@FredFriendly
I never suggested they be anything amazing. I merely said that they would either be able to say no to someone or just be able to endure for a moment. Your suggestion requires that your girlfriend would collapse immediately upon being spoken too. Remember, I said you can jump in if they keep going after them without getting a "yes" as a response, not that they have to scream no. Even if I had a girlfriend such as you described, they would still be able to wait for me to come and help after he has asked her more than once. What you are suggesting by denying that is that you should block other men from talking to her. I'm merely saying you have to let them speak for themselves and, even if they can't speak, don't go making decisions or speaking for them until they've had a chance to express themselves.
@Gotim18
I'm not speaking about something with subjective definitions like being offensive. I'm speaking to the actual definition of objectification. I'm actually not concerned with what is offensive or not, I'm not speaking to that. If you go more in depth into philosophy than the dictionary definition, you get 7 conditions which define objectification if any one of them occur. What we were talking about with giving up specifically because her boyfriend comes suggests ownership. What FredFriendly is suggesting would violate her autonomy and make her inert. Each of these are part of the definition of objectification, which I'm speaking to. It isn't about my feelings or if I find something offensive.
and, yeah, a great deal about being arrested objectifies you by necessity. Some of it is unnecessary, like how in the US our 13th Amendment allows you to be enslaved if you are convicted. It isn't done with consideration of if one is being objectified or not, that isn't the point.