Yeah, and SOME of that is PTSD and some of it is "things women learn to take into consideration". I really have no way of knowing which is which, because I don't remember experiencing the world any differently than I do now. (That's something else he brought up yesterday, that "most people" start out trusting that others are good/safe and, at some point in childhood, learn that isn't always true.)
Listening to that program DID get me thinking about how hard it is for anyone to understand something they've never actually experienced. I think, the way that guy structures his talks, there are so MANY women, eagerly adding to the list, it probably has a bigger impact than one person telling her experiences.
There was also kind of an interesting piece yesterday on "This American Life" (NPR) about an Australian woman who set out to convince guys that cat calls were bad. It was nearly impossible. Why? Well because they guys she talked to were totally convinced they were being complimentary. (I am totally serious!) When she explained how they made her feel, the guys believed her, but thought she was an exception. When she gathered statistics, they still doubted her. Apparently because, if some random woman complimented them on their ass, loudly and in public, they'd think it was great, and they can't imagine how else you might see it.
(I hope this isn't getting off topic, now that the Franken thing got moved to "politics"!