Kevin
Spacey can't play the president on TV because he committed sexual assault. Our
real president brags about assault and stays in office.
Our
national debate about sexual harassment and assault seems to be missing a bit
of nuance.
As a woman who’s been sexually harassed and assaulted many times, here’s how I see it.
As a woman who’s been sexually harassed and assaulted many times, here’s how I see it.
Sexual
predators aren’t the same as pigs.
Roy Moore is a predator. His systematic, frequent pursuing of teenage girls at a shopping mall when he was in his 30s shows a pattern of intentional behavior. He was after children too young to consent to sex.
Roy Moore is a predator. His systematic, frequent pursuing of teenage girls at a shopping mall when he was in his 30s shows a pattern of intentional behavior. He was after children too young to consent to sex.
Film
producer Harvey Weinstein, who systematically entrapped women trying to make it
in the film industry, is a predator. A monstrous one.
Al
Franken sounds like a pig.
A
pig is the man who stares at your chest instead of your face when talking to
you. A pig might try to touch you under the pretense of being friendly, or
joking, or “accidentally” brushing up on you.
The
pig might think he’s being hilarious or just having good fun. He may even think
he’s flattering you. You should feel grateful he chose you as
a woman worthy of his sexual attention.
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As
a woman I’m socialized to always remain polite. Since I couldn’t think of an
appropriate, non-confrontational polite response, I said nothing.
The
second time, I was ready. This wasn’t OK, and I was willing to risk an
unpleasant confrontation.
“Don’t
do that,” I said.
“Why
not?” the man asked.
“Because
I didn’t give you permission,” I snapped back.
“And?”
he said. He held up one finger, as if he were making a list and I’d just given
him one item — but there had to be more.
What?
No.
“I
didn’t give you permission” is the only reason I need. But I added, “And were
aren’t dating.” He nodded, accepting my reasons. I was enraged. “Don’t touch my
butt” shouldn’t require explanation or justification.
There
seems to be a spectrum, from the small-time pig to the most heinous sexual
predator. And different punishments fit different crimes. It also matters if
the perpetrator apologizes, and if he stops the problematic behavior.
Yet
the way we’re haphazardly applying consequences doesn’t reflect the severity of
the crime, the trustworthiness of the evidence, or the sincerity of the
apology.
Donald
Trump bragged about assaulting women, and many women have come forward to
allege he’s assaulted them, yet he’s in the White House. Roy Moore pursued
teenage girls when he was an adult, yet he still retained the support of most
Republicans.
Senator
Al Franken, a mere pig by comparison, resigned his seat after realizing he was
wrong for groping and kissing women without their consent.
Actor
Kevin Spacey, who played the president on the TV show House of Cards,
lost his job after a wave of assault allegations surfaced against him. But
while Spacey can’t play a president on TV anymore, a man who openly bragged
about committing assault still sits in the real Oval Office.
And
Clarence Thomas, a man once accused of serial sexual harassment, is still on
the Supreme Court.
Our
conversation must advance from simply agreeing to take sexual harassment and
assault seriously to agreeing upon a fair and consistent way to punish it.
OtherWords
columnist Jill Richardson is the author of Recipe for America: Why Our
Food System Is Broken and What We Can Do to Fix It. Distributed
by OtherWords.org.