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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

  • BASSMAN says:

    Bishop has put her foot in her mouth again. What an incompetent. How does she hold down a gig? Its tghe old Tories born to rule thing “Oh Labor won’t have a chance of getting in”. She should stick to jogging! As far away from us as possible.

    • Henry Blofeld says:

      Agree with your comments 100% BASSMAN goodness me it was only a few days ago she was assuring Australia that Fat Kimmie of North Korea “definitely wont be attacking us”. How does she know that. Time for a flush in the Liberal Party as long as the already “flushed” do not return! Cheers

  • Dismayed says:

    Does anyone remember me talking about Tom Cooper the SACA batsman that has a higher ODI average than any current Australian team member? He continue to tear it up with a rough house cameo following on the good work by the SACA top order with Travis Head supporting with a sedate 29 off 14 deliveries to date against the very strong Vic attack. Talk about Vic (tim) bashing

  • Dismayed says:

    This will be very interesting. Holy Wars indeed by Crickey.
    “Over the next two weeks, Crikey will catalogue one of the ugliest and most insidious features of Australian public life: the permanent spectacle of one of the country’s handful of serious daily news operations abusing its power to conduct personalised vindictive editorial warfare dressed up as objective reporting.”

  • Mack the Knife says:

    This latest about Hollywood, which seems to have gone global, reminds me of the two Coreys, Haim & Feldman. When Corey Feldman reported about pedophiles in Hollywood a few years ago I don’t recall the same outrage. Strange.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      He’s bobbed up again with the same claim. I don’t think anyone doubts him but he has to make a specific allegation.

    • Milton says:

      It’s not a well written article Mack, but in a way raising the same concerns (and maybe hysterically), yet undoubtedly plausible:
      http://takimag.com/article/the_overlord_of_oscar_bait_steve_sailer#axzz4vy4otyxg
      How’s about chaperone’s? And if we are being open and honest, it is not just man on woman, but also man on younger man. It is no secret how the art world has rich, older, powerful men “patronising” younger “artists”. Sam Wagstaff and Mapplethorpe come to mind. Though in this case, from what I gather, it was a case of mutual exploitation, or win win. Personally, I think Mapplethorpe wasn’t a photographers arsehole. Peter Hujar’s the man.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Come on Winston Peters you wally give the lovely Jacinda Ardern the nod to be the next NZ PM. Jacinda has a fetching smile, Mr Insider, that instils confidence, possibly a politically incorrect comment in this day and age.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacinda_Ardern

  • Dismayed says:

    Australia’s next keeper former GWS Giant young Alex Carey made a nice 92 just dismissed and the next opener in waiting young Jake Weatherald on 111 n.o. the SACA’s 1/212 after 36 overs against a strong Victorian bowling attack. Carey may have to wait until Neville gets another run but he will be very close if he can make some shield runs.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Nevill. No ‘e’ at the end. Carey is in the selectors’ thoughts but maybe for the longer term. Good player though, no doubt.

      • Dismayed says:

        Actually I hope they go for Nevill in the test’s Carey in the short stuff. Tim Paine very unlucky has done his job every time he has played was talk of him as a future leader when he came into the side over in England a couple of years ago but broken fingers for about 2 or 3 seasons has really shut down his career. Now with Wade back in Tas. he will struggle to get a game anywhere. I would still have him up there with the best keepers in the country and his batting is very good.

  • Dismayed says:

    Gibbs to the Crows, the Blues get more than he is worth with 2 early first round picks. The Crows just not very good on the trade game.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Carlton, Essendon and Port seem to have had the biggest wins. Lions maybe, too.

      • Dismayed says:

        Ports on ball brigade runs deep now and with Watts and Motlop up around half forward to help big Charlie Dixon they have to improve. Any forward line with a firing Stringer has to be better. Not sure about Carlton picking Lobbe, he went backwards last year, struggled in the SANFL, change may do him good but I went off him long ago when he was playing for West Adelaide, I watched him stop and allow another teams player a free run at the ball. He was dragged as he should have been but did go back on the coach and club were a lot more forgiving than me. One of the softest things I have ever seen on a football field.

      • Penny says:

        JTI, maybe but I’m not exactly thrilled by Stringer. Let’s hope he can shrug off the adverse publicity and prove that he’s worth playing for the Bombers. We still have a tenuous relationship with the football loving public so we shall see.

        Dismayed the Crows could be better at the trade game if your captain pulled his head in and stopped being an absolute jerk about players that want to leave the club. He’s shown himself to be a sore loser and his leadership skills are questionable

        • Jack The Insider says:

          There is a risk associated with him, no doubt but given his impact over the last three years and putting his personal problems to one side, he is the sort of player that should have been traded for two first round picks. Essendon got a bargain in that respect and if he shows maturity he could be very, very good for your club.

        • Dismayed says:

          Dr Penny, a lot of what was in the media was just over blown hype. I have no issue with a captain having very forthright discussions with players especially if they are walking away from a club that gave them their first opportunity. Lever is tough and gutsy but also can be ill disciplined. Walker is probably the most over rated big forward in the game. He stops props and feels for the defender just about every contest instead of just using his size to run straight up the ground and crash packs. Adelaide have some work to do but will get 2 other big bodied on ballers back from knee injuries this year. But their much hyped big boys up front need to step up.

  • jack says:

    i am sure there is a fair bit of this weinstein nonsense in a lot of industries and professions but here is a sensible piece on why it is much more prevalent in show business.

    https://tinyurl.com/yc23jyhp

    perhaps it becomes more common as opportunties get harder to access.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Yes. Also rare in any industry where certain individuals have so much power over another’s destiny. Only really two or three these days in Weinstein’s position.

    • Dwight says:

      In economics an industry or profession where all the rewards accrue to those at the top is called a tournament. In one of the Freakonomics books Levitt talks about why street drug dealers live with their mothers. Hollywood is just such an industry. That kind of concentration of power is inherently a problem.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    JB, I saw your 9.51pm 18 Oct note attempting to suggest the end is nigh, the apocalypse is closer than some may realise and you sought my “facts” to indicate why your gloomy outlook should be rebutted.

    Surely you’re not suggesting that I should participate in that silly game of yours where one offers up continuous streams of pretty graphs and pics supported by the most dubious of text and the constant revisions of deliberate esoteric doctrine so as to match the never-ending changes to dodgy computer modelling in order for a phalanx of white coats and others whose conscious or otherwise intent is to persist in fleecing a portion of a large part of the international population’s hard-earned while they (the workers) toil away attempting to make ends meet and who have no time for participating in the monstrous blarney that you so clearly appear to have gotten yourself caught up in.

    You should know better me old mate.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Perish the thought, I suggested no such thing. I was very clear in advising that you were not capable of confronting reality and should stick to your strategy of AGW denial for the sake of your equilibrium. Such as it is.
      On reflection , reading again the middle paragraph of your post, I have never seen so many unfounded opinions expressed in a single sentence, I realise that I have used the word “equilibrium” in a most reckless manner and hope it will be perceived in the context as irony.

      http://www.huffingtonpost.com.au/entry/obama-climate-change_us_57d16526e4b06a74c9f2d9fc

      But then again Obama is capable of drawing a logical conclusion from examining a graph.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        I say JB, your professor Peter Wadhams from Cambridge Uni, a global warming enthusiast if ever there was one, has a balanced and rational approach to your concerns. He puts you in the camp of using “breathless overkill”. He also has the firm opinion that the so called evidence of impending global extinction, etc is at best equivocal. It patently “doesn’t justify all the razzamatazz.”

        I suppose I’d be pushing it uphill to even suggest you take a leaf or two out of the good professor’s book me old mate.

        • Carl on the Coast says:

          PS.
          JB says: “Perish the thought, I suggested no such thing.”
          You did too! See below.
          Jean Baptiste October 18, 2017 at 9:51 pm says: – “Are you going to offer any sources to back up any of that magical thinking Carl? “

  • Bassman says:

    Welcome back John the Baptiste…..back to save us all!

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