So that bit of confusion is all straightened out. A moderator did get back to me.
Also received a PM from someone who knows him, that the person posting had no malicious intent. Great to know! It's not my intention to hurt anyone's feelings.
Below is why I'm so sensitive to this, and why so many of us women are.
Last year around the time of the WRTR a man was caught online making a fake profile and passing as a female into the WRTR group on Facebook. It was disturbing, as he was camped just across the wash from us in Quartzsite. He'd made the mistake of having identifying pictures up with himself, and his very distinctive rig, before he changed his profile pic and ID to a female on Facebook. He didn't even create a different profile, just changed his current one. He had said something in another forum (posting as himself, as a male) about the "Women's LGBT" group, (confusing that with the WRTR) that had set off red flags with me, and I'd looked at his profile and took a screenshot. Within an hour he'd then changed his profile to female, and when I showed my partner Nancy she recognized him and his rig and said he's camped near us! The timing was uncanny. Moderators were contacted and he was booted from the Facebook group. But, he was still camped near us, and also posted from the RTR groups that he was there at the RTR, (after also posting some very derogatory opinions and misinformation about Bob.) So you just never know.
Nancy and I have had men repeatedly walk into our campsites without permission. It's not just solo women that have this problem. Today, a man walked through our campsite, between our two vans, for the third time since we've been here. The first two times we were both in our vans, and I just watched him as he slowly walked through, bending over to pick things off the ground in our campsite. Rock hunting? Today, I was outside, and as he approached to walk through again, I said, what's up? He started talking about how we had a good set up with our two vans in the campsite, and I said something like, yes and you're walking right through our site. He immediately got defensive, berating me by saying, you know someone can park 15 feet right from your bumper .... implying I shouldn't have any boundaries with people just walking through the campsite. He then dismissed me, walking away, saying, OK, another one. Another one what? Another woman who has boundaries with you??? He just took me off guard and I was pretty speechless. I should have said, it's proper etiquette to ask permission to enter someone's campsite. Period. I've been on the road two years now, and it's a common scenerio. Most of the time I don't say anything ... and THIS IS EXACTLY WHY. So now I know I've ticked someone off within walking distance of our campsite, and it's a very vulnerable feeling.
So yep, I'm going to question if I see something that might be a boundary being violated. I don't want to hurt anyones feelings. In fact I just had a fantastic in person conversation with a another man about nomadism, single men and women, and what did I think was going on with all these single people on the road. He was genuinely curious about why so many relationships were breaking up, including his, but he was very respectful and not pushy. He struck up a conversation with me at the dumpsters, but not until I gave him a friendly hello and how are you.
I don't know what the answer is. I just know I'm on guard and there are reasons why.
Thanks for listening!
Mary Ellen T.