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Maybe women's ability to destroy men's carrier with #meToo men on twitter and similarly sue young men in universities, give them an overinflated sense of what they can achieve when due process is involved.
We had one instance where a 200 lb girl went to HR and said that someone else made an inappropriate sexual comment to her. 5 people, including me, were present and no one corroborated her story the way she saw it. Everyone (about 40 people) decided she was too much of a liability to talk to anymore so we all just kept our distance. She then went to HR and said we ostracized her.
I made a comment in mixed company about how fat women are in Oregon.
Maybe women's ability to destroy men's carrier with #meToo men on twitter and similarly sue young men in universities, give them an overinflated sense of what they can achieve when due process is involved.
Scorned women out for revenge.
Fortwaynemobile saysScorned women out for revenge.
Scorned, or fully appreciated for what they were? This is just a re-negotiation of the terms and conditions of the contract for gain. Never mistake secondary gain for revenge.
It would make more sense to attack him for sexual harassment.
As long as it was implicit that sexual favors were needed to help the carrier of women, it doesn't matter if the women willingly agreed, it's clear qui pro quo harassment and abuse of his position of power.
"Everybody says, 'Oh, are you telling women that if they go to hotel rooms they deserve to be raped?' No," Rotunno said. "What I'm saying is that after having drinks and being at a party and sitting in a bar with somebody and going to their hotel at midnight, don't be so ridiculous as to say, 'I thought I was going to see a script.' At some point, where is the responsibility?"
...
She presented the accuser, Jessica Mann, a 34-year-old hairstylist, with copies of an unpublished blog post that prosecutors recovered from her phone.
"You told the jury the threesome was horrifying because it was something you didn't want to do," Rotunno said. "I would like you to read the note from your phone to the ladies and gentlemen of the jury."
"Do I have to?" Mann asked, turning her head toward Justice James Burke.
"Yes," Rotunno said.
After a long pause, Mann began reading the years-old post, describing a threesome with an unnamed "older man" and an Italian woman, seemingly the same one she mentioned in her testimony.
Loaded with jokes, expletives, and erotic descriptions of the woman's body, the written version characterized the encounter as exciting, not upsetting. At one point it compared Mann to a "14-year-old boy about to lose his virginity."
"This is what really happened," Rotunno said after Mann read.
Mann disagreed. She said she wrote the post only because she "wanted to reframe it for comedy."
https://www.insider.com/donna-rotunno-harvey-weinstein-lawyer-profile-feminism-2020-2