Kavanaugh Circus Could Destroy the Me Too Movement

It's not a racial issue!It's a sexual abuse issue.
Everything is playing victim,and playing the race card!
FYI some of those women were black,that Cosby abused,with you.

It's a racial issue because the racist right is trying to put him ANOTHER racist on the courts for life.

One woman was Black in the Cosby case. Doesn't change the fact that it seems as if Black males are going to prison for rape, but wealthy white men aren't.

You might as well stop posting to me, EVERYTHING will be about race when it comes to me.

THIS COUNTRY WAS BUILT ON RACE AND RACISM, and I will point it out at every turn.

YOU can ignore it all you want.
 
It's a racial issue because the racist right is trying to put him ANOTHER racist on the courts for life.

One woman was Black in the Cosby case. Doesn't change the fact that it seems as if Black males are going to prison for rape, but wealthy white men aren't.

You might as well stop posting to me, EVERYTHING will be about race when it comes to me.

THIS COUNTRY WAS BUILT ON RACE AND RACISM, and I will point it out at every turn.

YOU can ignore it all you want.

If EVERYTHING is about race to you!
Then you're a racist!Self proclaimed!
 
like most things left wing, #MEETOO was taken too far, and lost all wind in its sails when Democrats in congress decide to use it as political football
 
It’s been nearly a year since Ronan Farrow torpedoed the career of Harvey Weinstein, printing in The New Yorker a series of credible accusations that the Hollywood producer had sexually abused several women. His piece touched off a firestorm that led to purges of incredibly powerful men in a variety of industries, finally forcing them to face consequences for their sexual misconduct.

Sunday night, though, Farrow and his colleague Jane Mayer did a huge disservice to the Me Too movement by publishing an incredibly thin sexual-abuse allegation against Brett Kavanaugh. That story, a prime example of how some media outlets and left-wing voices have mishandled the accusations against the judge, will likely create a climate in which fewer victims are believed, more innocent men suffer for crimes they didn’t commit, and neutral observers are more inclined to doubt claims of sexual assault.

The political circus overwhelming the Kavanaugh confirmation will almost certainly weaken the Me Too movement in the long run by undermining its promise that the truth matters and that it will enable us to obtain justice.

The slapdash nature of Sunday’s reporting by Farrow and Mayer encourages readers to cast doubt on this newest accusation. They write of Kavanaugh’s accuser, Deborah Ramirez: “In her initial conversations with The New Yorker, she was reluctant to characterize Kavanaugh’s role in the alleged incident with certainty,” saying she was only willing to go on the record “after six days of carefully assessing her memories and consulting with her attorney,” at which point “she felt confident enough of her recollections.” Their effort to publish this story should’ve stopped right there.

What’s more, they couldn’t find a single eyewitness to confirm that Kavanaugh was present at the party Ramirez describes, or even to confirm they heard this account from the accuser herself. One friend of Ramirez’s told The New Yorker:

The only corroboration Farrow and Mayer offer is one hearsay account from someone who says he was told that Kavanaugh did this. We are given no indication from whom this man heard it; for all we know, it could’ve been a tale passed along in a lengthy game of telephone. The New York Times noted on Sunday that its reporters had been aware of the story as well, but had “interviewed several dozen people” and could find no one with firsthand knowledge of Ramirez’s story.

The incident Ramirez describes may have happened, but surely no one can be blamed for reading the New Yorker piece and concluding that it didn’t. If Farrow and Mayer believed Ramirez’s story, they shouldn’t have published it without substantive corroboration in a piece that encourages neutral viewers to doubt women who claim to be victims.

Attorney Michael Avenatti’s claims of new allegations against Kavanaugh, meanwhile, are almost sure to have a similarly damaging effect. If his salacious stories prove false, his decision to peddle them could singlehandedly destroy the Me Too movement. Even if the claims are true, or partly so, he is quite obviously using allegations of severe sexual abuse as a teaser-trailer for his potential 2020 Democratic presidential run, stirring up the kind of political feeding frenzy in which victims often will be disbelieved.

The way that California senator Dianne Feinstein handled Christine Blasey Ford’s letter accusing Kavanaugh of attempted rape also indicates a lack of seriousness on the left: If Feinstein really believed the story, she did Ford a disservice by holding on to it until the last minute. If she cared about achieving justice for a potential victim, she should’ve encouraged Ford to allow her to address the accusation during the confirmation hearing, and she should’ve shared the letter with the full committee. Ford did ask for confidentiality, but she clearly wanted her story to bear on Kavanaugh’s confirmation in some way. If she was willing to share her story at all, she had to be willing to let the resulting process unfold fairly, which included letting the committee investigate her claim and letting Kavanaugh respond to it — even if her name was never attached to it.

Though we don’t know who leaked Ford’s story to the press, it seems most likely that someone on the left deliberately waited until the last possible moment to let it trickle out, in an eleventh-hour effort to tank Kavanaugh. That choice created an atmosphere in which it’d be much less likely that the public would take Ford seriously, hardly what those who care about victims would want.

Meanwhile, Hawaii senator Mazie Hirono has advanced the extremely dangerous notion that it doesn’t matter whether Kavanaugh committed misconduct or not. Last week, she insisted that And when CNN’s Jake Tapper asked Hirono Sunday whether Kavanaugh has “the same presumption of innocence as anyone else in America,” the Democratic senator replied, “I put his denial in the context of everything that I know about him in terms of how he approaches his cases.”

With this answer, Hirono — who casts herself as one of our government’s foremost opponents of sexual abuse — dealt a significant blow to the seriousness of the Me Too movement.
If it doesn’t actually matter whether alleged abusers actually abused anyone, and it’s just a question of partisanship, why should Americans listen to the stories of victims at all?
Just decide whether or not you like the politics of the person being accused, and that’s that.

The idea that we must “believe all women” is similarly reckless, and left-wing activists and abortion-rights groups are pushing it nearly nonstop. Far from being a way to support women, this argument means that the truth of an allegation matters not at all, a terrible development for real victims of assault — not to mention for men falsely accused.

All of this will add up to the average person, who naturally wants justice for survivors, being less inclined to take sexual-abuse allegations seriously, the exact opposite of what the Me Too movement has promised and until now largely delivered. Because these accusations against Kavanaugh have so clearly been weaponized as a partisan tool, it only makes sense that onlookers will dismiss stories presented by biased politicians or shoddy reporting.

When people become numb to outrageous claims launched without verification and wielded by those with no interest in the truth, they will close their eyes to real instances of abuse. This debacle is teaching onlookers to take the stories of victims with a grain of salt. How can the average person be expected to care about seeking justice when so many in the public square seem to care more about advancing an agenda than about discerning who has actually been mistreated or abused?

The Me Too movement has gained immense influence over the last year precisely because it has encouraged us to acknowledge the reality of sexual abuse and follow the truth wherever it leads. Now, the question of whether the accusations against Kavanaugh are true has been subjugated to a political endgame. That promises to destroy the cultural power of the Me Too movement.
https://www.nationalreview.com/2018/09/kavanaugh-nomination-circus-could-destroy-me-too-movement/

Talk about a transparent article! The point is to try to make women think they need to shut up about Kavanaugh's alleged attempted rape of one woman and alleged sexual assault of another, or it'll undermine the wider movement against sexual misconduct against women. Making a claim against a liberal Hollywood type, like Weinstein, is to be commended, but you better frickin' shut you mouth when it comes to Republican golden boys. Nice movement you've got there.... be a shame if anything happened to it.
 
Talk about a transparent article! The point is to try to make women think they need to shut up about Kavanaugh's alleged attempted rape of one woman and alleged sexual assault of another, or it'll undermine the wider movement against sexual misconduct against women. Making a claim against a liberal Hollywood type, like Weinstein, is to be commended, but you better frickin' shut you mouth when it comes to Republican golden boys. Nice movement you've got there.... be a shame if anything happened to it.
that's not it at all. It criticizes the media circus - but also the Dems for the way they played this.

Hopefully you see the difference between a direct detailed claim against Weinstein,and the nebulous political driven agenda of the Dems who are using Ford's very poorly detailed accusations to go after Judge K.

The danger to#meetoo is that it makes it look like noting more then a political stunt when abused like the Dems have done
 
Talk about a transparent article! The point is to try to make women think they need to shut up about Kavanaugh's alleged attempted rape of one woman and alleged sexual assault of another, or it'll undermine the wider movement against sexual misconduct against women. Making a claim against a liberal Hollywood type, like Weinstein, is to be commended, but you better frickin' shut you mouth when it comes to Republican golden boys. Nice movement you've got there.... be a shame if anything happened to it.

The entire point of #MeToo is to wreck media executives/reporters and Hollywood executives/producers/actors. It's not here to make-up charges against judicial nominees.
 
Talk about a transparent article! The point is to try to make women think they need to shut up about Kavanaugh's alleged attempted rape of one woman and alleged sexual assault of another, or it'll undermine the wider movement against sexual misconduct against women. Making a claim against a liberal Hollywood type, like Weinstein, is to be commended, but you better frickin' shut you mouth when it comes to Republican golden boys. Nice movement you've got there.... be a shame if anything happened to it.

It's the same thing they say about racism.......if you point it out, you're a racist and it diminishes real racism.

Then it's not racism at all.
 
Your post don't reflect that view.

Because you're blinded by sticking your head in the sand when it comes to racism.

YOU have been so privileged when it comes to race, you can't understand nor see it.

You probably think there hasn't been racism since slavery.

I'm hear to teach you, if you want to learn. Instead of calling me a racist, how about opening your mind to learning new experiences from someone who doesn't look like you.

And don't tell me you got one Black friend....rolling my eyes
 
Back
Top