to the likelihood of her being the victim of a sexual assault.

To say that women who don't cover 'have it coming' just reeks of ignorance.

66% of reported cases of sexual assault in Australia (I'm referring to Australia since that was the example used above) occured in the home, compared to 6% on the streets.

The most common victims of sexual assault are girls aged between 10-14, almost 5x the number of female victims aged between 25-44.

It's just so naive to think that there is some relationship between what a woman wears and how likely she is to be raped.

Instead, the Muslim focus seems to be skewed so much further towards how a woman can somehow magically prevent herself from being raped (by covering?!?!) instead of condemning the actions of the attacker.