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Stop the ugly victim blaming

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For the record, I made several appearances on the ABC’s panel show The Drum some years ago for which I fully apologise to all and sundry now. It was an error of judgment and I knew it even while I was doing it. A written statement of regret is being prepared. For those who demand more, the cheque is in the mail. Soon. Soonish. In the fullness of time.

Like many panel shows, The Drum is little more than street-corner junk opinion dressed up as expertise, featuring desperate stacks-on-the-mill attempts to make the most tortured and bizarre explanations of the bleeding obvious.

I didn’t watch the show last night. Indeed, I never do – but thanks to the magic of social media I was able to glean part of it and I can report that little or nothing has changed.

Unsurprisingly, there was a great deal of hand-wringing and furrowing of brows over the Harvey Weinstein scandal currently enveloping Hollywood. As expected, there were some takes on the program that were laughably glib.

One panellist, Gray Connolly, took a deep breath before launching into a scattergun hypothesis that amounted to spreading the guilt and shame around in a thin layer, apportioning less blame to the offender, the gelatinous sex creep Harvey Weinstein, than to just about everyone else, including possibly you and me.

“The most dangerous people in society are not your evil people. They are the bystanders. They are the people who do not do anything, do not say anything but let these sort of, erm, power mad, ah, maniacs sort of wreak their havoc on people and say nothing,” Connolly said.

Connolly is a lawyer. A barrister, in fact, the last time I looked. He may well be a very good one. If you’re ever in a spot of bother, you might do well to engage his services and suggest he gives his “culture of the bystander” speech a run.

“My client wishes to plead guilty to all charges, m’lud, but our submission is society is to blame.”

If all goes well, the beak could let you off while ordering everyone else in the courtroom, including himself, into handcuffs to be led away.

One lawyer of my acquaintance was a criminal barrister who had taken silk. He used to joke that he couldn’t help his friends if they ever got divorced as family law was beneath his vast jurisprudential skills but if marital friction did escalate and one did murder one’s spouse, he was the first person to call. So much for ethics and the law.

The case of Harvey Weinstein has put much of the commentariat into a deep, addled confusion. The net has been cast wide in the search for culprits and people considered deserving of the gnarled index finger of blame.

Meryl Streep has been put in the frame although there is not a skerrick of evidence to show she knew of Weinstein’s behaviour. Fellow actors Gwyneth Paltrow and Angelina Jolie say they were subject to indignities at the hands of the Hollywood mogul and they, too, have faced media interrogation as to why they did not come forward earlier.

Ignoring the ugliness of victim-blaming for a moment, the answer is fairly obvious.

Weinstein, a morbidly obese pile of predatory flesh with hair sprouting out in all the wrong places, was powerful and could destroy them.

Some of Hollywood’s biggest male names have been bandied about and what they are supposed to have done lies somewhere between ignorance and callous disregard for Weinstein’s victims. While this may be appalling, there is no parallel between what they did or did not do and what Weinstein is alleged to have done over the past three decades.

As we speak, The New York Times is compiling a list of Hollywood’s A-grade actors, men who are yet to have made statements to the media. The suggestion is their failure to condemn Weinstein should be shaped into an endorsement by omission and thus some measure of complicity is attached by measure of vague association.

Weinstein, whose mug brings to mind a phrase often used by the late Bill Leak, “You get the face you deserve,” is facing allegations of serious criminality that in our legal lexicon includes acts of gross indecency, sexual assault and rape.

The truly desperate among the commentariat have sought to politicise the issue. The Left does these things, the Right is as pure as driven snow or vice versa is how the arguments have gone. Not everything is subject to the nebulous rules of an imaginary linear expression of political opinion. In fact, in life and in crime and its rare moments of punishment, very little does.

If we have learned anything from Weinstein and Co., it is only a reminder that power and the abuse of it is the root cause of predatory sexual behaviour from male to female, and from adult to child for that matter.

Earlier in the week I was witness to a discussion between two middle-aged professional women, one in media, the other in advertising, while they catalogued the sexual abuse, harassment and humiliation they had been subjected to in their working lives. I say witness because it pays to sit quietly and listen at these times.

The accounts were staggering both in extent and gravity and told stories of jobs lost, resignations made, opportunities withdrawn and of unacceptable behaviour reluctantly accepted.

Some say that some good may come of Weinstein’s exposure and that victims and witnesses might now be emboldened to come forward. I am not convinced. Whether it is media, politics or the corner-store mixed business, the same power structure is in place defining the powerful and the vulnerable and that structure is rarely broken. Even if it were, its replacement would merely reinstate a new division between those who have power and those without it.

Let’s not fall for the nonsense that predators like Weinstein are only partly to blame. As difficult as it might be for victims and witnesses, the only way forward is to lay the blame and the consequences squarely on the shoulders of the offender, bearing in mind the fundamental principle of law enforcement, not to mention logic, is that if the offender is removed, the offending comes to a halt.

But then, what would that leave them to babble about on The Drum?

This column was first published in The Australian on October 13, 2017. 

226 Comments

  • Dismayed says:

    Ahh. ” analysis by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis has shown, Adani needs to refinance its Abbot Point coal terminal by by November 2018. In the absence of Galilee Basin coal, the export volumes through the port won’t be sufficient to service the debt.” Oh and on jobs 7 available and # $37 million of Public money is being spent on a airstrip in the middle of nowhere. SCAM.
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/oct/18/jobs-bonanza-the-adani-project-is-more-like-a-railway-to-nowhere

  • Bella says:

    So George Christensen now wants coal protestors charged with terrorism.
    Yes, this myopic overpaid goon, who once commended ISIS for throwing gays off buildings, should charge himself with being an undemocratic waste of space & a future drain on our hospital system.
    Next we’ll have a new definition for a terrorist – anyone who actively disagrees with this government.
    I mean why punish the destroyers of our planet when you can jail those who are trying to save it. ☹

    • John O'Hagan says:

      Yep, scratch the surface of a far-right warrior like George and you’ll find a totalitarian.

      On that, I read today that Bob Brown has won his High Court challenge against Tasmania’s anti-protest laws. I looked out the window to watch the 18C FSWs dancing in the streets, but nothing. I guess free speech is only useful for insulting minorities.

  • jack says:

    the NYT sets out some social media rules

    • In social media posts, our journalists must not express partisan opinions, promote political views, endorse candidates, make offensive comments or do anything else that undercuts The Times’s journalistic reputation.

    • Our journalists should be especially mindful of appearing to take sides on issues that The Times is seeking to cover objectively.

    2. Would someone who reads your post have grounds for believing that you are biased on a particular issue?

    https://tinyurl.com/y8ocf479

    i hope the ABC doesn’t have rules like this, it would take all the fun out of it.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      They do, mate. I know of an ABC part time employee who ran afoul of it and was dispatched to the dreaded counselling room. The common disclaimer “thoughts and views my own” do not amount to much. As is generally the case in all matters vaguely editorial there is a lever arched binder size set of rules, regulations, guidelines and explanatory notes at the ABC for those of its minions who engage on social media.

  • The Outsider says:

    Just when I was thinking that Maurice Newman was the most willfully ignorant commentator around, look what popped out from under the Stone: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/opinion/abbotts-speech-tells-it-like-it-is-on-global-warming/news-story/d8d96960c3744a53bb69a994f9e2ad6a

    Honestly, you couldn’t make up just how deluded these people are and you’d expect a former head of Treasury to understand that, just because a little of something is good for you, a lot of it isn’t necessarily better.

    • John O'Hagan says:

      There will always be puffed-up know-nothings spouting nonsense to anyone who’ll listen. The problem is that Australia’s only national daily newspaper hands these fools a megaphone with such regularity.

  • Dismayed says:

    The coalition government have abandoned the Australian people and future generations. Their “energy” announcement today locks in further power price rises effectively Subsidising Coal and Gas even further. This is the worst government in this Nations history.

    • Bella says:

      This government is corrupt & despicable.
      Prime Miniscule Turncoat has once again capitulated to Abbott & the climate deniers just so he can keep his job.
      Their re-election chances are now none to zero so they will be gone soon. What a mess they’ve made of future renewables investment.

  • Dismayed says:

    Oh yes The US Government’s Congressional Budget Office has compiled this handy comparative study of global corporate tax rates. Turns out Australia has an effective corporate tax rate of 10.4% yet the regressive Taliban coalition of Australia still want to put more unfunded tax cuts into the system which all research and data shows will NOT increase economic activity. FN Disgrace.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Another “Barry Crocker” of a Newspoll, Mr Insider, as the Coalition is trailing in its 21st consecutive Newspoll, with Labor maintaining its two-party lead of 54-46% and Malcolm Turnbull suffering a setback in his personal ratings. The all time “Champeen” was one T. Abbott who scored 30 bad ones in a row before his Liberal Party threw him out.
    http://tinyurl.com/y7aup6ej

  • Milton says:

    Beginning to think all this climate change “crap” is just a ruse by the poms to make us all like them and whingeing about the weather. Considering talk of thoughts, religions, philosophies, ideologies etc are passe or dead, it’s an ever present, daily diversion. Existential even!

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Who is whinging about the weather? Observing isn’t whinging. We had what would have been a decade ago the hottest day of the year in the middle of winter this year. That’s astonishing and exhilarating. We are definitely absolutely positively stuffed Milton. It’s all over for The Naked Ape bar the starving and wailing and a lot sooner than you think, so don’t wait for permission from God or the Suits, throw off the harness of conformity and denial, embrace extinction and hang on for the ride!
      It hasn’t got to “don’t buy any green bananas just yet” but when it does, about a decade from now, there wont be any bananas. So live it up or not doing so will be the greatest mistake of your life when the pennies finally drop with a resounding “boing” on your vacuous melon.
      https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/tag/climate-change-denial

      • Milton says:

        Human extinction is probably the best thing that could happen to planet earth, JB.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        I say JB, everyone now knows that these constant 10 year “extinction” prophecies are the last refuge of the hoaxer. These feeble and febrile predictions are nothing more than a cynical strategy by the trickster to buy time to create a fresh angle as the earlier offerings turn to mush. The ape is not naked, but the climate prankster’s pants have been well and truely pulled down and there ain’t nothing left to see me old mate.

        And besides, if as predicted there “won’t be any bananas” a decade from now, it follows that there similarly won’t be any melons for the pennies to drop on. This just further illustrates what a tangled mess the ‘warming’ doomsayers have gotten themselves into.

        I would have thought that your short sabatical may have resulted in just a scintilla of common sense on the subject me old mate.

        • Milton says:

          To quote from a Graham Greene character “People don’t demand that a thing be reasonable if their emotions are touched”, Carl. And I thought your ‘febrile’ and apt term.

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          Are you going to offer any sources to back up any of that magical thinking Carl? The situation is now far worse than almost anybody dreamed it would be.
          As for your second paragraph, a profoundly bizarre extrapolation , congratulations, it was presumed the pennies would drop before there were no bananas. In your mechanism though I suspect there is no penny available to ever drop or the cogs are seized fast. Try a squirt of Lanotec in your lughole. You never know. It’s lanolin based ,appropriate , biodegradble and environmentally friendly.
          You are simply in denial old boy, a coping strategy, and in my judgement a strategy perfectly appropriate, in fact I cant think of another option you might successfully attempt.
          However, for those who can, the facts should be faced.

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqIt93dDG1M

        • Wissendorf says:

          the scintilla is down sharply against the dollar

      • Lou oTOD says:

        I am reminded that there are certain animals on this earth JB who change sex depending on the prevailing temperature.

        How’s it going girlie?

  • Milton says:

    Where does truth lie?
    That is the question.

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