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The good thing is, these days people are a lot more confident coming forward, 50 years ago there was absolutely no where for women to turn.That was a truly horrifying story. Left the Judge almost without words.
One point to make clearly that was in one of the articles I read about the case. It was the courage of the wife to make the charge and then allow her name and his name to be publicised. She made it clear that while her case was abhorrent she also wanted to encourage any similar victims to step forward and not be shamed into silence. I hope she doesn't cope the sort of disrespect and disbelief that is sometimes levelled in this situation.
After 30 years of " no one saying, no one asking" the worst kept secret of Hollywood final blew up. Harvey Weinsten was accused of being a serial sexual harrasser of women and finally the message was heard.
The fallout has been dramatic for Harvey and his company. He is now a pariah. His wife has left him. He faces multiple legal charges and hundreds perhaps thousands of women are telling or repeating their stories of his sexual aggression.
On the bigger stage however thousands of other women (and men) coming forth with their experiences of harrassment as children, students, employees and just people on the street.
So what could happen as an outcome of this widespread revolt against unwanted assault ? What could change ?
What does sexual harrassment under Harvey Weisten sound like ? How would you feel ?
A Reporter at Large
October 23, 2017 Issue
From Aggressive Overtures to Sexual Assault: Harvey Weinstein’s Accusers Tell Their Stories
Multiple women share harrowing accounts of sexual assault and harassment by the film executive.
By Ronan Farrow
Check story for link to audio tape of Harvey hitting on a young actress
.
https://www.newyorker.com/news/news...harvey-weinsteins-accusers-tell-their-stories
And in one fell swoop, destroyed the proper meaning of the word for a whole generation.
Well, the question is, is it the tip of an iceberg or an isolated case?This trial is dominating French media. It is quite horrific. They fact that most of the 80- plus men who raped the unconscious woman were neighbours in her small town makes it so much more personal.
‘Not all men, but a lot of them’: will Gisèle Pelicot rape trial finally change France’s attitude to sexual abuse?
The horrifying details of the case that shook the country, and the local mayor’s reaction, show a refusal to confront abuse
Kim Willsher in Paris
Sat 21 Sep 2024 10.40 EDT
As the horror of how Dominique Pelicot drugged his wife, Gisèle, and allowed at least 83 men to rape her continued to unfold in a French courtroom last week, it was hard to see how the case “could have been worse” as one local official suggested.
Louis Bonnet, mayor of Mazan, the southern French town of 6,000 people where the Pelicots and a number of the alleged rapists lived, who added that “no one was killed”, later apologised and admitted his words were not “entirely appropriate”.
For French feminists and women’s activists, however, Bonnet’s ill-judged comments encapsulated how France has failed to respond to the #MeToo movement and is “abysmally” lagging behind in addressing sexual abuse socially and legally.
‘Not all men, but a lot of them’: will Gisèle Pelicot rape trial finally change France’s attitude to sexual abuse?
The horrifying details of the case that shook the country, and the local mayor’s reaction, show a refusal to confront abusewww.theguardian.com
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