Photo: Rob Latour/ShutterstockJoshua Bassettis being open about the trauma he faced as a child — and is educating online commenters in the process.On Wednesday, the “Crisis” singer responded to someone who claimed that “men can’t be raped” days after Bassett revealed that he wassexually abusedas both a child and teenager in an interview withGQ.Posting the tweet on his Instagram story while blurring out the troll’s name and adding a trigger warning, Bassett, 20, wrote, “And we wonder why more people don’t come forward.“Bassett then added, “[It] started when I was 5. You haven’t the slightest idea what you’re talking about and how damaging it is.“According to anti-sexual assault organizationRAINN, one in every 10 rape victims is male. Also, one in four men who are victims of rape or attempted rape experienced the abuse between the ages of 11 and 17, according to theNational Sexual Violence Resource Center.Sharing a second set of tweets — with one saying he “deserved” the abuse — he wrote, “Disgusting.“joshua bassett/ instagramThe singer revealed in an all-encompassing interview withGQthat he was sexually abused earlier in his life.“I experienced sexual abuse a lot in my childhood,” Bassett toldGQ. “I didn’t remember that until last year, which is pretty insane. I buried it so far.“He added, “And when I was a teen, a much older man routinely abused me, and I wasn’t able to see it for what it was at the time.“He explained in the interview that his new track “Set Me Free” referred to his journey of processing that trauma."[It’s] an anthem for me and the sort of people who’ve held pain and power over me my whole life,” he said, before referring to the song lyric: “You’ve taken so much from me but you don’t get to take all of me.“Opening up about his sexual abuse to the magazine was the singer’s first step to exploring the issue of childhood sexual abuse. He shared that he will soon host a podcast featuring “heavy talks” that will “hopefully help people who are experiencing that.“It’s “the podcast that I wish I had when I was a kid,” he said, before adding that he’s now “so much stronger than I was before.“If you suspect child abuse, call the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-4-A-Child or 1-800-422-4453, or go to www.childhelp.org. All calls are toll-free and confidential. The hotline is available 24/7 in more than 170 languages.
Photo: Rob Latour/Shutterstock

Joshua Bassettis being open about the trauma he faced as a child — and is educating online commenters in the process.On Wednesday, the “Crisis” singer responded to someone who claimed that “men can’t be raped” days after Bassett revealed that he wassexually abusedas both a child and teenager in an interview withGQ.Posting the tweet on his Instagram story while blurring out the troll’s name and adding a trigger warning, Bassett, 20, wrote, “And we wonder why more people don’t come forward.“Bassett then added, “[It] started when I was 5. You haven’t the slightest idea what you’re talking about and how damaging it is.“According to anti-sexual assault organizationRAINN, one in every 10 rape victims is male. Also, one in four men who are victims of rape or attempted rape experienced the abuse between the ages of 11 and 17, according to theNational Sexual Violence Resource Center.Sharing a second set of tweets — with one saying he “deserved” the abuse — he wrote, “Disgusting.“joshua bassett/ instagramThe singer revealed in an all-encompassing interview withGQthat he was sexually abused earlier in his life.“I experienced sexual abuse a lot in my childhood,” Bassett toldGQ. “I didn’t remember that until last year, which is pretty insane. I buried it so far.“He added, “And when I was a teen, a much older man routinely abused me, and I wasn’t able to see it for what it was at the time.“He explained in the interview that his new track “Set Me Free” referred to his journey of processing that trauma."[It’s] an anthem for me and the sort of people who’ve held pain and power over me my whole life,” he said, before referring to the song lyric: “You’ve taken so much from me but you don’t get to take all of me.“Opening up about his sexual abuse to the magazine was the singer’s first step to exploring the issue of childhood sexual abuse. He shared that he will soon host a podcast featuring “heavy talks” that will “hopefully help people who are experiencing that.“It’s “the podcast that I wish I had when I was a kid,” he said, before adding that he’s now “so much stronger than I was before.“If you suspect child abuse, call the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-4-A-Child or 1-800-422-4453, or go to www.childhelp.org. All calls are toll-free and confidential. The hotline is available 24/7 in more than 170 languages.
Joshua Bassettis being open about the trauma he faced as a child — and is educating online commenters in the process.
On Wednesday, the “Crisis” singer responded to someone who claimed that “men can’t be raped” days after Bassett revealed that he wassexually abusedas both a child and teenager in an interview withGQ.
Posting the tweet on his Instagram story while blurring out the troll’s name and adding a trigger warning, Bassett, 20, wrote, “And we wonder why more people don’t come forward.”
Bassett then added, “[It] started when I was 5. You haven’t the slightest idea what you’re talking about and how damaging it is.”
According to anti-sexual assault organizationRAINN, one in every 10 rape victims is male. Also, one in four men who are victims of rape or attempted rape experienced the abuse between the ages of 11 and 17, according to theNational Sexual Violence Resource Center.
Sharing a second set of tweets — with one saying he “deserved” the abuse — he wrote, “Disgusting.”
joshua bassett/ instagram

The singer revealed in an all-encompassing interview withGQthat he was sexually abused earlier in his life.
“I experienced sexual abuse a lot in my childhood,” Bassett toldGQ. “I didn’t remember that until last year, which is pretty insane. I buried it so far.”
He added, “And when I was a teen, a much older man routinely abused me, and I wasn’t able to see it for what it was at the time.”
He explained in the interview that his new track “Set Me Free” referred to his journey of processing that trauma.
“[It’s] an anthem for me and the sort of people who’ve held pain and power over me my whole life,” he said, before referring to the song lyric: “You’ve taken so much from me but you don’t get to take all of me.”
Opening up about his sexual abuse to the magazine was the singer’s first step to exploring the issue of childhood sexual abuse. He shared that he will soon host a podcast featuring “heavy talks” that will “hopefully help people who are experiencing that.”
It’s “the podcast that I wish I had when I was a kid,” he said, before adding that he’s now “so much stronger than I was before.”
If you suspect child abuse, call the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-4-A-Child or 1-800-422-4453, or go to www.childhelp.org. All calls are toll-free and confidential. The hotline is available 24/7 in more than 170 languages.
source: people.com