You wrote a bunch of words and managed to evade the question put to you entirely. Predictable.
Evaded it? You'll see that the last example addressed it precisely. Here's the answer again:
Having sex with a woman after plying her with booze to get her so drunk that she passes out (which is rape) is morally unacceptable.
You asked me if I thought that rape was immoral or not and I gave you a very specific answer, so how is that evading the question? Your problem seems to be that I gave it some context. You can give your own context if you like. That answer will be the same.
Part of the incoherence of "absolute morality" construals is the arbitrariness of "context" that you are showcasing. You want to say, for example, that the act is having sex and the context is non-consent, and therefore a prohibition against rape is a contextual and therefore non-"absolute" prohibition.
The context isn't arbitrary. It's always present and always extremely specific. It's literally the facts of the matter. Which will determine the morality of the act.
I'd guess that you'd concede that many acts are relative to the context. In fact, I'm pretty certain that you'd agree with the fact that all the examples I gave were context dependent. You might not agree with my decision as to whether they were moral or not, but your decision, if it is different, would likewise be based on the context as well. But your position would render all moral questions absolute. There wouldn't be any relative morality at all.
Do you agree that killing animals for fun is immoral?
Yes.
Ah, so you're an absolutist.
Do you agree that cheating on your wife is immoral?
Yes.
Ah, so you're an absolutist.
Do you agree that getting a woman blind drunk and having sex with her is immoral?
Yes.
Ah, so you're an absolutist.
You can literally give enough specific context to any act to get a definite yes or not from someone as to the morality of the act and then declare them an absolutist. Relative morality then ceases to exist. Which, quite honestly, is plainly nonsensical.