Some people subscribe to both mottos, using SSC as a description of the activities to any member of the general public, while using RACK as a description of the activities within members of a community. Not all members of the BDSM community adhere to one principle to the exclusion of the other. In both, risk is an essential part of the thrill, and that risk is minimized through study, training, technique, and practice. Noting that nothing is truly 100% safe, not even crossing the street, Switch compared BDSM to the sport of mountain climbing. In 1999, Gary Switch posted to The Eulenspiegel Society's USENET list "TES-Friends" proposing the term RACK out of a desire to form a more accurate portrayal of the type of play that many engage in. "Instead of asking people to think about what it means to do S/M ethically, and to make the hard choices that are sometimes necessary (if only between what's right and what's right now), many organizations today act as if these issues have all been settled, assuring us that sadistic or masochistic behavior not deemed SSC isn't S/M at all but something else - abuse, usually, or domestic violence or poor self-esteem." Over time, as the phrase started spreading through the larger community and appeared on bumper stickers and T-shirts, people started to associate "safe" with "risk-free," diluting the message. According to David Stein, the man who coined "Safe, Sane, and Consensual S/M" for New York's Gay Male S/M Activists organization, SSC was only intended to be put forward as a minimum standard for ethically defensible S/M play, to establish a distinction between play between loving S/M partners and the public perception of sadomasochism which would be more accurately described as abusive behavior. RACK was coined in reaction to dissatisfaction within the BDSM community regarding SSC. Thus, RACK adherents stress the value of individual prior consent to even risky fun, while the SSC contingent counters that people often do not choose as freely as they seem, they might behave irrationally at times, and so the consequences of rash individual choice perhaps ought to be mitigated from the start. Both philosophies aim to minimize foreseeable harm, but RACK puts more emphasis on individual commitment to possible risk, beforehand, while SSC tries to minimize total harm foreseeable over the longer term. It tries to minimize any potential harm despite the risks BDSM players might be willing to partake in. In contrast, SSC revolves around the end results of play, or the ex-post. Its theory revolves around reasoned, ex-ante commitment, including the possible consequences of riskier play. RACK can also be described as a mindset which pays more attention to perhaps unexpected consequences of BDSM play. There is no "safe" or "not safe" within RACK, only "safer" and "less safe." By acknowledging that what may be safe or sane to one person may not be considered the same to another, the RACK philosophy tends to be more inclusive of activities that others may consider as edgeplay. While " Safe, sane and consensual" (SSC) attempts to describe and differentiate BDSM from abuse in ways that are easy for the non-BDSM public to comprehend, RACK differs from it in that it acknowledges that nothing is ever 100% inherently safe. Kink: Said activity can be classified as alternative sex.Consensual: In light of those risks, both or all partners have, of sound mind, offered preliminary consent to engage in said activity.Risk-aware: Both or all partners are well-informed of the risks involved in the proposed activity.The philosophy for RACK consists of the following components: This is often viewed in contrast to safe, sane, and consensual which generally holds that only activities that are considered safe, sane, and consensual are permitted. Risk-aware consensual kink ( RACK, also risk-accepted consensual kink) is an acronym used by some of the BDSM community to describe a philosophical view that is generally permissive of certain risky sexual behaviors, as long as the participants are fully aware of the risks. A submissive man is consoled by his mistress after she has made his back bloody through beating. For other uses, see RACK (disambiguation).
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