No one should be mistreated. Not in jail. Not at work. Not in a relationship. Not in a hospital. Not in a music stu
No one should be mistreated.
Not in jail. Not at work.
Not in a relationship.
Not in a hospital. Not in a music studio.
Not in a courthouse.
Not in a shelter. Not online.
Not anywhere.
So when a man says he needs protection, the answer should be sober and humane: investigate it. Take it seriously. Do not laugh at harm. Do not treat danger as entertainment.
Tory Lanez has reportedly sought emergency court protection related to alleged mistreatment or danger in prison; a judge denied that emergency request, according to AllHipHop reporting. Separately, he filed a $100 million lawsuit against California prison officials after being stabbed while incarcerated, alleging failures in prison safety.
But here is where the wound opens.
He is serving prison time for shooting Megan the Stallion.
When a man says, “I need protection,” people understand the concept immediately.
When women ask for protection, suddenly the room turns into a comedy club. When a woman says, “I need protection,” suddenly everybody becomes a philosopher, comedian, defense attorney, culture critic, body language expert, and hip-hop historian.
Not that long ago, Megan Thee Stallion sought legal protection while he was incarcerated, saying he was harassing her through third parties. A California court granted her a 10-year restraining order in January 2025.
When Megan Thee Stallion said she was harmed, people laughed.
They made memes.
They questioned her character.
They questioned her strength.
They questioned her body.
They questioned her pain.
They questioned whether she could “handle” hip-hop culture, as if surviving male violence is some kind of entrance exam.
That was never just celebrity gossip.
That was a public lesson in how this culture treats women who say, “I am not safe.”
When a man seeks protection, people understand vulnerability.
When a woman seeks protection, people often demand performance.
Was she calm enough?
Was she likable enough?
Was she modest enough?
Was she grateful enough?
Was she quiet enough?
Was she tough enough?
Was she hurt enough?
Did she cry the right way?
Did she smile too soon?
Did she fight back too much?
Did she not fight back enough?
This is why women’s safety cannot remain a debate topic.
Because the debate itself becomes part of the danger.
A woman should not have to become perfect before people agree that harm done to her matters.
A woman should not have to be silent before people agree she deserves peace.
A woman should not have to be weak before people agree she deserves protection.
A woman should not have to be famous, rich, beautiful, bruised, bleeding, or dead before people stop making jokes.
No one should be harmed in prison. No one.
But if we can understand that a man in prison still has human rights, then we can understand that a woman walking through the world has human rights too.
If we can understand that a man convicted of harming a woman can still ask the system to protect him from harm, then surely we can understand that women who have been harmed are not “dramatic” for asking to be protected from further abuse.
This is not about revenge.
This is about moral consistency.
Either safety matters, or it does not.
Either harm is serious, or it is not.
Either protection is humane, or it is only granted to the people society feels like defending.
And that is the insult women are beginning to name.
Too often, women are told to prove they deserve safety to people who have already decided to laugh.
Too often, women are told to “be strong” by the same culture that mocks them when they survive out loud.
Too often, women are told to toughen up while men are allowed to file papers, hire lawyers, demand orders, seek protection, and expect the world to understand.
Let the record show this:
Women’s safety is not a debate topic.
Women’s pain is not a joke format.
Women’s boundaries are not a group project.
Women’s need for protection is not an invitation for public entertainment.
When women ask for safety, the mature response is not laughter.
It is listening.
It is action.
It is protection.
It is the end of the joke fest.
The Hidden Danger: How Abusers Stalk Their Victims Even from Behind Bars – WESurviveAbuse
When the Harm Comes for Us First: Updates on the Megan Thee Stallion Case – WESurviveAbuse
You Cannot Punish Women for Protecting Themselves from Male Violence Against Women – WESurviveAbuse
Safety Requires Strategy — Not Just “Being Nice” – WESurviveAbuse
Who Benefits From My Silence? – WESurviveAbuse
Megan Thee Stallion: They Can Fake Your Image, But They Can’t Rewrite Your Worth – WESurviveAbuse
13 Things Black Men Could Be Using Their Mics to Talk About – WESurviveAbuse
