Is "actual assault" anything like "legitimate rape"? Grace was pretty clear that there was no violence, just coercion. The point isn't to equate every story, it's to say that it's all harmful, and women have a right to demand men stop harming them. We've normalized a woman telling a man "You're harming me" and his response being "No I'm not" and society's response thus being "No he's not".
Obviously, I don't like expect anyone to read every word I write, but just to be clear now, I did explicitly differentiate this situation from the acts of Weinstein. I don't think considering them both is the same as equating them though. And they don't have to be equally severe behaviors to be rooted in the same poisonous soil. Let's say for instance, I own a slave, who approaches me with wine as I'm talking to my neighbor, also a slaveowner. I don't cease the conversation, but I do wave my slave away, dismissing him offhand, as I don't want a refill. During this conversation, my neighbor mentions whipping his slave for some infraction. Is whipping a slave worse than waving one away? Sure. Are both our behaviors just as rooted in the institution of slavery, in our expectations of being obeyed, in our presumed power over this other person?
Personally, I think focusing on whether men('s careers) are being hurt, on whether men feel bad about having to back off a bit and
self-reflect in how they pursue relationships or even just sex, undermines the whole thing vastly more than the diversity of stories being told by women.
Edited to say: I realize that first line might come off as snark, but I don't mean it to be.
This post has been edited by worry: 16 January 2018 - 04:44 AM