The Guardian has her well-written story:

I am 17 years old and I am a feminist. I believe in gender equality, and am under no illusion about how far we are from achieving it. Identifying as a feminist has become particularly important to me since a school trip I took to Cambridge last year.

A group of men in a car started wolf-whistling and shouting sexual remarks at my friends and me. I asked the men if they thought it was appropriate for them to be abusing a group of 17-year-old girls. The response was furious. The men started swearing at me, called me a bitch and threw a cup coffee over me.

For those men we were just legs, breasts and pretty faces. Speaking up shattered their fantasy, and they responded violently to my voice.

Shockingly, the boys in my peer group have responded in exactly the same way to my feminism...

As a side note, I've noticed that internet bellyachers have two main complaints about these types of posts: The experiences women describe are either a fluke ("I talked to my wife and her friends and they've never blah blah blah"), and thus their experiences are worthy of dismissal, or the stories are all the same, which somehow makes them not newsworthy. Boring. Mundane.

I post them because the common refrain in these narratives is intolerable—that women are casually physically and verbally assaulted by strange men every day, but then they're assaulted deliberately and with malice if they refuse to be complicit in their own abuse. It's not boring; it's indefensible. Absolutely indefensible.

It happens every day to 15-year-old girls, it happens to 50-year-old women, and as long as it keeps happening, I'll keep pointing it out.