T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1004.1 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Tue Aug 27 1991 14:58 | 1 |
| Anyone who Molly Yard is against can't be all bad.
|
1004.2 | I hate ignorance | RDGENG::LIBRARY | unconventional conventionalist | Tue Aug 27 1991 15:13 | 4 |
| I'm English - give me some background, please - like who is this
person?
Alice T.
|
1004.3 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Note to the Trashcan Sinatras. | Fri Aug 30 1991 13:35 | 518 |
| Article: 532
Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
Subject: Center for Const. Rights: Judge Thomas nomination
Sender: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
Organization: PACH
Date: Thu, 29 Aug 1991 02:56:24 GMT
/** pn.publiceye: 32.0 **/
** Topic: CCR Statement on Judge Thomas **
** Written 3:15 pm Aug 27, 1991 by peacenet in cdp:pn.publiceye **
From ccr Mon Aug 26 10:22:53 1991
STATEMENT BY
THE CENTER FOR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
AGAINST THE NOMINATION OF
JUDGE CLARENCE THOMAS
TO THE U.S. SUPREME COURT
The Center For Constitutional Rights
666 Broadway, 7th Floor
New York, New York 10012
Tel. (212) 614-6464
Fax. (212) 614-6499
The Center for Constitutional Rights urges all groups and
individuals who are concerned with social justice to vigorously
oppose the nomination of Judge Clarence Thomas to the Supreme
Court.
This nomination is completely unacceptable for the many
reasons detailed below, which include Judge Thomas' controversial
role as administrator of the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission (EEOC), his views on the most serious issues currently
facing women and people of color, and his judicial
qualifications, which, like most of the Bush-Reagan appointments to
the federal bench, reflect slender legal and judicial experience.
Moreover, this nomination is an insult to the African-American community
which must now endure, if President Bush has his way,the replacement of
a legendary African-American fighter for human rights -- Justice Thurgood
Marshall -- with a right-wing African-American bureaucrat -- Judge Clarence
Thomas.
It is also an affront to millions of Americans -- people of
color, women, laboring people, the poor, the elderly -- who, for
the past 25 years, looked to the Supreme Court as the final
arbiter and protector of their rights.
By selecting Judge Thomas, President Bush seeks to get one
step closer to the goal he and President Reagan charted 11 years
ago, and which they have nearly accomplished: the appointment of
conservative judges to all levels of the federal court system,
including the Supreme Court, who will alter the judicial face of
our country for generations to come.
While President Bush, who recently demonstrated his dedication to
civil rights by opposing the Civil Rights Bill, cynically
plays on the legitimate desire of many people to see diversity on the
court, let there be no doubt about it: he intends to utilize a
person of color to put the last nail in the coffin containing the
progressive legacy of Justice Marshall. This nomination raises
the nightmarish prospect of right-wing presidents using women and
people of color to reverse the gains won over the past three
decades, gains won with blood and tears. It cannot -- to use
President Bush's own words in another grim context -- be allowed
to stand.
Judge Thomas is an unsuitable candidate for the following
reasons:
*********
Record as Chair of the Equal Employment Commission
While serving as Chairman of the EEOC, the agency which
enforces federal laws prohibiting employment discrimination on
the basis of race, sex, national origin and age, Judge Thomas
informed a senate committee that more than 13,000 age discrimination
complaints were at risk of being lost because they were not
processed before the expiration of the two-year statute of
limitations.1
During his tenure, the number of class action suits declined
precipitously in comparison to the number of individual cases.
This meant that the agency was more concerned with individual
cases than with challenges to systemic discrimination. In fact,
Judge Thomas wrote, "most of our cases involve discrimination by a
particular manager or supervisor, rather than a 'policy' of
discrimination..."2
Judge Thomas' methodology was described as follows in a
profile in the Atlantic Monthly:
If an employer over the years denies jobs to hundreds of
qualified women or blacks because he does not want women
or blacks working for him, Thomas is not prepared to see
a "pattern and practice" of discrimination. He sees
hundreds of local, individual acts of discrimination.
Thomas would require every woman or black whom that
employer had discriminated against to come to the
government and prove his or her allegation. The burden
is on the individual. The remedy is back pay and a job.
"Anyone asking the government to do more is barking up
the wrong tree," Thomas says.3
The General Accounting Office found in 1988 that a large
number of cases were closed -- from 40 to 87 percent -- because
allegations were not fully investigated by the field offices and
state fair employment practices agencies.4 In addition, the
backlog of cases at the EEOC rose from 31,500 in 1983 to 46,000
in 1989, as did the processing time -- from 4 to 7 months in 1983 to
almost 10 months in 1989.5 The number of equal pay cases
declined from 35 in 1982 to 7 in 1989.6 And the agency ceased to
aggressively pursue its mandate: former EEOC Chair Eleanor Holmes
Norton wrote, "The EEOC effectively has lost the role as lead
agency conferred to it by the historic Civil Rights
Reorganization of 1978, not because of any change in law, but by
abdication to the Justice Department."7 Finally, even the Civil Rights
Commission, which had lost much of its steam in the Reagan years,
reported in 1987 that "on a number of policy issues requiring regulatory
activity, the EEOC to date has accomplished very little."8
Actions and views about affirmative action.
Judge Thomas regards affirmative action as useless and
harmful to the initiative of African-Americans (this despite the fact
that he took advantage of an affirmative action policy at Yale Law
School). The author of the Atlantic Monthly portrait described
Judge Thomas as believing that "There is no governmental
solution" [to historical discrimination], and that "government simply
cannot make amends, and therefore should not try."9
In an interview in the New York Times in July 1982, Judge
Thomas said:
I am unalterably opposed to programs that force or even
cajole people to hire a certain percentage of minorities.
I watched the operation of such affirmative-action
policies when I was in college, and I watched the
destruction of many kids as a result. It was wrong for
those kids, and it was wrong to give that kind of false
hope.10
He wrote, "A positive civil rights policy would aim at reducing
barriers to employment, instead of trying to get 'good numbers.'"11
And further:
I don't think that government should be in the business
of parceling out rights or benefits. Rights emanate from
the Constitution and from the Declaration. They are
there, and they should be protected. I am not confident
that Washington is any more moral or stronger than anyone
else to assign rights, or even better able to do it. We
should be careful not to concede the rights of
individuals in our society in order to gain something
such as parity. Ultimately that will do us a
disservice.12
While heading up the EEOC, Judge Thomas changed its previous
practice of setting goals and timetables for employers to make
jobs available to women and people of color. In 1985, according to an
Alliance for Justice report, "the EEOC acting general counsel,
with the Chairman's support, ordered EEOC regional attorneys not to
include goals and timetables for settlements or in actions in
which the EEOC had intervened. The general counsel also ordered legal
staff not to seek enforcement of goals and timetables in existing
consent decrees." This prompted a protest by five congresspersons
who stated that the "Commission is forfeiting the most effective
tool to combat centuries of discrimination." It was only when
the Supreme Court handed down three decisions in May and June 1986
upholding the use of goals and timetables that Judge Thomas promised to
reinstate the policy.13
Judge Thomas acknowledged the deeply entrenched racism in
this country when he said, "There is nothing you can do to get past
black skin. I don't care how educated you are, how good you are
at what you do -- you'll never have the same contacts or
opportunities, you'll never be seen as equal to whites."14 Yet
he eschews affirmative action as a way to reduce "barriers to
employment," and offers no other alternatives, leaving women and
people of color to the mercy of the very people he distrusts.
Other racial matters
Judge Thomas complained about civil rights leaders who
"bitch, bitch, bitch, moan and moan and whine" about the Reagan
Administration.15
A sharp exchange took place between Judge Thomas and Joseph
H. Duff in a symposium on affirmative action:
Thomas: A race-conscious law is one that defines rights
based on race. Segregation and apartheid are race-conscious laws.
Duff: I was admitted to law school under the University
of California's Equal Opportunity Program. I passed the bar
exam, and now practice law in the community. That is a good
race policy.
Thomas: It is good for you.
Duff: It is also good for the community and the society.
Thomas: No, I think it is good for you. When I went to
college the problems with those policies were quite
significant as were the animosities they generated.16
"Right to life," the family, and contraception
Although Judge Thomas has not ruled directly on these issues
during his tenure as a judge, a good idea of his general attitude
about family issues can be obtained from the 1987 report issued
by President Reagan's Working Group on the Family, of which Judge
Thomas was a member. This report is such a litany of right-wing
views about the family that it is worthwhile quoting it at
length. It includes discussions about the nature of the family
(preferably, a traditional nuclear constellation), divorce (it
should be made harder to obtain); the Supreme Court's "weakening"
of the traditional family; teen-age sexuality (it must be restricted);
women staying at home to care for children (it should be encouraged),
and so on:
...If an ever larger percentage of adults choose not to
marry or choose to remain without children, there will be
public implications...With current fertility levels and
without immigration, our population will decline; this is
a problem we share with much of the western world...17
***
The disconcerting truth is that judicial activism over
the last several decades has eroded this special status
[of the family] considerably.18
***
...[In the past 25 years the Supreme Court has handed]
down a series of decisions which would abruptly strip the
family of its legal protections and pose the question of
whether this most fundamental of American institutions
retains any standing...The Court has struck down State
attempts to protect the life of children in utero, to
protect paternal interest in the life of the child before
birth, and to respect parental authority over minor
children in abortion decisions...The Supreme Court has
turned the fundamental freedom to marry into a right to
divorce without paying court costs. It has journeyed
from protection of the "intimate relation of husband and
wife" in its contraception cases to the dictum that "the
marital couple is not an independent entity with a heart
and mind of its own..."19
***
...traditional divorce laws inhibited easy
separations...In so doing, they sometimes made things
difficult, and changes in divorce law may well have been
overdue. But in a relatively short period of time,
almost all the states adopted a model divorce law that
established, in effect, no-fault divorce.20
***
...enrollment in a family planning program appeared to
raise a teenager's chances of becoming pregnant and of
having an abortion.21
***
At a minimum, no Federal program should provide
incentives for sexual activity by teens. No Federal
activity should contravene the approach we have taken to
drug abuse: we do not compromise with self-destructive
behavior. We insist that it stop and we provide
assistance to those young people who want to regain
control of their future.22
***
Government should not provide incentives -- or make
things easier -- for teenagers tempted to promiscuity.
For example, AFDC benefits should be restructured to
limit their availability to those minors who agree to
continue to live with their parents. This step would go
a long way toward making illegitimate motherhood less
attractive in the poverty culture.23
***
Unlike Sweden, for example, the mothers of America
managed to avoid becoming just so many more cogs in the
wheels of commerce.24
***
In one of the great tragedies of American life, tens of
thousands of childless families wait for children to
adopt while 1.8 million other Americans abort their
unborn children each year.25
Judge Thomas' comments about abortion have raised such
enormous concern that most leading women's organizations are
opposing his nomination. In a speech he made in 1987 to the
Heritage Foundation Judge Thomas spoke favorably about an article
written by another conservative, Lewis E. Lehrman, in which
Lehrman wrote:
Adapting Lincoln's words from his patient struggle for
the inalienable right to liberty in the 1850's, we may
now say that the "durable" moral issue of our age is the
struggle for the inalienable right to life of the child-
in-the-womb -- and thus the right to life of all future
generations...
May it be reasonably supposed that an expressly
stipulated right to life, as set forth in the Declaration
and the Constitution, is to be set aside in favor of the
conjured right to abortion in Roe v. Wade, a spurious
right born exclusively of judicial supremacy with not a
single trace of lawful authority, implicit or explicit,
in the actual text or history of the Constitution itself?
Are we finally to suppose that the right to life of the
child-about-to-be-born -- an inalienable right, the first
in the sequence of God-given rights warranted in the
Declaration of Independence and also enumerated first
among the basic positive rights to life, liberty, and
property stipulated in the Fifth and Fourteenth
Amendments of the Constitution -- are we, against all
reason and American history, to suppose that the right to
life as set forth in the American Constitution may be
lawfully eviscerated and amended by the Supreme Court of
the United States, with neither warrant nor amendment
directly or indirectly from the American people
whatsoever?26
Judge Thomas said Lehrman's article "on the Declaration of
Independence and the meaning of the right to life is a splendid
example of applying natural law."27 This view, according to some
legal scholars, puts Judge Thomas to the right even of Justice
Scalia in the matter of abortion, since no justice currently on
the Supreme Court has voiced the view that the fetus has either God-
given or constitutional rights. Translated into current
realities, a court that took this position could not only overturn Roe but
could make abortion illegal in all states.
The Griswold v. Connecticut decision, which gave married
couples the right to obtain legal contraceptives, also caused
Judge Thomas some unease. He wrote:
Some senators and scholars are horrified by Judge Bork's
dismissal of the Ninth Amendment, as others were
horrified by Justice Arthur Goldberg's discovery, or
rather invention, of it in Griswold v. Connecticut."
["The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights,
shall not be construed to deny or disparage others
retained by the people."]
...A major question remains: Does the Ninth Amendment,
as Justice Goldberg contended, give to the Supreme Court
certain powers to strike down legislation? That would
seem to be a blank check. The Court could designate
something to be a right and then strike down any law it
thought violated that right. And Congress might also use
its powers to protect such rights -- say a "right" to
welfare.28
Economic issues and congressional oversight
As illustrated above, Judge Thomas' distaste for welfare
surfaces in many of his writings and speeches, but probably his
most widely-publicized comment was made about his own sister, who
received public assistance for six years while she cared for the
aged aunt who had helped raise her. Judge Thomas said, "She gets
mad when the mailman is late with her welfare check. That is how
dependent she is. What's worse is that now her kids feel
entitled to the check too. They have no motivation for doing better or
getting out of that situation."29 His distrust of governmental
economic aid extends to criticisms of minimum wage laws and
unfair labor practices as unnatural interference with the economic
process.30
Judge Thomas also appears to distrust congress. He wrote
that congress was "out of control," and cited none other than Ollie
North as a person competent to assess this: "Congress remains
the keystone of the Washington establishment. Over the past several
years, Congress has cleverly assumed a neutral ombudsman role and
has thrust the tough choices on the bureaucracy, which Congress
dominates through its oversight function. As Lt. Col. Oliver
North made it perfectly clear last summer, it is Congress that is out
of control."31 Legal scholars fear that Judge Thomas may be
unsympathetic to congressional initiatives on oversight.
Judicial Experience
The idea that President Bush chose the best-qualified person
for this job is not credible.
Judge Thomas has served on the U.S. District Court of
Appeals for only 16 months. Before that, he was Chairman of the Equal
Employment Opportunities Commission for eight years, an
administrative role which was much-criticized and controversial.
His actual legal experience includes three years in then-Missouri
Attorney General John Danforth's office, followed by a two-year
stint at the Monsanto Corporation. He then served as a
legislative assistant to Danforth for two years, and served for a year
at the Department of Education's civil rights division.
In the days following the nomination many legal scholars
expressed concern about the question of qualifications,
especially Professor Derrick Bell of Harvard, who commented, "Even
had Bush limited his selection pool to black judges on the federal courts
of appeal, there are at least a half-dozen other black judges whose
accomplishments, both on the bench and before becoming federal
judges, put those of Thomas to shame."32
Judge Thomas' record since becoming an appeals judge is
undistinguished and spotty. As of July 3, 1991 Judge Thomas had
authored 16 opinions. While these opinions, standing alone,
offer no clear indication of what positions Judge Thomas will take in
civil rights and women's rights cases if he is elevated to the
Supreme Court, it appears that he will provide an additional vote
to the Court's present conservative majority in criminal cases.
Two decisions, however, should be of concern to workers and
environmentalists. In one case,33 Judge Thomas rejected a union
challenge to a Labor Department decision permitting a mine owner
in Alabama to use a high-voltage electrical cable within 150 feet of
a working mine face in violation of federal regulations. The
union had argued that use of these cables would increase miners'
exposure to dust and methane, create ventilation problems and make escape
from the mines more difficult. In another case,34 Judge Thomas
rejected a challenge by an alliance of Toledo, Ohio residents to
a Federal Aviation Administration decision authorizing expansion of
a local airport. The residents contended that the FAA had
violated several environmental statutes and regulations.
The qualifications issue existed even when Judge Thomas was
nominated to his present post on the U.S. district court:
fourteen members of congress, all chairpersons and high-ranking
members of house committees which oversee the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission, opposed it. At that time,
representatives of more than 20 public interest organizations
expressed concerns about Judge Thomas' qualifications during Senate
Judiciary Committee hearings.
Conclusion
Judge Thomas, who called Robert Bork's defeat
"disgraceful,"35 is a complicated man, at once a dedicated conservative
and a self- described admirer of both Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm
X, something of a nationalist, a critic of affirmative action and
a "bootstrapper," a man who suffered extreme poverty and
discrimination but one who believes in little or no government
assistance to combat these conditions. His nomination has
appalled otherwise moderately conservative African-American commentators
like Carl Rowan:
It horrifies me that the country might have to endure 40
years of opinions of a black man who has shown no sense
of compassion for the needs of the poor, who hasn't the
guts to acknowledge that 'self-help' isn't enough in a
milieu of institutionalized racism, and who embraces
heartless legalisms where abortion and other rights of
women are at issue.36
The Center for Constitutional Rights believes that Judge
Thomas' inconsistency and complexity should be scant comfort to
progressive-minded people. As Christopher Edley, an African-
American commentator, wrote in the Washington Post: "If there
were a snowball's chance in Hades that Thomas would be a moderate on
the court, he would not have been nominated."37
In fact, we fear that Judge Thomas' successful appointment
will impact on the court in a way that goes beyond mere
conservatism. His voice will be used to permit extreme
conservatism to re-emerge. That it comes from an African-American
will be used as tragic legitimation of those views. Judge Thomas will
likely participate in the end of legal abortion in this country; and he
may also extend new economic concepts of deregulation, which will make
life even more difficult for the great majority of people in this country.
Even if, as some people predict, a defeat of this nomination
is followed by the selection of someone even less suitable, the
Center for Constitutional Rights believes that this battle is
worthwhile. Though the conservative tide is lapping over the
steps of the Supreme Court, there are many millions of people who will
continue to search -- and who will find -- a way to struggle
successfully for their human rights. It is this standard of
human rights to which we must insist that all prospective Supreme Court
justices subscribe.
We urge all civil rights and civil liberties organizations
to take a position against the nomination of Judge Thomas and
request all such organizations that haven't issued conclusive positions
to do so as soon as possible. This nomination is an insult, not a
pat on the back. Finally, we urge all fair-minded people to
communicate their ideas and thoughts on this subject to the
members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, to their congressperson and
senator, and to their local newspapers and media outlets. We
remain convinced that the voices of the millions of people to
whom this is a vital concern will be heard.
New York City
August 22, 1991
***********************
The Center for Constitutional Rights is a non-profit legal and educational
organization dedicated to advancing and protecting the rights guaranteed
by the United States Constitution and the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights.
For further information contact:
Joan Gibbs, Dorothy Zellner, Frank Deale or Vernice Miller at:
(212) 614-6464
(212) 614-6499 (fax)
For distribution and computer networking, contact Chris Agee at
CCR: (212) 614-6437
** End of text from cdp:pn.publiceye **
|
1004.4 | | BUBBLY::LEIGH | can't change the wind, just the sails | Sat Aug 31 1991 03:23 | 4 |
| >I urge all of you to contact Chairman
>Joseph Biden and other members of the Senate Judiciary Commitee.
Can someone provide a pointer to their names and addresses?
|
1004.5 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Sat Aug 31 1991 15:07 | 13 |
| Well, there's Ted "Rape, what rape? We'll drive off that bridge when
we come to it." Kennedy, Joe "Plagerize! Plagerize! Why do you think
God made your eyes!" Biden, and Dennis "Wholly owned subsidiary of
Keating, Inc" DeConcini.
Write to all of these distinguished gentlemen c/o
US Senate
Washington DC 20510
Tom_K
PS: Don't forget to address it to "The Honorable Senator soandso".
|
1004.6 | Hey what a guy | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | linville | Sat Aug 31 1991 16:30 | 7 |
| Cast my vote for Judge Thomas. It is about time some put the brakes on
socialism. Hey if the Russians did it so can we.
Wayne
|
1004.7 | "Would you buy a used address label from this man?" | BUBBLY::LEIGH | can't change the wind, just the sails | Sat Aug 31 1991 16:44 | 1 |
| I really would prefer a factual reply, not an editorial.
|
1004.8 | I'll go for Thomas | COMET::PAPA | Vote for Freedom, Vote Libertarian | Tue Sep 03 1991 19:18 | 1 |
| I support Thomas
|
1004.9 | TOO CONSERVATIVE | ODIXIE::WITMAN | THIS_SPACE_BEING_REFURBISED_FOR_YOUR_FUTURE_ENJOYMENT. | Fri Sep 06 1991 16:51 | 2 |
| MHO -- Judge Thomas is TOO CONSERVATIVE for the SOCIAL LIBERAL / FISCAL
CONSERVATIVE in me. I'd have to look for a different candidate.
|
1004.10 | | RANGER::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Fri Sep 06 1991 19:38 | 25 |
|
Whether Thomas makes it to the Supreme Court or not is irrelevant.
The Supreme Court is already configured so that it will help set this
country back socially by at least 50 years.
It is as I warned this community it would be when the last judge was
nominated. There is already a majority on the Bench that is capable of
neutralizing the gains made in the sixties and seventies in the areas of
Civil Rights, Women's Rights, and personal freedom.
Equally, it is illogical to suppose that even if Thomas is not confirmed
(frankly, I'd be suprised if he wasn't) that Bush would nominate anyone
who would not reflect his "conservative" stance on various issues.
An irony for this community to consider: there is one female judge on the
Supreme Court who is somewhat conservative. It would be ironic indeed if
Thomas was not confirmed and Bush nominated and got confirmed a female who
would become the key to removing the last laws which protected women's
rights.
-Robert Brown III
|
1004.11 | So what wasn't factual? | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Mon Sep 09 1991 13:34 | 7 |
| re .7
The Senators named in my previous reply are on the
committee. Mail addressed as suggested, will reach them.
In fact, mail may be sent to any US Senator at the address given.
Tom_K
|
1004.12 | Hmmm, this does seem odd, but... | BOOTKY::MARCUS | What?...and Me Without My Crossbow | Mon Sep 09 1991 13:49 | 17 |
|
I agree with you, Robert. Extremely ironic that either a woman or a black
man will put the skids on social gains for both groups. As for the other
great irony, I borrow a phrase from E Grace...
Gack...Gggaaaaaccccccckkkkkkkkkk...hhaaacccckkkkk.....hhhaarooouuukkkkk!!!
Likely, *IN MY OPINION*, the greatest support for Judge Thomas will come
from conservative white males...which only goes to show you that THEIR
value system is put into action for themselves....mainly, the ends justify
the means.
GGGggggggggaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaccccccccccccccccckkkkkkkkkkkkkk!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Barb
p.s. I do oppose...
|
1004.13 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Glasnote. | Sun Sep 15 1991 21:22 | 36 |
| Article: 711
From: jlohrmann@igc.org
Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive,alt.activism
Subject: misc.activism.: People For Amer Way on Thomas
Date: 15 Sep 91 17:20:37 GMT
Sender: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
Organization: PACH
The People for the American Way is working on the Judge
Thomas nomination
PEOPLE FOR THE AMERICAN WAY
(Defending Constitutional Liberties)
2000 TMU Street NW
Suite 400
Washington DC 20036
202/467-4999
202/293-2672 FAX
People for the American Way invite you to do the following:
*Join them for a national conference call on the Judge Thomas nomination, to be
held on September 16, 5 pm EST. The call
will feature a briefing on the nomination and an activity
discussion. Call the PFAW Field Department at
1/800-326-PFAW (7329) to sign up.
*Invite your friends and associates without computers to
join FAXNET, the PFAW Information Network. If they have
a fax machine and want to receive regular updates on the
Thomas nomination and action discussion, just call PFAW
at 1-800/326-PFAW (7329)
*Contact the PFAW Field Office at the above listed
800 number if you are interested in becoming a local
contact point.
|
1004.14 | a bit on this morning's proceedings | LJOHUB::GONZALEZ | sets the stars on fire | Mon Sep 16 1991 14:58 | 17 |
| I was listening to the Thomas hearings on radio this morning.
Thomas answered promptly questions about uniform sentencing and the
death penalty. He waffled and ultimately did not answer a question
covering 1st amendment rights in any federally funded programs, a
general reframing of the Rust V Sullivan (gag rule) case.
Funny that a man can have and talk about his opinions on some topics and
have none or talk about none on other topics....
BTW, the American Bar Association came out against the Rust v Sullivan
ruling on the grounds that it can be too broadly applied and get in the
way of any professional/client relationship that requires the
dispensing of professional information or advice. The ABA mentioned
defendant/public defender relationships as an example.
Margaret
|
1004.15 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Guess I'll set a course and go... | Mon Sep 16 1991 15:12 | 7 |
| > Funny that a man can have and talk about his opinions on some topics and
> have none or talk about none on other topics....
Not funny; predictable. You know which torpedos can sink your ship and
which can't. If you had a chance to be on the supreme court and all you had to
do was not say the wrong thing about charged issues, I think you might be
tempted to batten down the hatches and weather the storm, too.
|
1004.16 | so he will float while women sink... | LJOHUB::GONZALEZ | sets the stars on fire | Mon Sep 16 1991 20:48 | 9 |
| The death penalty (which he favors as a proven means of deterrence)
is a charged issue. I know darn well why Thomas keeps his silence on
the issue of choice. If he were pro-choice he would say so.
The knowledge that anti-choice is a stance that (probably) could
scuttle his chances suggests that he knows where public sentiment lies,
and certainly what the mood in the senate is. Phaw.
Margaret
|
1004.17 | | TENAYA::RAH | | Mon Sep 16 1991 21:56 | 2 |
|
Thats preciely why Justice of the SCOTUS is not an elective office...
|
1004.18 | huh? SCOTUS? | JURAN::TEASDALE | | Tue Sep 17 1991 15:16 | 0 |
1004.19 | SCOTUS is the Supreme Court | LJOHUB::GONZALEZ | sets the stars on fire | Tue Sep 17 1991 15:43 | 1 |
| SCOTUS = Supreme Court of the United States
|
1004.20 | just heard... | GEMVAX::BROOKS | | Tue Oct 08 1991 18:17 | 4 |
|
...they're delaying the vote.
D.
|
1004.21 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Tue Oct 08 1991 18:28 | 8 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.20 by GEMVAX::BROOKS >>>
>> ...they're delaying the vote.
Yup, another case of being tried by the media and being guilty until proven
innocent...
Roak
|
1004.22 | | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Tue Oct 08 1991 18:34 | 9 |
| Nnsense, Roak. I heard several Senators (among them, bowtie Simon) asking
why they hadn't heard what the judiciary committee evidently heard a month
ago, requesting a fuller investigation before a confirmation vote. That
isn't trial by media, that's just barely noticing that a potential Supreme
Court Justice may have violated the law on sexual harassment, within the
past ten years. So they delayed the vote. He hasn't been found guilty;
he's just going to have to answer more questions for the Senate.
DougO
|
1004.23 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Tue Oct 08 1991 18:45 | 21 |
| <<< Note 1004.22 by FMNIST::olson "Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4" >>>
>I heard several Senators (among them, bowtie Simon) asking
>why they hadn't heard what the judiciary committee evidently heard a month
>ago, requesting a fuller investigation before a confirmation vote.
Then it would seem that the NEXT vote (after the one to delay)
should be to abolish the Committee system. Just have all nominees
field questions from all 100 Senators.
Even Professor Hill admits that her affidavit was submitted to the
Committee well in advance of the hearings. From this we are told
that the FBI was asked to investigate and found nothing (other than
Prof. Hill's testimony) to substantiate the charges. These facts
were made known to Committe members prior to the vote.
The Senators are "responding" to media charges that, as men, they
are not sensitive to "women's issues". This may well be true, but
it has nothing to do with this particular nominee.
Jim
|
1004.24 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Tue Oct 08 1991 18:46 | 14 |
| General comment:
Whether you support Thomas or not, I think if you step back for a
minute, you'll agree that something fishy is going on here.
The comittee holding back the information to the eleventh hour perhaps
as a trump if they thought he'd be approved? I don't know. But the
timing is just a little too convient for me to think that this "just
happened" to break just before the vote, and then the immediate calls
for the vote to be delayed.
Again, it doesn't matter if you're for him or against him, something's
wrong here...
Roak
|
1004.25 | Nice guy, eh? | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Oct 08 1991 19:54 | 45 |
| Wow! It takes a unanimous vote of the Senate to delay something
like this -- according to what I heard on the news (Christian Science
Monitor) this morning. "From this we are told that the FBI was asked
to investigate and found nothing (other than Prof. Hill's testimony)
to substantiate the charges." Well, what *I* heard last night was
that the F.B.I. did not even speak to Prof. Hill, so I would be very
surprised if they found anything; they didn't look.
What timing would people have liked? That Prof. Hill had lied when
a reporter [finally] asked her what she had told the committee. (She
didn't just broadcast this information, you know.)
* * *
Another little something about Justice Thomas, from a letter by Prof.
Joel F. Handler to the New York Times:
To the Editor:
Your July 7 article about Judge Clarence Thomas[] reports his oft-
repeated quotation about his sister, then on welfare: "She gets mad
when the mailman is late with her welfare check. ... What's worse is
that her children feel entitled to the check, too. ..."
This is an appallingly callous statement and contrary to the facts.
... Judge Thomas's father deserted the family.... When a fire destroyed
their home and belongings, the mother, who could no longer support
the children cleaning houses at $15 a week, sent the boys -- not
the girls -- to live with their grandfather, an independant small-
businessman.
[The sister] stayed home and graduated from high school. She got
married and had children, and then her husband deserted her. While
the judge was attending Yale Law School, she supported her family
with two minimum wage jobs. ...
Then the aunt suffered a stroke, and Emma Mae Martin had to quit work
to take care of her. This was when she went on welfare. She was on
welfare for about four and a half years. Now she works as a cook....
She has three children. One works as a carpenter; one was just laid
off, and the 15-year-old is in school.
..."
Ann B.
|
1004.26 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Tue Oct 08 1991 20:23 | 13 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.25 by REGENT::BROOMHEAD "Don't panic -- yet." >>>
>> What timing would people have liked? That Prof. Hill had lied when
>> a reporter [finally] asked her what she had told the committee. (She
>> didn't just broadcast this information, you know.)
Why did the reporter go to Hill now? The information's been lying around for a
month! Did it just "happen" to come out now? Did someone just "happen" to tell
the reporter now? It wouldn't be the first time a reporter has been used...
Sorry, it smacks of being orchestrated from behind the scene...
Roak
|
1004.27 | Excuse me? | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 10:04 | 10 |
| If the charges are true (that Thomas did, in fact, commit sexual
harassment) - then who the hell CARES how the information came
out???
If he'd committed murder, would anyone be suggesting the info was
only brought out as some sort of "plot" (or whatever?)
Or maybe the problem is that he ONLY committed this crime against
a mere woman (a mere BLACK woman, at that.)
|
1004.28 | | FDCV07::KING | Can't think of anything clever....... | Wed Oct 09 1991 10:12 | 5 |
| Something really stinks about this 11th hour smoking gun.... Seems
that these two have been talking to each other for the last 7 years
after she charged him with sexual harassment....
REK
|
1004.29 | Irony | CSC32::M_EVANS | | Wed Oct 09 1991 10:24 | 7 |
| Heard this morning on NPR that memebers of the Senate Judiciary
Committee want an investigation into how the information is leaked. It
seems that some members feel the fact that information was leaked to
the media is more damaging then whether or not Thomas is a suitable
person as a Supremem Court Justice.
Meg
|
1004.30 | Give us a break... | GIAMEM::JLAMOTTE | Join the AMC and 'Take a Hike' | Wed Oct 09 1991 10:35 | 16 |
| REK - You don't have a clue as to the ways women have dealt with
harassment from their bosses and male relatives. Have you ever left
a position on less than best terms with a manager and still contacted
them for the skills they did possess? Many of us have and it annoys
me that this comment keeps coming up. We make choices and deal with
bad behavior on the part of managers for a variety of reasons and that
does not change the bad behavior or make it right. Also negative
behavior in one position can be tolerated and in another it is
intolerable.
This woman chose not to prosecute this case for whatever reasons when
it happened.
To her, it has become necessary to examine the issue again in the light
of the Supreme Court Nomination, a life appointment that should be held
by a person of high standards.
|
1004.31 | | CFSCTC::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, OO-R-US | Wed Oct 09 1991 10:36 | 8 |
| I've been horrified at seeing some of the Senator's attitudes during
the past 4 days, esp. DeConcinni (sp?), Hatch, and Danforth. They
really seem to have decided, without any facts that I can see, that
Prof. Hills is obviously lying. Afterall, they have Judge Thomas' word
that it never happeed, and how can we doubt him? It almost feels like
the "old" attitudes you would see in a rape trial.
Jim
|
1004.32 | | MSBCS::HETRICK | you be me for awhile | Wed Oct 09 1991 11:01 | 9 |
| right, and a wonderfully sensitive comment from Strom Thurmond, to the
effect that why did she wait until the last minute to make it public?
one, it appears that she didn't.
two, could it be that having been sexually harassed is a very painful
thing to talk about, and she had a great deal of difficulty doing it?
cheryl
|
1004.33 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 11:06 | 12 |
| RE: .28 REK
> Something really stinks about this 11th hour smoking gun.... Seems
> that these two have been talking to each other for the last 7 years
> after she charged him with sexual harassment....
People who have been brutally beaten by their spouses sometimes stay
married to them - does this mean that the assault didn't take place?
If a store-owner talks to a perp after a robbery, does that mean that
the robbery didn't take place?
|
1004.34 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Wed Oct 09 1991 11:06 | 34 |
| In the absence of compelling corroboration, the "investigation" will be
little more than window dressing as we have two people who are believed to
be trustworthy coming out with contradictory statements. Who do we believe?
Whomever is most convenient, of course. If we want to see Thomas confirmed,
we shrug our shoulders and say "what's with this woman, why would she come
out with such a tale?" and take Thomas at his word that this never happened.
If we want to see the nomination derailed, why then he's a nasty, sexist myn
and thank the goddess for this fine woman for saving us from him.
I would tend to believe that in all likelihood, nothing conclusive will
turn up in the investigation. Thomas will be attacked by his opponents,
and Hill will be attacked by supporters. There will be considerable mud
slinging and it will almost certainly be a circus of the highest order. And
in the end, no one will be satisfied one way or another.
I can't imagine why this woman would lie. On the other hand, I couldn't
imagine why Charles Stuart would shoot his wife and himself. I am wary of
making a judgement in the absence of significantly more detail, detail that
is probably not forthcoming. There's so much I don't understand. Why would
somebody who is on friendly terms with another act in a manner to deny
that person advancement?
Is this whole thing being blown out of proportion? Did he say "saw that new
John Holmes movie last night"? Or did he go into considerable detail about
the mechanics of a certain film or other, and imply "it could be us"? Did
he imply that her advancement potential was tied to sexual liaisons between
them? Or is there something to this woman spurned thing?
Finally, is it a given that past actions definitely indicate a person's
character? We already know that smoking a bone cost one judge the same job.
Does talking dirty disqualify one permanently from a supreme court post?
To what degree? How often? Over what period of time?
I fear there are infinitely more questions than answers forthcoming.
|
1004.35 | Well said | JUMBLY::BATTERBEEJ | Kinda lingers..... | Wed Oct 09 1991 11:18 | 4 |
| I think 1004.34 said it all. Good note IMHO.
Jerome.
|
1004.36 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Oct 09 1991 11:30 | 18 |
| Typical Democrat slime tactics.
If a Senator leaks information from an FBI investigation, it
is grounds for expulsion from the Senate. I think this ought
to be attended to before the Senate takes up the Thomas
confirmation vote.
Note that the *Democratic* chair of the Judiciary committee
had this information quite some time ago. He could have
delayed the *committee* vote if he wanted this investigated.
Why didn't he?
It would have been supreme irony if a single Senator had the
courage to oppose the call for a delay, and Thomas had been
denied his seat due to unproven allegations.
Tom_K
|
1004.37 | | FDCV07::KING | Can't think of anything clever....... | Wed Oct 09 1991 11:56 | 4 |
| Re:30 I am not talking about "other" women and how they have dealt
with S_H. I'm talking about Judge Thomas's situation.
REK
|
1004.38 | | FDCV07::KING | Can't think of anything clever....... | Wed Oct 09 1991 12:01 | 21 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RE: .28 REK
> Something really stinks about this 11th hour smoking gun.... Seems
> that these two have been talking to each other for the last 7 years
> after she charged him with sexual harassment....
People who have been brutally beaten by their spouses sometimes stay
married to them - does this mean that the assault didn't take place?
If a store-owner talks to a perp after a robbery, does that mean that
the robbery didn't take place?
Sue, you are getting off the subject here. I am talking about what is going
on with the Surpreme Court nomination.....
REK
BTW After reading more about the phone calls between these two people it
really doesn't sound like a victim talking to her harasser?
|
1004.39 | Picture this... | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 09 1991 12:10 | 9 |
| Alright, men. How many of you have been twenty-five year old women
who needed to be nice to a man in order to get/keep your job?
Oh yeah, black, single women, that is.
Those of you who have, congratulations! You are now in an excellent
position to give an informed opinion of Professor Hill's actions.
The rest of you, well, your position just isn't as good.
Ann B.
|
1004.40 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Wed Oct 09 1991 12:17 | 3 |
| So apparently the Senate ought to simply reject the nomination, since they
are in no position (save for two of them) to form an opinion regarding the
veracity of Ms. Hill's testimony?
|
1004.41 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 12:22 | 7 |
| RE: .38 REK
Sexual harassment is a crime, even if the victim is willing to be
civil to the perp after it happens.
(And I can think of many, many reasons why Prof. Hill would choose
to be civil to him in spite of what he did.)
|
1004.42 | | CFSCTC::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, OO-R-US | Wed Oct 09 1991 12:42 | 21 |
| Re: what actually transpired between Hills and Thomas
There are a couple of things to note here. First, I believe that Hills
is on the record saying that what transpired may/may-not-be "Sexual
Harassment" as defined by the legal code. She's also said that it
really isn't important it legally Thomas "broke the law". The real
issue was one of conduct: if her sworn statement is true, was the
conduct of Clarence Thomas appropriate for a judge/SCJ? I heard part
of her 1 hour interview (which was released to the full Senate) and
found her to be very lucid, forthcoming, and not appearing to be on
a witch-hunt.
She has described in detail what some of the comments made to her were
and, without repeating them here, its my judgement that anyone in
Digital making similar comments to a co-worker could be brought up on
sexual harassment charges. (Please don't quote me on this; I'm not an
expert in the process). Even I ;^) couldn't imagine making commments
like that in a work situation; even in a social situation they would
make many people extremely uncomfortable.
Jim
|
1004.43 | | FDCV07::KING | Can't think of anything clever....... | Wed Oct 09 1991 12:43 | 4 |
| Sue, no one has said that sexual harassment was not a crime. And to
inivte him to speak to her class?
REK
|
1004.44 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 12:54 | 23 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.27 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> If the charges are true (that Thomas did, in fact, commit sexual
>> harassment) - then who the hell CARES how the information came
>> out???
>> If he'd committed murder, would anyone be suggesting the info was
>> only brought out as some sort of "plot" (or whatever?)
I would meet an eleventh-hour accusation of murder or jaywalking with the same
amount of suspicion as I met this.
>> Or maybe the problem is that he ONLY committed this crime against
>> a mere woman (a mere BLACK woman, at that.)
Let's stick to reasoning instead of accusing everyone of hating women, being
racist, etc...
My problem is with the timing, not the accusation (and if anyone takes that
statement out of context and accuses me of not caring about the alleged crime,
*I'll* go to the primal scream note, too).
Roak
|
1004.45 | why don't you check the facts? | GUCCI::SANTSCHI | violence cannot solve problems | Wed Oct 09 1991 13:13 | 53 |
| the jist of her press conference as reported in the Washington Post
yesterday:
1. She was 25 at the time of the incidents (yes there were more than
one). She had only worked for Thomas for 9 months, and would not
likely get a good job recommendation. How many of us were told in our
young working lives that we should stay at least a year or two to
establish a track record of work products and habits?
2. At the time of the incidents, she confided in a woman who has given
a statement to the committee about what Hill revealed to her.
3. She went from the Education Dept. to the EEOC because the incidents
had stopped (for a time only) and because of #1 above. She believed
that the incidents were over and she would get on with her life in
spite of the incidents.
4. She has not had that much contact with him in the last 7 years.
The telephone calls were at the behest of Oral Roberts University
people who wanted Thomas come and speak at the university. Because she
had worked for him, they asked her to make a call to Thomas and ask him
to accept the speaking invitation. Because of their exhortations, she
made the call but only spoke to Thomas' secretary and passed on the
message.
5. She was contacted by a staff person from the Judiciary Committee
because the committee had heard rumors about Hill being sexually
harassed by Thomas and they wanted her statement. She gave a statement
to them for their deliberations, and she did not want her name made
public. She continually asked whether all the members of the committe
had had a chance to read her statement and was informed that some had
not. The nomination was then voted out of committee. She has only
made this public now because not everyone knew about her statement and
she wanted a full investigation.
6. The FBI investigated the matter and presented their findings to the
White House. The FBI spokesperson says that they work for the White
House. Interesting piece of news, I thought they worked for the
American people. Anyway, the FBI says that they just present what they
find, and do not make conclusions. The White House said that the
allegations were "unfounded". I love that term. It conveys so much
while meaning little.
I think that this matter does need a full airing. I hope the media
machine doesn't cover up this one. Thomas has further conveyed his
contempt for women in this instance.
Sen. Gore on last night's CSPAN channel gave a very reasoned speech as
to his take on this whole mess.
more later,
sue
|
1004.46 | *sigh* | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 13:26 | 13 |
| RE: .44 Roak
>> Or maybe the problem is that he ONLY committed this crime against
>> a mere woman (a mere BLACK woman, at that.)
> Let's stick to reasoning instead of accusing everyone of hating women, being
> racist, etc...
It's too bad I forgot to threaten to go to the Primal Scream topic
if anyone accused me of *this*!
I could have saved myself a trip...
|
1004.47 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 09 1991 13:58 | 19 |
| <<< Note 1004.45 by GUCCI::SANTSCHI "violence cannot solve problems" >>>
>Thomas has further conveyed his
> contempt for women in this instance.
How was this determined. Prof. Hill says that Judge Thomas harrased
her, Judge Thomas said that he didn't.
Is "contempt" now defined as "I deny that I did what this woman
says I did"? What if he really DIDN'T do it? Is it STILL comtemptable
that he deny the allegation?
At this point we have two people that have given mutually exclusive
statements. It seems that many are willing to condemn the male half of
this dispute simply because he IS, in fact, a man.
Folks, that IS sexist behavior.
Jim
|
1004.49 | | GIAMEM::JLAMOTTE | Join the AMC and 'Take a Hike' | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:06 | 4 |
| It appears in the real world, not wnotes, there were enough people that
were willing to consider Professor Hill's testimony as unfounded.
Of course this has been going on for years so what is new?
|
1004.50 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:20 | 22 |
| RE: .47 Jim
> At this point we have two people that have given mutually exclusive
> statements. It seems that many are willing to condemn the male half of
> this dispute simply because he IS, in fact, a man.
> Folks, that IS sexist behavior.
BS, Jim. It's only your erroneous assumption.
Thomas has the less creditable position in this. If he'd admitted that
he had the conversations with Prof. Hill as she described them, but said
he was sorry (and agreed that they were inappropriate or that he'd made
a mistake in judgment) - I wouldn't condemn him nearly as much, personally.
She has very little reason to put herself through this circus for the
kinds of things he said to her. He has every reason to lie to protect
his chances to get one hell of a good lifetime job.
He doesn't seem worthy of being condemned because he is a man. If I
knew a woman who refused to admit wrongdoing, I'd consider her every
bit as much of a jerk for it.
|
1004.51 | Been there, did that. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:22 | 47 |
|
The following is entered anonomously [with spacing changes by me] on
behalf of one of our contributors.
Ann B.
Co-moderator
======================================================================
The experience I relate below is just one of many I've had in my career.
We might choose to continue to work for these bozos, but that doesn't
mean they should be on the Supreme Court!
----------------------------------------------------------------------
I thought I might add some perspective as to why a woman might continue
to work for, and retain professional ties with a man who sexually harassed
her.
Back in the late seventies, I was an entry level staff accountant in a
public accounting firm. On several jobs, I was the only woman. Sexually
explicit jokes, references, etc. were the norm. I was constantly
on-guard, because everything I said was picked up for double meanings...
for example, in a discussion about moving apartments, and the difficulties
I had transporting furniture, a comment was made about "that large CHEST
of yours". The men I worked with had a game where every women at the
client was rated, with a number. Every woman -- every time they walked
by. This went on up to partner level. Did I complain? No. I wanted
to succeed -- I put up with it to get ahead. And I did -- I didn't
"make waves"; I was accepted as "one of the boys" -- I was promoted,
rated well, and moved on.
The question is not whether a women puts up with it or not. Not
reporting it does not change whether or not it was harassment. A woman
does what she has to do to get by. In my case, the manager on this
job was a "fast tracker" -- he wanted me on other jobs, and I continued
to work for him -- putting up with his nonsense, in order to succeed
professionally. The issue is not the fact that I did put up with it --
the issue is that I should not have to have put up with it.
This man was a pig... but if he had another opportunity for me, and it
was a good one, I might take it.... Does my willingness to put up with
an obnoxious work environment to get ahead negate the fact that he's a
pig?
So, I can understand why Ms. Hills continued to work for Judge Thomas,
didn't "file a report", and even followed him to the EEOC. All of that's
irrelevant.
Discounting her charges on that basis is just more of blaming the victim.
|
1004.52 | 2:1, not 1:1 | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:26 | 9 |
| Jim,
Professor Hill has corroborating testimony -- a woman she told AT
THE TIME -- and Judge Thomas does not. Professor Hill has nothing
personal to gain by lying and Judge Thomas has fame and power almost
within his reach -- if he can get 51 of 100 people to believe that
he is telling the truth.
Ann B.
|
1004.53 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:36 | 9 |
| > Professor Hill has corroborating testimony -- a woman she told AT
> THE TIME
Actually, Professor Hill has a woman who claims that Professor
Hill told her at the time. I am unaware of any proof that these
claims are either true or false.
Tom_K
|
1004.54 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:53 | 26 |
| <<< Note 1004.52 by REGENT::BROOMHEAD "Don't panic -- yet." >>>
> Professor Hill has corroborating testimony -- a woman she told AT
> THE TIME -- and Judge Thomas does not.
I am willing to wait for the public disclosure of the facts.
News reports have been sadly lacking concrete evidence.
You have heard a report that Prof. Hill told a co-worker (who BTW
has specifically refused to make a public statement or to even
be publicly identified), I have heard reports that other co-workers
(also unidentified) have testified that Prof. Hill may be trying to
"get even" with Judge Thomas for rejecting HER attentions. So far
NO ONE has been reported to have overheard the alleged remarks.
What will happen if Prof. Hill testifies that that she was harrassed
and Judge Thomas says that he didn't do it, all in front of the
Judiciary Committee? Is the accusation, absent of any other testimony,
enough to cause the rejection of Judge Thomas? I hope not, because
that's NOT the way it's supposed to work in this country.
If he did do it, then he should not be confirmed, but the accusation
alone is not enough for me. Unfortunately it IS for some members of
this noting community.
Jim
|
1004.55 | | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:13 | 12 |
| re .34,
> Finally, is it a given that past actions definitely indicate a person's
> character? We already know that smoking a bone cost one judge the same job.
> Does talking dirty disqualify one permanently from a supreme court post?
> To what degree? How often? Over what period of time?
Mark, 'talking dirty' is one thing, talking dirty to a subordinate young
woman who needs your signature on her review is something else. To what
degree would you find that acceptable?
DougO
|
1004.56 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:17 | 4 |
| I don't know. How DO you feel about the use of eyewitness
testimony in civil cases?
Ann B.
|
1004.57 | Some dreams have too far to reach to happen... :-} | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:23 | 10 |
| RE: .54 Jim
Well, if people come forward to suggest that Prof. Hill may have
an axe to grind against Thomas, I hope all the people who doubt
her word *because* she's been civil to him all these years will
use her civility as reason to doubt that she has had an axe to
gring against him all these years...
Somehow I doubt it, though...
|
1004.58 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:32 | 20 |
| It depends on the situation in question. Certain behaviors are categorically
"bad," others may be "bad" or not depending on the situation and relative
comfort levels of the various participants. If you and a coworker share a
common interest in, say, erotic literature, is it necessarily harrassment
for you two to discuss this unless you are both on the same level? If you
and your boss discuss this stuff, is s/he necessarily harrassing you? Does
it matter what the gender of your boss is?
If what Judge Thomas said was merely inappropriate, I would consider the fact
that 10 years have passed since the alleged incident and that a decade is plenty
of time to grow as a person and a jurist. If what Judge Thomas said was truly
harrassment material, I would be sufficiently uneasy to be skeptical of
whether 10 years of growing would be enough, or even likely. If we never know
whether he really said anything or not, then I can't say that anybody's vote
should change as a result of the allegations. That establishes a clear path
for political bastardization of the process, one which may sit well with those
who are benefitting this time, but which creates a precedent they might find
distressing at a later date.
The Doctah
|
1004.59 | Personal rage | LJOHUB::NSMITH | rises up with eagle wings | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:40 | 98 |
|
There may ultimately be reasons to doubt the credibility of Anita Hill's
charges against Clarence Thomas, but it enrages me to hear the "reasons"
that some male Senators, commentators, and others are giving for not
believing her story! While I can understand their ignorance, it is
appalling nevertheless, and they certainly should hurry to upgrade
their education about sexual harrassment, sexual power, sexual
politics, and the realities of women's lives.
Based on my own experience, I conclude that when a woman experiences
sexual harrassment, she has to think through a number of options and
make a series of decisions.
1) If it seems "out of character" with her previous experience with that
man, she will question whether he did, in fact, say what she clearly
heard him say. (Or do what she clearly felt him do, etc.)
2) Once she establishes in her own thinking that, yes, he clearly *did*
say or do what she experienced, she must make a decision: Should she
tell, and if so, whom should she tell?
3) Reasons that a woman may decide *not* to tell:
- They were alone, no witnesses, no proof; her word against his
- The woman feels that she personally can deal with the man and does not
see him as being an immediate threat to other women
- Telling would hurt his wife/family and her husband/family
- Telling would mean the end of a much-needed business or professional
relationship
4) If she decides not to tell, she is quite likely, in my opinion, to continue
as normal a relationship as possible with the man, especially if their
relationship involves her (or her family's) livelihood!
My generalizations are based on my own experience, as follows:
A man who was a friend of ours and a business associate of my husband's,
got my work phone number, called me long distance, and asked me to do
specific physical things. It was entirely unexpected and I kept thinking
he had some business message for me to give my husband -- until he abruptly
hung up and I realized what personal activity of his own he had been
engaging in while on the phone!
There are so many factors to consider in a case like this! I told my
husband, but I did not tell the man's wife nor ask my husband to refuse
any further business dealings with the man.
- I didn't want to "raise a stink" or be considered a prude.
- I didn't want to deprive my husband of a much-needed business contact.
- I didn't want to give his wife information that would cause her pain and
embarrassment. (We were friends as couples.)
- I was not afraid of a physical sexualy assault and felt that he was not
likely to be a physical threat to any other woman, either.
Furthermore, if I had confronted the man the next time I saw him, he could
easily have denied that the phone call ever occurred -- and I had no way
to prove that it did. I, like Anita Hill, would have been scrutinized.
Even though I think I told someone at work, that would not have been proof
of *who* had called me!
So my husband and I agreed that the man was in some sense "crazy" and we
would be cautious. I further decided that if he repeated anything like that
again, I would be prepared, would confront him, and would probably tell his
wife.
I received that phone call approximately ten years ago. Fortunately, the
incident has never been repeated. My husband continues to do business with
the man and we occasionally go out together as couples. Most of the time
I don't even think about the incident, and I feel reasonably comfortable
when the four or us socialize.
But what he did was *way* out of line and cause me a great deal of stress
and turmoil!
Fortunately, this man will never be a Supreme Court nominee and I will never
have to deal with the tell/don't tell issue in the context that Anita Hill
had to do.
If Anita Hill's allegations are true, I can fully understand why she did not
report them sooner -- and why she continued to maintain friendly,
professional contact with Clarence Thomas.
The incredulity of male Senators who cannot understand this is evidence of
a greater rift between men and women than I had believed possible.
Oh yes, and I just heard Pat Robertson (700 Club) say that Hill's
allegations were just that Thomas "asked her out" on a date! This
man (Robertson) who claims to be a TV journalist (rather than a
televangelist) either is professionally negligent in keeping up with
the news or is deliberatly deceiving his viewers by "omitting" the
allegations that Thomas described sexually explicit activities and
the plots of pornographic movies.
Nancy Smith
Oct. 9, 1991
|
1004.61 | the timing bothers me | CSC32::HADDOCK | the final nightmare | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:52 | 38 |
|
The problem that I'm having with Ms. Hill's accusations is that it
seems that Ms. Hill herself did not think the accusations serious
enough to come out in public *up front*. She did not come out in
public and apparently would have let the nomination go through until
the press started howling at her door because of the "leak". The
Committee had the information, but should a man be crucified by the
*accusation* of a single woman, and a woman who wishes to remain
anonymous at that. Yes there are a lot of drawbacks to coming out
in public with this kind of accusation with little or no supporting
evidence, but if it was *that* important, IMHO, Ms. Hill should have
been one of the first people screaming bloody murder when Thomas's
nomination was announced.
One thing that bothers me with all this is the number of people
advocating that the *woman's* testimony should be given *more*
weight. That would be spitting in the face of the very constitution
that they are claiming to try to protect ( equal rights?? ).
The problem is our society has determined that someone is *innocent*
until *proven* guilty and the unsubstantiated accusations of one
*person* is not enough evidence to hang another *person*. People have
literally gotten away with murder on a *lot* more *evidence* than has been
presented in this case.
I *do* believe that the charges could be very serious. If they could
be backed up by corroborating evidence, then Thomas should be rejected.
However, I have equally strong misgivings about the "trial by hysteria"
and "conviction by accusation" that I am seeing in this case.
re the leak.
Leaking information in this manner can seriously hamper future
investigations. The Committee *had* the information. The FBI
*investigated* the accusations and made their report to the committee.
However, in the future, anyone who does not wish to be dragged
through the public mud will not be able to trust their right to
confidentiality. They may likely just keep quiet.
fred();
|
1004.62 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 16:01 | 26 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.46 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>>> Let's stick to reasoning instead of accusing everyone of hating women, being
>>> racist, etc...
>> It's too bad I forgot to threaten to go to the Primal Scream topic
>> if anyone accused me of *this*!
** <<< Note 1004.27 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
**
** If the charges are true (that Thomas did, in fact, commit sexual
** harassment) - then who the hell CARES how the information came
** out???
**
** If he'd committed murder, would anyone be suggesting the info was
** only brought out as some sort of "plot" (or whatever?)
**
** Or maybe the problem is that he ONLY committed this crime against
** a mere woman (a mere BLACK woman, at that.)
Seems you are accusing all people advancing the "plot" theory of possibly
discounting women or being racist. Using standard english language syntax, I
can't seem to parse that last paragraph any other way. Perhaps you'd care to
translate if this is not what you intended...
Roak
|
1004.60 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 16:02 | 11 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.56 by REGENT::BROOMHEAD "Don't panic -- yet." >>>
>> I don't know. How DO you feel about the use of eyewitness
>> testimony in civil cases?
Note that we're not talking about an eyewitness, we're talking about someone
who was told about something happening.
In court, that's called "hearsay."
Roak
|
1004.63 | Umm, hmmm. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 09 1991 16:07 | 22 |
| No, Roak, it is called "hearsay", and it is admissible in civil
cases.
The statement of the second woman is very useful, because it
answers that stupid, whiny question, ~Why didn't she say anything
at the time?~ So, she told someone at the time. The woman provides
a living timestamp, demonstrating that it was not something Professor
Hill invented to stop a Supreme Court nomination. In that sense, it
is first-hand testimony, not even hearsay.
Now here's someone trying to discount her statements entirely, so
that it is still one naughty woman against a judge instead of two
responsible citizens against one man who has been shown to have twisted
the truth in the past (1004.25). How interesting.
And here's Fred, who talks about innocent until proven guilty, et
cetera, yet, using the same brain, comes to the conclusion that it
was wrong of Professor Hill to have quietly communicated with the
authorized, interested body of people instead of publicising her
charges to the public at large. How interesting.
Ann B.
|
1004.64 | Roak had originally type "heresay" | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 09 1991 16:12 | 3 |
| ... but he independantly corrected it.
Ann B.
|
1004.65 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 17:14 | 10 |
| My next Primal Scream should be about being on a terminal that won't
let me edit properly. :-(
RE: .62 Roak
Look - let me put it to you this way:
Let's stick to REASON instead of discounting anyone with accusations
of making veiled accusations of sexism and racism (and I *am* talking
directly to you.)
|
1004.66 | Oh, I read it as "heresy" | BUBBLY::LEIGH | Gone flat | Wed Oct 09 1991 17:14 | 1 |
|
|
1004.67 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 18:00 | 8 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.66 by BUBBLY::LEIGH "Gone flat" >>>
>> -< Oh, I read it as "heresy" >-
It was, but I went back and fixed it, but Ann had already started her reply,
which caused the race condition, etc., etc., etc...
Roak
|
1004.68 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 18:26 | 33 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.65 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> Let's stick to REASON instead of discounting anyone with accusations
>> of making veiled accusations of sexism and racism (and I *am* talking
>> directly to you.)
I don't think you'll find one place where I'm discounting you, instead you'll
only find specific attacks on your "veiled accusations" -- no more.
I debate ideas and concepts; I do not discount people because they disagree with
me.
Back to the discussion...
Now let me see what facts we have:
Hill has said she was sexually harrassed by Thomas
Thomas has said that he did not sexually harrass Hill
[net, zero so far]
Hill told someone at the time that she was sexually harrassed by Thomas
[question, has this person come forward, or is it Hill who is telling us
that she told someone?]
Advantage: Hill
Hill's timing was terrible (as is evidenced from the lively discussion
contained within this note). This does not mean that she's fabricating
her accusation, just that it smacks of a plot, plot or not.
Advantage: Thomas
Does anyone have any other facts about this case?
Roak
|
1004.69 | Oh, great facts, Roak | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Wed Oct 09 1991 18:37 | 23 |
| > [question, has this person come forward, or is it Hill who is telling us
> that she told someone?]
The person has been reported as corroborating part of Hill's statement; ie,
Hill didn't tell this person everything that Hill has since told the Senate
Judiciary Committee. I believe the news report said it was the initial FBI
investigation that checked with this other person.
> Hill's timing was terrible (as is evidenced from the lively discussion
> contained within this note). This does not mean that she's fabricating
> her accusation, just that it smacks of a plot, plot or not.
Hill's timing? She gave testimony a month ago. That the all-male judiciary
committee didn't see fit to release her testimony or otherwise explain why they
dealocked 7-7 which passed Thomas to the full Senate WITHOUT a positive or a
negative recommendation is hardly Hill's fault. It got leaked, and the phones
in Congress evidently got rung off the wall; reports are that half a million
consitutents called in to express concern that the nominee would be confirmed
without the Senate even checking this story out. Quite obviously this is a
matter that congressional constituents are very concerned about. Don't blame
the timing on Hill.
DougO
|
1004.70 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 18:38 | 28 |
| RE: .68 Roak
You attacked what you *interpreted* as a veiled accusation - but I'll
let you slide on it (you've made much too much of this already.)
Prof. Hill's and Thomas's testimony contradict each other - so we need
to ask ourselves who stands to gain what by lying (since they can't
both be telling the truth.)
So far, the only indication of a motive for Prof. Hill is resentment
over his rejection of her advances (which someone in this string
mentioned earlier today.) Would she be mad enough at (what? not being
asked on a date???) to lie to a Senate hearing?
What motive would Thomas have for lying? Appointment to the Supreme
Court?
Phone logs have shown that she did not demonstrate any signs of having
an "axe" to grind against him all this time. She also tried to report
the harassment without being identified, so she wasn't looking to get
famous over it.
So why would she go out of her way to lie about him (especially with an
accusation that is not as startling or damning as the accusation COULD
have been if she were making it all up)?
Advantage: Prof. Hill. The timing was beyond her control (she
reported it long before it came out in the press.)
|
1004.71 | Advantage: Hill | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 09 1991 18:41 | 13 |
| What, in the name of star-spangled rotifers, makes "bad timing"
an argument at all??????
She went to the Senate committee when Thomas' nomination was announced.
That's good, honest `timing'. She remained quiet while the committee
deliberated. That's polite, and so it ought to be politic, but I
don't know if it is or not. *After* she had ascertained that not all
the committee had familiarized themselves with her statements, she
spoke to a reporter. The timing may be someone's idea of "bad", but
as behavior goes, it seems reasonable, and honest. What more can
you judge?
Ann B.
|
1004.72 | Meanwhile, the Court is N-1 | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Oct 09 1991 18:41 | 8 |
| > Hill told someone at the time that she was sexually harrassed by Thomas
I cannot even take that as fact. Hill claims she told someone.
That person may or may not have corroborated that. Even if
she has, I'd like to see independent evidence, not just folks
saying so.
Tom_K
|
1004.73 | | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Wed Oct 09 1991 18:41 | 10 |
| > So far, the only indication of a motive for Prof. Hill is resentment
> over his rejection of her advances (which someone in this string
> mentioned earlier today.)
Also contradicted by those same phone logs; she called him sometime in the
last two or three years to congratulate him on his wedding (just read in
today's paper). Hardly the actions of someone who would then perjure herself
in resentment over rejection.
DougO
|
1004.74 | Turnabout test | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 09 1991 18:46 | 9 |
| Tom,
Tell you what: Let's be fair. Clarence Thomas said he's innocent.
"I'd like to see independent evidence, not just" this one guy "saying
so."
Does that really sound fair to you? (I didn't think so either.)
Ann B.
|
1004.75 | I am always fair | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:00 | 4 |
| The burden of proof is on the accuser, not the accused.
Tom_K
|
1004.76 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:02 | 7 |
|
Outside a criminal court, the proof doesn't have to be beyond
a reasonable doubt.
Prof. Hill's testimony is enough to warrant some concern about
the appropriateness of Thomas' nomination to the Supreme Court.
|
1004.77 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:05 | 5 |
| So, you are willing to deny Judge Thomas a seat on the Supreme
Court on the basis of hearsay? Excuse me while I go barf.
Tom_K
|
1004.78 | (Do I believe this? Nah.) | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:05 | 4 |
| Okay, Tom. *You* have (essentially) accused Professor Hill of
repeatedly lying. The burden of proof is now yours.
Ann B.
|
1004.79 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:07 | 7 |
| > Okay, Tom. *You* have (essentially) accused Professor Hill of
> repeatedly lying. The burden of proof is now yours.
I have done no such thing. I only said that I have seen no proof.
No more, no less. I'll thank you to stop putting words in my mouth.
Tom_K
|
1004.80 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:10 | 6 |
| On the bright side, at least while the Senate is busy with
this fiasco, it has less time to dream up ways to further
drive the country into the ground.
Tom_K
|
1004.81 | Oh, really? | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:12 | 13 |
| Tom, From your reply .72:
"> Hill told someone at the time that she was sexually harrassed by Thomas
I cannot even take that as fact."
*That* is accusing Hill of lying.
"Hill claims she told someone."
*That* is accusing Hill of lying.
Ann B.
|
1004.82 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:17 | 7 |
| If I were to say that I thought she was lying, then I'd
be accusing her of lying. I said I've seen no proof that
confirms or disproves that what she said is true. That is
taking a neutral, open minded position, and I stand by it.
Tom_K
|
1004.83 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:21 | 35 |
| <<< Note 1004.76 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> Prof. Hill's testimony is enough to warrant some concern about
> the appropriateness of Thomas' nomination to the Supreme Court.
Why? You're saying that the accusation AND THE ACCUSATION ALONE
should bear on his appropriatness for the Court?
A different tack. There seems to be a current of "He has more to
gain, so he MUST be guilty" running here.
An Example,
It just so happens that Roak is campainging for a spot on the Board
of Directors for the governing body of our sport. All in all, a pretty
big deal and a fairly important job.
Now let's say I accuse Roak of some heinous activity (like giving
a cash donation to HCI, [just joking Rog]).
There are no witnesses to this activity. I claim that he did it, he
claims that he did not. Does this mean he is not qualified to serve?
IS the accusation alone, without independent information or
confirmation enough?
After all, I have nothing (at least nothing anyone knows about) to gain
and Roak will get this position of power and prestige (an inside joke).
Therefore he MUST be guilty, right?
Sorry folks, this doesn't wash any better than those who are arguing
that Thomas is guilty because he's a man.
Jim
|
1004.84 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:22 | 12 |
|
RE: .77 Tom_K
> So, you are willing to deny Judge Thomas a seat on the
> Supreme Court on the basis of hearsay?
I was willing to deny it to him *before* this came out, so why
not now? :-)
> Excuse me while I go barf.
Have a good one.
|
1004.85 | Get this straight, would you? | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:24 | 6 |
|
RE: .83 Jim
NO ONE is arguing that Thomas is guilty because he is a man
(except in YOUR mind!)
|
1004.86 | Depending on the credibility of your testimony, of course... | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:25 | 7 |
|
RE: .83 Jim
If Roak is nominated to the Supreme Court and you testify about
his wrong-doing under oath to the Senate, I'd support their
having concerns about Roak's appropriateness for the post.
|
1004.87 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:32 | 12 |
| <<< Note 1004.86 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> If Roak is nominated to the Supreme Court and you testify about
> his wrong-doing under oath to the Senate, I'd support their
> having concerns about Roak's appropriateness for the post.
As far as I can recall Prof. Hill has not offered sworn testimony
in an open forum.
Jim
|
1004.88 | I'd support concerns about your testimony anyway... | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:37 | 3 |
|
Who said anything about an "open" forum, Jim?
|
1004.89 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:43 | 16 |
| <<< Note 1004.50 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> Thomas has the less creditable position in this.
OK, if it's all in my mind, please state the basis for this
assumption.
You have two well-educated professional individuals. They both
make statements that are mutually exclusive. There is no independent
evidence for either statement. One what basis do you choose to believe
one or the other?
YOU are the one crying for his blood. I'm simply saying wait for
the evidence.
Jim
|
1004.90 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:53 | 12 |
|
RE: .89 Jim
Excuse me????
Where did I "cry for his blood"???
OH - you must mean where I stated that the Senate should have
some concerns about the appropriateness of Thomas as a Supreme
Court justice after hearing Prof. Hill's testimony...
(Exaggerate much, Jim?) :-)
|
1004.91 | ... | SPARKL::JOHNHC | | Wed Oct 09 1991 19:57 | 26 |
| Maybe I've missed something....
Has this discussion already covered what Professor Hill has to lose by
going public with a negative aspect of a hierarchically superior male
of the species?
Has somebody already noted that the legal profession is a paradigmatic
old-boy network?
Has it been mentioned that Hill stands to lose her future prospects
(and probably will anyway, regardless of the outcome of this fiasco)
for stepping forward and saying, "It was *me* who said those things,
and they are still true."?
A successful woman who stands up and sounds off about a famous male
colleague in an intensely competitive profession dominated by men is
*not* likely to be an embittered, jilted bimbo who is taking advantage
of an opportunity to make someone she perceives as an a**hole pay for
her pain.
The circumstances alone lend credibility to her tale, by my lights, and
I believe she will lose regardless of whether Thomas becomes a Supreme
Court Justice. I'll bet she believes the same thing.
John H-C
|
1004.92 | | MLTVAX::DUNNE | | Wed Oct 09 1991 20:02 | 6 |
| I hestitate to get involved in a note whose tone has already
become so nasty, but there is evidence that Professor Hill told
a colleague about the harrassment at the time, and that colleague
has corroborated her statement.
Eileen
|
1004.93 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 20:17 | 49 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.70 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
RE: .68 Roak
>> You attacked what you *interpreted* as a veiled accusation - but I'll
>> let you slide on it (you've made much too much of this already.)
And I'll let you slide on your accuasation.
>> Prof. Hill's and Thomas's testimony contradict each other - so we need
>> to ask ourselves who stands to gain what by lying (since they can't
>> both be telling the truth.)
Are you going to decide on who's lying and not lying based solely on "who stands
to gain?" Are you even giving any weight as to "who stands to gain?" What a
travesty of justice! I'm glad *you're* not nominated for a SCotUS position!
>> So far, the only indication of a motive for Prof. Hill is resentment
>> over his rejection of her advances (which someone in this string
>> mentioned earlier today.) Would she be mad enough at (what? not being
>> asked on a date???) to lie to a Senate hearing?
I'm glad you threw in a couple of question marks in there, Sue, because neither
you nor I know the answer to that question. This unknown, of course, is added
to the fact that she has not testified "to a Senate hearing".
>> So why would she go out of her way to lie about him (especially with an
>> accusation that is not as startling or damning as the accusation COULD
>> have been if she were making it all up)?
Another question mark. Good. Again, neither you nor I know the answer to this,
or even (at this point) if she's lying or telling the truth...
>> Advantage: Prof. Hill. The timing was beyond her control (she
>> reported it long before it came out in the press.)
It was leaked. Even if she didn't have any control over it, the negative
reaction to the timing is a disadvantage to her. Note: The fact that it is
to her disadvantage that it was released when it was does not mean that I think
it's right; it's very, very, wrong. It is also a fact that people will look
at this as a "plot" because of it's timing, and that will reflect badly on her
(again, I feel that's wrong, but just pointing out the ugly facts of life).
This unfortunate fact of life is also reflected in those who state "he has
everything to gain and nothing to loose, and she has nothing to gain and
everything loose so he must be lying". That's the way some people will think,
(including many in this file) unfortunately...
Roak
|
1004.94 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 20:33 | 37 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.91 by SPARKL::JOHNHC >>>
Hey John, is isn't as nice over here as in the SCUBA notes file, so watch out!
>> The circumstances alone lend credibility to her tale, by my lights, and
>> I believe she will lose regardless of whether Thomas becomes a Supreme
>> Court Justice. I'll bet she believes the same thing.
So, do we:
1) Block a nomination because what she's saying might be true, or
2) Wait for more information and make an informed decision?
You, as the majority of the people in this file want Thomas not nominated
bacause he was accused of sexual harrasement. This is taking the path of
guilty until proven innocent.
He may have sexual harrased Hill. He may not have. Using fuzzy logic such as
"The circumstances alone lend credibility to her tale..." should not be used
as a basis for condemming Thomas...
I guess what all my responses have tried to say, over and over, is that we don't
knwo who's lying. And we don't yet have enough information to determine that
yet. To side with Thomas or Hill at this point is pure speculation. Any
"reasoning" such as "he's twisted the truth before" or "she's a woman scorned"
or "why should she do this if it wasn't the truth" is a waste of time.
Again, the facts are:
Hill says she was harrassed
Thomas says she wasn't
Net: 0
Hill has a timestamp in the form of someone she told at the time
Advantage: Hill
The timing of the leak was terrible
Advantage: Thomas (through no fault of Hill -- she's unfortunately a
pawn however this turns out).
|
1004.95 | | KOALA::TEST | No brag, Just fact. | Wed Oct 09 1991 20:36 | 50 |
|
This is getting a little out of control here::
As of yet there is NO evidence from Prof Hill that she was sexually
harrassed. She has not given testamony. All she has is made a couple of
statements to the press. She has yet to appear to give her SWORN
testamony. When she does, then Judge Thomas will give his testamony to
the opposite (I expect). When all this happens, there will still be NO
PROOF that Prof Hill is telling the truth. So what else is needed???
. Any physical evidence??? (doubeful)
. Any letters or notes?? (possible)
. Any witnesses??? So far there haven't been any. The person
Prof Hill told is NOT a witness.
. Did Prof Hill inform anyone of authority that she was being
sexually harrassed??? If so where are they???
All we know so far is that one person says it did happen and one person
says it didn't. All this warrents is for a investigation to uncover who
is telling the truth. Someone is obviously lying. If it's Thomas, there
is no way he should get the seat. More likely what will happen is that
there won't be enough evidence to confirm which one is telling the
truth. If that's the case then it shouldn't stand in Judge Thomas's way
of being appointed.
re - about the leak of the FBI report.
I hate to burst your buble, but the Democrats had nothing to gain from
this. The report confirmed Thomas. If it was a Senetor, then it was
most assurdly a Republican (at least a Thomas supporter).
re - Prof Hill has nothing to gain.
B*ll....
"Prof Hill, I'm a lawyer representing a private interest group, and if
you would come forward and tell the Senate hearings that you were
sexually harrassed by Judge Thomas, then I've been authorized to offer
you 5 million dollars"
Anyone want to deny that this can't happen????
My personal opinion is that Thomas is guilty of the accusation. And he
shouldn't be nominated the Supreme Court. However my gut feeling and
what really happened could be totally opposite. And I sure as hell
wouldn't want to ruin someones career/nomination over something that
could/might have happened. I need proof. And as of yet there isn't any.
Another_Mans_Outlook
|
1004.96 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 20:36 | 14 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.92 by MLTVAX::DUNNE >>>
>> I hestitate to get involved in a note whose tone has already
>> become so nasty, but there is evidence that Professor Hill told
>> a colleague about the harrassment at the time, and that colleague
>> has corroborated her statement.
There is an advantage to the timestamp of telling her at the time (Advantage:
Hill), but unfortunately what she told her colleague is mere hearsay (Advantage:
None).
Now an eyewitness (earwitness?) would have been great...
Roak
|
1004.97 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 20:40 | 12 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.86 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> If Roak is nominated to the Supreme Court and you testify about
>> his wrong-doing under oath to the Senate, I'd support their
>> having concerns about Roak's appropriateness for the post.
Ok, he testifies under oath that I did it. I testify under oath I didn't do it.
There is no other evidence.
Now what? Should I get the nomination or not?
Roak
|
1004.98 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 20:43 | 18 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.90 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> RE: .89 Jim
>> Excuse me????
>> Where did I "cry for his blood"???
>> OH - you must mean where I stated that the Senate should have
>> some concerns about the appropriateness of Thomas as a Supreme
>> Court justice after hearing Prof. Hill's testimony...
Very good. You completely avoided Jim's question. I'll ask it again...
How do you justify the statement "Thomas has the less creditable position in
this." in reply .50?
Roak
|
1004.99 | A month ago. Pay attention, .95 "TEST" | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Wed Oct 09 1991 21:12 | 4 |
| Oh, so careful with the quote marks, Roak. She testified before the Senate
Judiciary Committee. Under oath.
DougO
|
1004.100 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 09 1991 21:44 | 10 |
| <<< Note 1004.91 by SPARKL::JOHNHC >>>
> I believe she will lose regardless
It has been reported that she is a TENURED Professor of Law.
If this report is true, she risks nothing. Does this then, alone,
make her claim LESS credible?
Jim
|
1004.101 | .... | SPARKL::JOHNHC | | Wed Oct 09 1991 21:59 | 37 |
| OK, this is my last one here. I don't really like being "another one of
those men who take up all the disk space that belongs to WOMANNOTES."
Being a tenured law professor (or any kind of professor) is a looooong
way from the heights of professional achievement. There, as in many
other pursuits, "teachers are those who can't." Tenure means nothing if
you want status outside the parochial boundaries of staff meetings. It
is especially meaningless if you want to make a difference in the
world. Having seen my fair share of academia nonsense, I think she will
suffer within her own hallowed halls. (Unless the NAACP put her up to
this.... How come no conspiracy-theory-prone folks have suggested this
yet?)
Roak---
Thomas is a guy who's made a living wrestling with legal issues and
their implications, right? Yet he doesn't have an opinion, or can't
recall his stated opinion on the issues surrounding Roe v. Wade?
(Uh, that last was rhetorical.)
Thomas: -23
Hill: 0
United States Judicial System: Hanging in the balance....
(If he wins, guess what the score will be.)
And what do you mean this is less nice (warm? friendly? whatever?) than
SCUBA? Are you suggesting there are hard-hearted people opening this
file? Or so you mean that folks are opinionated? Oooof! THAT one shoos
me away.
John H-C
|
1004.102 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 09 1991 22:03 | 13 |
| <<< Note 1004.88 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> Who said anything about an "open" forum, Jim?
Well actually YOU did. You keep refering to Prof. Hill's "testimony",
you use "testify under oath", as relating to the Hill/Thomas dispute
in answering my little scenario.
Testimony (in this case) implies going before the Judiciary Committee
in open session. Supplying data in written form is NOT testimony.
Jim
|
1004.103 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 09 1991 22:09 | 28 |
| <<< Note 1004.90 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> Where did I "cry for his blood"???
Well exuce ME, if I percieved something you did not intend to
convey.
In .27 you say "He only committed this crime..."
In .33 you compare this incident to wife-beating AND robbery.
In .41 you say "in spite of what he did..."
in .50 you say " Thomas has the less credible position", "he has
every reason to lie" and implied that he has refused to admit his
wrongdoing.
And finally in .84 you admit your obvious bias with "I was willing to
deny it to him before".
Far be it from me to interpret these remarks as "crying for his blood".
> (Exaggerate much, Jim?) :-)
Only a little.
Jim
|
1004.104 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 09 1991 22:26 | 34 |
| One other thing bothers me about this accusation.
Prof. Hill did NOT, by all accounts contact the Committee. An
aide (by some reports a Kennedy aide, which would TRULY be ironic
given the charges) contacted her. She responded to his questions
and ultimately submitted a written document to the Committee. She
SPECIFICALLY requests that her identity NOT be revealed (so much
for being able to face one's accusers).
Time marches on.
The hearings are over, the tie vote has been recorded and the issues
raised in Prof. Hill's document have NOT been raised during questioning
(reportedly because the Committee after reviewing the FBI findings could
NOT substantiate the charge or for that matter even find "probable
cause" to pursue them).
Thomas' confirmation (by all reports) is virtually a certainty.
Prof. Hill STILL remains silent.
Someone associated with the Committee "leaks" either Prof.
Hill's written statement or the FBI report or both to the press.
At this point Prof. Hill begins responding to the questions of
reporters.
Then things REALLY begin to roll. Appearances on all three morning news
shows, press conferences and so on.
What I still do not understand is why was she willing to let the
confirmation proceed?
Jim
|
1004.105 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 09 1991 22:35 | 16 |
| <<< Note 1004.99 by FMNIST::olson "Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4" >>>
>She testified before the Senate
>Judiciary Committee. Under oath.
When did this happen? All reports are that she submitted a written
statement to the Committee. She did NOT appear before the Committee
OR answer questions from Committee members.
As to whether her statement was "sworn", reports have refered to
it as a affidavit, this has a specific legal description as a
sworn statement. But unless the document itself is released we
will not know if it was, in fact, an affidavit in the legal sense
or whether the term was used loosely by the media.
Jim
|
1004.106 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 22:38 | 17 |
| RE: .98 Roak
> How do you justify the statement "Thomas has the less creditable
> position in this." in reply .50?
Sorry, in my editor-less haste, I misspelled "credible" - I regard
Thomas's denials as less credible than the accusations against him
(and NOT, I repeat NOT - let me say it once again: *NOT!!!* because
he is a man.)
Cases of sexual harassment are most often bungled as badly as the
one brought up by Prof. Hill (even if investigators as well-paid
as the FBI are the ones doing the "investigating" - and I use the
term loosely.)
Her predicament is a very familiar one in this country, unfortunately, and
she will pay the usual price extracted from women who dare to report it.
|
1004.107 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 23:26 | 36 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.106 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> > How do you justify the statement "Thomas has the less creditable
>> > position in this." in reply .50?
>> Sorry, in my editor-less haste, I misspelled "credible" - I regard
>> Thomas's denials as less credible than the accusations against him
>> (and NOT, I repeat NOT - let me say it once again: *NOT!!!* because
>> he is a man.)
Hadn't even noticed the misspelling, those things happen, and I just cut and
pasted from your last note.
You again repeat your bias -- "Thomas's denials as less credible than the
accusations against him" but you still offer no support for this bias, nor offer
how you arrived at it -- *that's* what I'm asking for...
>> Cases of sexual harassment are most often bungled as badly as the
>> one brought up by Prof. Hill (even if investigators as well-paid
>> as the FBI are the ones doing the "investigating" - and I use the
>> term loosely.)
What! You don't trust your own government!? Tell you what -- I'll meet you
over in the GUN_CONTROL conference... :-)
>> Her predicament is a very familiar one in this country, unfortunately, and
>> she will pay the usual price extracted from women who dare to report it.
Again, it's obvious that you feel that Hill is telling the truth without the
slightest questioning; on what do you base this conclusion?
Note that I'm not saying that Hill is lying or Thomas is telling the truth;
I'm willing to admit that I DON'T KNOW and I'm willing to wait for more
information before I start casting stones or put people on pedestals...
Roak
|
1004.108 | There'll be hell to pay for this... | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 23:32 | 22 |
| RE: .103 Jim
Your apology is accepted (with regard to your misperception about my
being "out for his blood.") Thomas can keep every drop. :-)
The Supreme Court wasn't set up as a "neat job opportunity" for Thomas.
It's an important (lifetime) job requiring someone with the highest
possible integrity (something very much in question with Thomas now.)
By the way, you were also wrong about my being biased against Thomas.
I was against his nomination, true, but I'd accepted the inevitability
that Bush would continue to create the most lopsided Supreme Court in
our nation's entire history (and that his main concern was to find a
minority Justice to push the Civil Rights movement back to the 19th
Century.)
Even if Thomas were turned down now, Bush would find someone worse to
nominate (that much is a given.)
One good thing about all this is that legislators are finding out that
their constituents will not take this appointment well (and they may
find some rude awakenings upon the next few elections.)
|
1004.109 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 09 1991 23:32 | 21 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.101 by SPARKL::JOHNHC >>>
>> Thomas is a guy who's made a living wrestling with legal issues and
>> their implications, right? Yet he doesn't have an opinion, or can't
>> recall his stated opinion on the issues surrounding Roe v. Wade?
>> (Uh, that last was rhetorical.)
Yes, but I'll answer it anyway :-). He wouldn't answer, not that he couldn't
or that he had no opinion...
>> And what do you mean this is less nice (warm? friendly? whatever?) than
>> SCUBA? Are you suggesting there are hard-hearted people opening this
>> file?
I ment not to suggest any of the above; It's just more political and therefore,
let's say, heated. And yes, opinionated. In SCUBA we debate over snorkel-
clearing techniques. If you don't like the way I clear, just don't do it my
way :-).
Roak
|
1004.110 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 09 1991 23:45 | 35 |
| RE: .107 Roak
> Again, it's obvious that you feel that Hill is telling the truth
> without the slightest questioning; on what do you base this conclusion?
Stop the mind-reading, Roak. You're lousy at it.
I reserved judgment on it until I'd done some reading on the issue.
When it's one person's word against another's (and outside the criminal
courts) - it's a matter of deciding whose story to believe (based on
whose story is more credible.) Civil courts don't base these things
on "proof beyond a reasonable doubt."
What I've tried to tell you repeatedly (and which you steadfastly refuse
to comprehend) is that her description of sexual harassment is not at
all unusual. All the elements have much in common with the real-life
stories of people I know about.
I'm sure that Thomas considers himself "innocent" (even if he did say
the things Prof. Hill has described.) What's the harm in a little
sex talk with a pretty woman at the office, after all. Boys will be
boys, after all. Why should he be held to higher standards than most
men are held to (just 'cause he's going for the Supreme Court)?
Well, he should, that's all.
>Note that I'm not saying that Hill is lying or Thomas is telling the truth;
>I'm willing to admit that I DON'T KNOW and I'm willing to wait for more
>information before I start casting stones or put people on pedestals...
You're willing to appoint a lifetime Supreme Court Justice on the
basis of "Well, he was accused of a crime, but it wasn't proven"??
I'm not. I'm funny that way.
|
1004.111 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Thu Oct 10 1991 02:02 | 61 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.110 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> > Again, it's obvious that you feel that Hill is telling the truth
>> > without the slightest questioning; on what do you base this conclusion?
>> Stop the mind-reading, Roak. You're lousy at it.
I'm not mind-reading, I'm text reading. Text such as the following:
>> I reserved judgment on it until I'd done some reading on the issue.
Past tense. Ok, you have the information, you know Hill is telling the truth
and Thomas is lying (statement after statement you've made support this, if you
*really* want me to, I'll go back and collect a few examples). Care to share
what information you have available that leads you to this conclusion (third
time you've been asked, Sue!)
>> When it's one person's word against another's (and outside the criminal
>> courts) - it's a matter of deciding whose story to believe (based on
>> whose story is more credible.) Civil courts don't base these things
>> on "proof beyond a reasonable doubt."
And you seem to have decided. Based on what? (yhea, same question I asked
above, fourth time you've been asked, but since this is the same note as the
thrid request, we won't count it...)
>> What I've tried to tell you repeatedly (and which you steadfastly refuse
>> to comprehend) is that her description of sexual harassment is not at
>> all unusual. All the elements have much in common with the real-life
>> stories of people I know about.
Good, her description matches other sexual harrassment cases. I guess I fail to
see how that even *implies* that she's telling the truth!
Me: "Officer, I was walking out to my car, and Sue Conlon snuck up behind me
and hit me on the head with a tire iorn and took my wallet"
Officer: "Yup, that story has all the elements in common with the real-life
muggings that I know about, so we'll just skip the trial and throw her in the
slammer."
Yup, that's how I'd like *our* justice system to work... :-(
>> I'm sure that Thomas considers himself "innocent"...
Love that spin; compeletly discards any shread of possibility that he's truely
innocent; the best he can do is that he may "consider himself innocent" but you
do know better, don't you Sue. He's guilty, guilty, GUILTY!
>> >Note that I'm not saying that Hill is lying or Thomas is telling the truth;
>> >I'm willing to admit that I DON'T KNOW and I'm willing to wait for more
>> >information before I start casting stones or put people on pedestals...
>> You're willing to appoint a lifetime Supreme Court Justice on the
>> basis of "Well, he was accused of a crime, but it wasn't proven"??
I must have a problem with my terminal; I don't see anything in that paragraph
that says we should nominate him before we figure out who's lying and who's
telling the truth. Now who was accusing who of being a poor mindreader?
Roak
|
1004.112 | sorry, I'm in the mood for stirring a little. | RDGENG::LIBRARY | A wild and an untamed thing | Thu Oct 10 1991 09:21 | 7 |
| No matter what his politics, and no matter what he's done or not done
in the past, isn't there just a *slight* 8-) possibility he might
actually be good at the job he's being nominated for?
Alice T.
I'll be honest with you here: I know very little about him.
|
1004.114 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 10 1991 10:37 | 31 |
| RE: .111 Roak
You can ask your question til doomsday - I've answered it repeatedly,
but you simply won't accept it:
Her story is more believable than his. I'm not on a jury in a criminal
court of law, so I'm not required to use the "proof beyond a reasonable
doubt" criteria. I can listen to both sides and form my own opinion
about who is telling the truth. I've decided. You don't have to like
my decision, but I have every right in the world to make it (and NO
obligation to justify it to you!)
>> I'm sure that Thomas considers himself "innocent"...
>Love that spin; compeletly discards any shread of possibility that he's truely
>innocent; the best he can do is that he may "consider himself innocent" but you
>do know better, don't you Sue. He's guilty, guilty, GUILTY!
Why are you being so nasty? What do you care if I believe Prof. Hill
over Thomas? I'm entitled to think he committed sexual harassment.
>I must have a problem with my terminal; I don't see anything in that paragraph
>that says we should nominate him before we figure out who's lying and who's
>telling the truth. Now who was accusing who of being a poor mindreader?
Ok, I'll offer you this: Let's agree that his nomination
should not be approved until we know for absolute certain who is
telling the truth. (Most likely, we'll never know, of course.)
Here's another novel idea: Let's put someone on the Supreme Court
who has NOT been accused of sexual harassment.
|
1004.115 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Oct 10 1991 10:38 | 48 |
|
I hope Ellen Goodman's column is in the Glob as well (I read it last night
in the Concord (NH) Monitor and it is awesome).
Folks, Thomas's guilt or innocence is not what has people upset. It is
the fact that the Judiciary Committee has been sitting on this information
for over a month and that they were apparently ready to deal with it in
the traditional "old-boy" manner. In Goodman's words, "It was her word
versus his. They took his without hearing hers. They didn't tell the rest
of us." And that stinks.
The reality is that in sexual harassment cases, it is usually one person's
word against another's, with no eyewitness and no physical evidence. We
are going to have to learn to deal with that situation and the only scheme
I can think of is to listen to both sides, judge the relative credibility
of the principals, and make a choice.
I think what is going on here echoes the discussion in the "what is rape?"
topic. Our illustrious Senators, faced with these charges against Thomas,
are thinking "that can't be sexual harassment, because if that _is_ sexual
harassment, then I myself..." At this point the Senators go non-linear due
to the number of potential charges that could surface against any of them.
Many valid sexual harassment charges are never made for reasons already
mentioned. But if the newly-raised consciousness about harassment causes
even 1% of such potential charges to be aired, well, I suspect that Ted
Kennedy and others might have good reason to be worried.
Personally, I think the current brouhaha is wonderful. Everyone in the
country is wrestling with the admittedly difficult issue of sexual
harassment, and that is a good thing. And I am delighted that the Giplet's
clever nomination ploy may blow up in his face.
No one believes that Thomas is the most qualified person for the job, or
even that he is on the list of the 100 most qualified. No one believes
he would have been nominated were he not black. (No one believes Thomas has
no opinion on abortion, either, but that's neither here nor there.)
The US Constitution says quite clearly that Supreme Court nominations are
done with the advice and consent of the Senate. Bush could have consulted
with the Senate and gotten a list of candidates everyone could live with --
this approach has been taken in this century, so there is precedent as
well as constitutional support for this. But no... Bush had to get cute
(I think of the Thomas nomination as Bush's monument to Lee Atwater...).
Ok, ok, I'll shut up now.
JP
|
1004.116 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 10 1991 10:41 | 5 |
|
RE: .115 John H. Parodi
Thanks - agree 100% !
|
1004.117 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | a good dog and some trees | Thu Oct 10 1991 10:58 | 1 |
| yes, John's .115 makes plenty of sense.
|
1004.118 | Something I put in ::SOAPBOX yesterday | RT93::KALIKOW | Then: Ruble; Now: Rubble! | Thu Oct 10 1991 11:03 | 31 |
| <<< PEAR::DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SOAPBOX.NOTE;1 >>>
-< SOAPBOX: to seek out strange new opinions >-
================================================================================
Note 101.699 Clarence Thomas 699 of 760
RT93::KALIKOW "Then: Ruble; Now: Rubble!" 24 lines 9-OCT-1991 11:11
-< Would someone with today's Boston GLOBE... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
...kindly post (-:without permission:-) Diane White's commentary on
this matter? I skimmed it quickly over breakfast this morning and was
impressed with some of the subtleties she expressed about this
situation, both at the time of the alleged incident, and now as it's
coming to light.
The female perspective on sexual harrassment is very different from the
male. I learned something valuable from White, and from many other
women observers.
IMHO it's too early (for me) to firm up my spectator's opinion on this
matter, but I will say that Hill seems a solid citizen, and that
Thomas, despite his intellect and accomplishment, was a willing
participant in a Senate confirmation system that "places a high premium
on disingenuousness," in the words of some political pundit whose name
I've forgotten. By this I mean that the Judiciary Committee members
accepted answers (e.g., that he's neither discussed nor formed an
opinion on Roe V. Wade) that, though given under oath, trash credulity.
At least my opinion of his credulity.
Whether my view of his credulity when dealing with Ms. Hill will be
related to my view of his credulity when responding to legal questions
like the one above, remains to be seen. Let the soap opera continue...
|
1004.119 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Thu Oct 10 1991 11:21 | 10 |
| 1) Another bright side: The whole issue of harassment is/will
get a lot of much deserved attention.
2) Intelligent people, such as the two in question, can legitimately
see the same events in different light. It is possible that
event X occurred, Ms Hill considered it harassment, Mr Thomas
did not. Which would leave them *both* telling the truth.
Tom_K
|
1004.120 | Will Thomas admit it happened, tho? Not too likely now. | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 10 1991 11:27 | 9 |
|
RE: .119 Tom_K
> It is possible that event X occurred, Ms Hill considered it harassment,
> Mr Thomas did not. Which would leave them *both* telling the truth.
Agreed. Of all the possible scenerios (of what really happened,)
I regard this one as the most likely possibility.
|
1004.121 | re .119 | RT93::KALIKOW | Then: Ruble; Now: Rubble! | Thu Oct 10 1991 11:35 | 20 |
| Yeah, but even if your 2) was what actually happened, I sincerely doubt
that Judge Thomas would ever publicly testify that he broached *any*
sexual subject with Professor Hill....
So I predict he'll have to deny anything of the sort ever happened. So
we'll have to make our own judgements about the veracity of the
testimonies. (More importantly, the Senate will have to...) Now of
course there could be corroborating testimony that will shed more light
on one side or the other, as well...
Taking the above argument one step further: Given that Judge Thomas
will (p=.99) deny ever having raised the subject, that could be (a)
because he actually never did, and Professor Hill is lying, or (b)
because he actually did, independent of whether he considered it
harassment. Pretty tough to tease apart, and part of the tools that
will be used to do this will be Professor Hill's testimony.
'nuff rambling
Dan_who_could_certainly_never_even_get_nominated_for_anything
|
1004.122 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Thu Oct 10 1991 11:50 | 9 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.112 by RDGENG::LIBRARY "A wild and an untamed thing" >>>
>> No matter what his politics, and no matter what he's done or not done
>> in the past, isn't there just a *slight* 8-) possibility he might
>> actually be good at the job he's being nominated for?
Yes, he might. And he might not. I'll wait until more information is
presented. It's called having an open mind. You seem to possess one too,
Alice. That's a refreshing breath of fresh air in this note...
|
1004.123 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 10 1991 11:53 | 38 |
| <<< Note 1004.108 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> It's an important (lifetime) job requiring someone with the highest
> possible integrity (something very much in question with Thomas now.)
THIS is what bothers me the most about this entire string. Over and
over we are told that Thomas' "credibility" or "integretity" has
suffered or is now "suspect". This is WRONG people, very wrong.
A charge has been made, no evidence has been given, but we have those
that are willing to say that Thomas is somehow "less" that he was
prior to the accusation.
According to this mornings NPR report, Hill will testify tommorrow.
To support her accusation, three witnessness will also be called.
Two are co-workers she says she complained to at the time, another
is a person that says she told him she left EEOC because of
harrasment (but he says no names were mentioned).
Thomas' witnesses include other female co-workers that say their
relationship with him at EEOC was strictly professional and others
at EEOC that say that the working relationship between Hill and
Thomas was "cordial and professional".
Except for one thing it seems to be a zero sum game. That one thing
(at least in my mind) is my belief (potentially streotypical) that
a person that engages in sexual harrassment in the workplace does
not "single out" a particular victim. More likely is that the
behavior will be directed to more than one person.
In this case no other woman (women) has come forward to say
"Thomas harrased me as well". Either from Education OR EEOC.
Unless this does happen, I'd say the game goes to Thomas. If
it does happen, then he's toast (and justifiably so).
Jim
|
1004.124 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Thu Oct 10 1991 11:54 | 13 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.113 by SPARKL::BROOKS >>>
>> Those interested in understanding women's feelings about sexual
>> harassment might want to read the numerous articles on the subject in
>> today's and yesterday's Boston Globe.
Well, I'm a couple of thousand miles from Boston, but I think the major heated
point in this string is the discussion trying to point out that assuming Hill is
telling the truth is just as wrong as assuming Thomas is telling the truth; it
(unfortunately) can't get beyond that point so we truely can discuss sexual
harrassment...
Roak
|
1004.125 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 10 1991 11:58 | 15 |
|
Alice, the job of Supreme Court Justice is granted for life
(until the Justice passes away or makes his/her own decision
to retire.) Clarence Thomas is only 43 years old, so if he
doesn't do a good job, we could be burdened with his presence
for several decades.
Clarence Thomas could get any number of other wonderful jobs
if he missed his chance at this one.
I see no reason in the world why we should take a chance with
him when there are any number of qualified candidates (both
men and women of all races, creeds) that could be nominated.
Keeping an open mind to a new such candidate, myself...
|
1004.126 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:04 | 20 |
| RE: .123 Jim
Well, I'm glad everyone's notes seem calmer this morning.
> In this case no other woman (women) has come forward to say
> "Thomas harrased me as well". Either from Education OR EEOC.
The paper announced this morning that the White House is planning
an attack on Prof. Anita Hill (in an attempt to destroy her
credibility.)
How many women do you think will feel comfortable coming forward
under these circumstances? Even Prof. Hill did not want her name
revealed.
Knowing what I know about how women are treated after complaining
about sexual harassment, I would never recommend to another woman
that she bring such charges forward (NOT EVEN HERE AT DIGITAL!)
This is the hell of sexual harassment.
|
1004.127 | | ZFC::deramo | the radio reminds me | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:08 | 23 |
| re .115:
> Folks, Thomas's guilt or innocence is not what has people upset. It is
> the fact that the Judiciary Committee has been sitting on this information
> for over a month and that they were apparently ready to deal with it in
> the traditional "old-boy" manner. In Goodman's words, "It was her word
> versus his. They took his without hearing hers. They didn't tell the rest
> of us." And that stinks.
From listening to Senator Biden on CNN Headline News, that is simply
not what happened. He said that a person has the right to face his
or her accuser; that the accuser wished to remain anonymous; and
that therefore he had no intention of repeating the charge to the
full Senate or to the public, not in this case nor in the future
should it happen again. When the accuser went public, the vote was
delayed so that the accusation could be considered.
That sounds more like a long held principle of the American judicial
process (the right to face ones accuser) at work to me, not like an
"old-boy" network at work as Ellen Goodman states. Her criticism is
way off base. The confirmation process seems to be working to me.
Dan
|
1004.113 | | SPARKL::BROOKS | | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:18 | 6 |
|
Those in the Boston area who are interested in understanding women's
feelings about sexual harassment might want to read the numerous articles
on the subject in today's and yesterday's Boston Globe.
Dorian
|
1004.128 | | CURRNT::ALFORD | An elephant is a mouse with an operating system | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:19 | 13 |
| Re: .122
>presented. It's called having an open mind. You seem to possess one too,
>Alice. That's a refreshing breath of fresh air in this note...
Possibly because Alice is British, and like the rest of us (maybe) over here,
find US politics an amusing bit of entertainment at best, so can afford to be
unbiased and "open-minded".
...and surely this whole matter has very little to do with sexual harrasment,
but much more to do with politics and the rules (or lack of) that politics is
played by....
|
1004.129 | Taking a strategic view of the White House's plan in .126 | RT93::KALIKOW | Then: Ruble; Now: Rubble! | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:21 | 12 |
| ... one possible construction is to lessen the probability that another
woman WILL come forward. I agree with an earlier note that opined that
this eventuality would "toast" Thomas, hence the utility of the White
House attack on Hill. Aside from its normal utility as the standard
"establishment" reaction -- i.e., to "reject the allegation and resent
the allegator."
But watch out if the ploy fails and a SECOND credible allegator
emerges. Then the attackers will be toast.
(-: And spare me the extensions of the above metaphor; I know that
allIgators live in swamps. :-)
|
1004.130 | Consider this: | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:24 | 41 |
| Let's assume that Professor Hill is telling the truth about the
*actions* she took (and the press did not scramble them (So that
isn't the best assumption in the world.)). In that case:
a. She told a friend, ten years ago, that Clarence Thomas
was saying sexual things that made her feel uncomfortable.
b. She filed an anonymous report, ten years ago, stating that
Clarence Thomas was saying sexual things that made her feel
uncomfortable, and that she was therefore charging him with
sexual harassment.
c. She continued to treat Clarence Thomas civilly whenever they
met/interacted.
Now, why would she do that THEN?
1. She is precognitive, and did that to block his forseen rapid
advancement in the world.
2. She is a horrid, spiteful, two-faced woman who did it for
horrid, spiteful reasons best left to the imagination of the
reader.
3. She was harassed, she figured she could handle it, but, since
there were other, perhaps less ept, women around, she reported
it so that it would be corroborative if anyone else filed a
similar complaint.
Reason 1. is just flat-out unlikely. Reason 2. doesn't jibe with
action c. and, because of c., implies an "I will bide my time until
I can do him the most harm" mentality that requires the same exquisite
foresight as 1.. Reason 3. sounds very ordinary, very common, and
very plausible.
How many of you know how hard it is to tell an elaborate lie? And
keep repeated tellings consistant? Without having anachronisms
creep in? (Two years ago, I got to read an elaborate lie. It
included an alleged discussion of "cold fusion" in early March, 1989.
Thunk.) How much harder do you think it is to tell a long, detailed
lie than to tell a lie like, "Nothing happened. No. Nothing like
that happened. <repeat>"?
Ann B.
|
1004.131 | my opinions | TERZA::ZANE | for who you are | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:27 | 50 |
|
Here are some ramblings from me:
1) It is extremely hard to believe that these Senate confirmation
hearings can be any different from other confirmation hearings. It's
hard to believe that the Senate is really trying to determine whether
Thomas is really qualified to be a Supreme Court justice. It is much
easier to believe that the Senate is using the hearings to sound out
what is the best course of action for politics *right now*.
There may actually be Senators who really want to decide if Thomas is
really the best man for the job. But their voices will be lost in
the din for the best political appearance.
2) The Bush administration has been extremely clever with how they
handle the media. It would not surprise me to learn that this entire
Thomas thing has been handled extremely well from the beginning.
Thomas is not known for *anything*. The Senate could not get him to
express his opinions about *any* important/controversial topic. Now
he has become the center of media attention. And now with sexual
harrassment charges, nothing useful about this man will ever be
known. The topic of sexual harrassment is *extremely* important, but
it should NOT be piggybacked on this confirmation. It will serve to
discredit BOTH issues.
3) What does the Federal government have to gain by engineering this
circus? Has anybody noticed that the sessions of the Supreme Court
have begun this week, anyway? And that many HIGHLY important issues
are being decided RIGHT now? Did anyone notice that one of the
justices whose name I can't remember right now, stepped down the week
before these sessions were to begin, i.e., he decided not to wait for
the Thomas confirmation hearings to be concluded? (Note that this
also took place before Hill's charges were leaked to the press.)
It may be good that sexual harrassment in general is getting national
attention RIGHT now. Some useful things may actually come out of this.
But more damaging things may be going on that we'll only start to notice
in the long run.
I'd be willing to wager that both Thomas and Hill are pawns in a much
larger political game and that neither the Bush administration nor the
Senate really care whether Thomas gets confirmed or whether Hill was
really sexually harrassed or not.
Terza
|
1004.132 | some more | GUCCI::SANTSCHI | violence cannot solve problems | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:27 | 19 |
| re: .47
re: my post about Thomas' contempt for women. He has trashed his
sister who was on welfare. The whole story is that is mother could not
care for all of her children so she sent the BOYS off to live with
their grandparents so they could get a good education and support
themselves. But also remember that this was the time period when it
was thought that girls married and their husbands supported them. This
is indeed what happened with Thomas' sister. But then her husband ran
off and didn't support his family so she worked 2 minimum wage jobs to
support her family. She went on welfare when she had to take care of
an ailing relative, whom no one else was caring for. Sometimes you
have to look beyond mere factual statements to understand the
circumstances.
Also, Hill did not speak to the press until the reporter read the
leaked statement to her verbatim.
sue
|
1004.134 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:34 | 10 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.116 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> RE: .115 John H. Parodi
>> Thanks - agree 100% !
See, Sue and I can agree, at least in this case to the 85% mark!
Roak
|
1004.135 | A few points that have been ignored. | LEDS::LEWICKE | My other vehicle is a Caterpillar | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:39 | 27 |
| A couple of points that have been ignored.
First, anyone that is nominated to the supreme court by Bush or any
other president is almost certain to be accused of a crime by the
opposing political party. The fact that Thomas has been accused of a
crime is just part of the job (being nominated to the court).
Second, From what I have read here and elsewhere, it isn't sexual
harrassment until and unless the supposed harrasser has been informed
by the harrassee or some third party that the harrassee considers some
form of behavior to be harrassment. From what I can tell, this has
only occurred withing the past week. If Thomas talks dirty to Hill now
or in the future, it will be harrassment. What he did in the past was
not harrassment (whether or not he said anything sexual to Hill)
because he was not asked to refrain, and had no reason to be aware that
she may have objected.
Third, she did not make any form of record at the time of the
alleged offense, so the best we will ever get from this is two or three
people's recollection of some events ten years ago. All of these
recollections will be tainted by the present events. My spouse has
been in a sensitive position at work. When events occurred that might
have led to later problems she has written her description of the
events had me witness it and mailed it to herself certified mail. This
doesn't make it public, but protects her if something goes wrong in the
unforseeable future. If professor Hill thought that something
significant had occurred she should have done something like this at
the time.
John
|
1004.133 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:43 | 64 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.114 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> You can ask your question til doomsday - I've answered it repeatedly,
>> but you simply won't accept it:
>> Her story is more believable than his.
In other words, it's the truth because I think it's the truth.
You have pre-judged Hill to be telling the truth. There's another word for
that, too...
>> Why are you being so nasty? What do you care if I believe Prof. Hill
>> over Thomas? I'm entitled to think he committed sexual harassment.
Believe me, I don't care what your final conclusion is, I only am interested in
how you arrived at it. You have concluded that Hill is telling the truth
and that Thomas is lying (or, at the very best, unaware that he comitted sexual
harrassment). In the absence of any supportng evidence except "I choose to
believe Hill and choose not to believe Thomas" I can reach only one conclusion
as to why you take that stance, since there is only one, glaring difference
between Hill and Thomas.
>> Ok, I'll offer you this: Let's agree that his nomination
>> should not be approved until we know for absolute certain who is
>> telling the truth. (Most likely, we'll never know, of course.)
As you've pointed out, we'll probably never know for certain; as you've also
pointed out you need not prove beyond reasonable doubt that Thomas sexually
harrassed Hill in a civil case. So, if Thomas is not found guilty of sexual
harrassment, he should be nominated.
>> Here's another novel idea: Let's put someone on the Supreme Court
>> who has NOT been accused of sexual harassment.
Ok, finally! I've been waiting for this. I knew it was what you were basing
your conclusions on. I'm glad it's out in the open now.
The legal operative that Ms. Conlon is working from is that whenever sexual
harrassment is accused, it did in fact happen. No ifs, ands or buts. One
merely has to accuse someone of sexual harrassment and, after all, why would
they *accuse* someone of it if it really didn't happen? Guilty until proven
innocent. Guilty *EVEN IF* proven innocent!
The "shift of power" (for lack of a better word) is moved from the accused,
who usually "gets off" because of lack of evidence, to the accusor, who now
has to prove nothing; once accused, the accused is guilty.
If Ms. Conlon didn't like the next Supreme Court nominee, all she'd have to
do is call her senator's office, and say s/he sexually harrassed her at some
time in the past, and TA DA! That judge has now been accused of sexual
harrassment and (by Sue's standards) ineligible for the position.
I don't know if Sue knows, but she's following the most basic tennent of
Politically Correct thought. First, you divide people up into opressed and
opressor catagories. Then, to be politically correct, you do not only
even out the two catagories, but you switch them allow the opressed to
opress the previous opressors, to pay for the sins of opression.
Me, I'll keep an open mind. If Thomas is found guilty of SH, I'll be first in
line to say he shouldn't be nominated. If he's not found guilty, I'll be just
as fair and say he should be nominated...
Roak
|
1004.136 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:46 | 20 |
|
Re: .127 (Dan)
This of course would not be the first time that Sen. Biden played fast and
loose with the truth to further his own interests.
Given that what we have allegations to work with rather than facts, it is
pretty hard to prove anything. But according to Hill's statements, the
"confronting the accuser" argument seems bogus. She says that she made
repeated calls to the Judiciary Committee asking whether she needed to
appear (granted, she wanted to do so in closed session). So the Committee
certainly could have had that confrontation if they had wanted it.
The way I read it, they wanted the allegations to go away. They aired
the allegations only after they became public through other channels.
And I disagree that the confirmation (indeed, the nomination process)
is working as it was intended, for the reasons outlined in .115.
JP
|
1004.137 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Thu Oct 10 1991 12:49 | 12 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.126 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> The paper announced this morning that the White House is planning
>> an attack on Prof. Anita Hill (in an attempt to destroy her
>> credibility.)
And I'm sure the non-supporters are planning an attack on Thomas (in an attempt
to destroy his credibility). If they're not, someone's not doing their job!
Through this method I hope we'll come as close to the truth as possible.
Roak
|
1004.138 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | all I need is the air.... | Thu Oct 10 1991 13:11 | 9 |
| i was quite interested this morning to hear Sen Edward Kennedy
supporting Professor Hill's actions in re the harassment charges.
He stated that her behavior was quite normal for a woman caught
in the situation. While I was pleased that he was coming out
so strongly in her support there was a small voice in the back
of my mind wondering just how much direct experience Kennedy had
had, sigh.
Bonnie
|
1004.139 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 10 1991 13:32 | 17 |
| RE: .133 Roak
BS, Roak. If you are attempting to claim that my only criteria for
believing Prof. Hill is her sex - you are dead wrong. Absolutely,
positively, without question. 100%.
If you want to know the kind of abuse subjected to someone who
reports sexual harassment - just look at the abuse YOU are heaping
on me for simply BELIEVING her claim.
It is MY CHOICE to believe one person over another. All your biting,
vicious sarcasm over my exercising this choice only serves to
demonstrate the severity of the problem of sexual harassment (both
reporting it and what happens when others, such as me, BELIEVE it.)
Thanks for your cooperation. It was worth the annoyance of reading
your notes.
|
1004.140 | | SPARKL::BROOKS | | Thu Oct 10 1991 13:51 | 10 |
|
If anyone wants to call Professor Hill's office to express support, here's her
telephone number at the law school in Oklahoma where she teaches:
405-325-4699
(It was given out at a meeting last night of Lexington NOW.)
Dorian
|
1004.141 | ''Judge Thomas, did you sexually harass Prof. Hill?'' | RT93::KALIKOW | Then: Ruble; Now: Rubble! | Thu Oct 10 1991 13:54 | 27 |
| File this under "It'll never happen... but it's sure fun to construct a
petard anyway..."
"Well, Senator, let me just say that as a nominee to the highest court
in the land, it is a virtual certainty that I will eventually have to
express, and in fact perhaps even author, either a majority or minority
opinion on what exactly constitutes sexual harassment. This is a
subtle area with many pitfalls and deep implications for jurisprudence,
and it may well affect American society down to its roots. For that
reason, I feel that at this time I should reserve any judgment as to
whether any action I might or might not have taken with respect to
Professor Hill might be construable to have been, at the time, what you
have termed sexual harassment. This position, that it would be
inappropriate for me to comment on a matter so weighty, is consistent
with those I have taken at several other times in response to many
other questions posed during the first time I appeared before this
committee. Since you accepted those answers, I see no reason to give
further details, and much to be lost to our American Justice System if
more is requested."
"And let me close with an anticipation of your next question: I would
like to add further that while I have mulled this matter over for
years, privately, I have as yet formed no opinion or conclusion on it,
whatever."
:-)
|
1004.142 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 10 1991 14:05 | 39 |
| <<< Note 1004.126 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> The paper announced this morning that the White House is planning
> an attack on Prof. Anita Hill (in an attempt to destroy her
> credibility.)
> How many women do you think will feel comfortable coming forward
> under these circumstances? Even Prof. Hill did not want her name
> revealed.
OK, I can buy into the argument that Prof. Hill had reasons for
not going public. Many of those reason will prove to be well
founded in the coming days. But I don't beleieve that those
same reasons apply to a second (fictional to this point) woman.
She would be believed INSTANTLY, she would have unassailable
credibility (plus she would make a bundle from the book rights).
But so far nothing, how come?
Maybe I find this thing so hard to believe because of the women
I know personally. I can't think of even one of them that would
keep silent if they were uncomfortable with remarks that were
made to them, by an employer or anyone else for that matter.
A simple, "I don't appreciate that kind of talk" would have been
sufficient.
Another thing that bothers many men (at least myself) is that
we can UNKNOWINGLY commit this offense and unless the woman
does choose to say something we have NO IDEA that we did
anything "wrong". We can not even attempt to correct the behavior
that the woman finds offensive. And then someday in the future
this will come back to haunt us. Somehow there's a lack of
fairness in all of this.
That's why we are so sensitive to this issue of "accusation means
your guilty".
Jim
|
1004.143 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Thu Oct 10 1991 14:15 | 42 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.139 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> If you want to know the kind of abuse subjected to someone who
>> reports sexual harassment - just look at the abuse YOU are heaping
>> on me for simply BELIEVING her claim.
Again, I'm not attacking your belief, I'm merely trying to understand the basis
of that belief. If I have a belief, and I air it, anyone should expect me
to be able to back up that belief. The reasoning of "I belive it because I
believe it" I left behind a long time ago because it doesn't hold water.
>> It is MY CHOICE to believe one person over another.
I agree. Completely. But when you stated your opinion in this forum, the basis
of your choice was open to scrutiny. Or perhaps in WOMMENNOTES everything is
supposed to be taken at face value, unquestioned and blindly accepted. Somehow
I don't think so...
>> All your biting,
>> vicious sarcasm over my exercising this choice only serves to
>> demonstrate the severity of the problem of sexual harassment (both
>> reporting it and what happens when others, such as me, BELIEVE it.)
I thought we were having a debate; I was hoping to convice you to have an open
mind until more data is available. I never said your conclusion *was* wrong,
only that it *could* be wrong. My debate was over the route that you took to
reach your conclusion. Now this debate is equated to sexual harrassment.
The truth is, I would have had the same identical debate whether my "opponent"
(for lack of a better word) was male or female (one of the beauty of notes). It
was a debate over the sense of fair play, of what is the right thing to do. The
comittee burying Hill's accusations was wrong. Assuming Thomas is guilty of SH
is wrong too.
Roak
Ps. I apologize for the sarcasam, but 1) I'm very sarcastic to begin with and 2)
When I perceive that someone has abandoned logic in an argument I use it to
[hopefully] make the person reexamine their foundation. I've had people change
their minds when they found nothing but an emotional basis for their arguments,
and I have had people change *my* mind when they supplied some fact that I was
unaware of. And of course I've come across people who don't want to closely
examine or reveal their beliefs at all...
|
1004.144 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 10 1991 14:35 | 72 |
| RE: .143 Roak
Your apology is accepted and appreciated.
Look - I majored in Symbolic Logic for my Philosophy degree. I have
not abandoned Logic in this incident (not by a long shot.) We are
simply failing to communicate well enough for the message to have
gotten through to you.
Let me tell you how I viewed this thing from the beginning (perhaps
it will help.) If it stops you from making all these false accusations
about me, so much the better. I'm getting really tired of being
subjected to them.
Listen carefully:
When I picked up the paper and saw the story about charges of sexual
harassment (last minutes ones,) my first thought was: "Oh, no. Not
some convenient last minute stuff to stop the confirmation. It won't
work."
Then I saw the photo of Prof. Hill (she was being hounded by a bunch
of reporters as she went to work) - she looked positively HORRIFIED
at the attention. I said to myself, "Oh, my God." No publicity-
seeking person (hoping for big book rights later) here, I thought.
I read the newspaper story.
I looked at what she claimed - not that he wore women's underpants to
work or flashed her in the elevator - but that he did something pretty
damn ordinary in our culture (wrong, but very, very, VERY common.)
I also saw that she treated him with civility afterwards (which is
very, very, VERY normal among the women I've known who have gone through
things like this.)
I read her credentials - and saw how reluctant she was to be identified
as the one making the complaint. Every single thing I read about what
she claimed, her approach to the Senate (in making her statement,) the
corroboration of other people she told about it (back when it happened)
- and I believed her story.
Perhaps Thomas didn't know he was harassing her - it's quite possible
that he didn't. So why doesn't he say, "I didn't know it would bother
her" or "I didn't mean to offend her - I didn't know she would regard
it as harassment"?
I believe (from looking at all the things that have happened so far)
that Prof. Hill is telling the truth. What Thomas did (and I believe
he did it because I find Prof. Hill's story more plausible than his
denials) wasn't as bad as other things I've seen and heard.
So why doesn't he admit it? This is the problem I have with his
nomination. You may say he could be telling the truth. I believe
Prof. Hill's testimony, so I have to doubt his denials.
I'm not against him for being a man - and I don't think he should be
convicted of a crime without physical evidence. But I believe there
is enough doubt to consider a new candidate for Supreme Court justice.
It's too important a job to simply say "Well, at least he wasn't
convicted" after a very reputable person has testified that he made
some remarks (and her character and presentation support what she
says - eg, she is credible.)
You may not agree with what I'm saying, but I have every right in the
world to say it. If you have further questions of the logic I used
to come to this decision - ASK ME!!! Don't accuse me again of not
using any.
Thanks,
Suzanne
|
1004.145 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Thu Oct 10 1991 14:46 | 6 |
| So, when the next Democratic President tries to nominate
a left wing extremist to the Court, all I need to do
to nix the confirmation is to fabricate a plausible
accusation against that candidate?
Tom_K
|
1004.147 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | | Thu Oct 10 1991 14:52 | 14 |
| Roak and Jim,
I think that what Suzzane and a lot of other women are saying is that
we can identify with prof Hill because we have seen it happen too
often. We have also seen the "good old boys" circle the wagons as they
are at this time to discredit someone who doesn't fit in to their idea
of correctness, or sense of humor.
Also the fact that the judiciary committee completely ignored the
original allegations as not important enough or too threatening needs
to be addressed. I think it is time that the power structure learns
that women are real humans and not window dressing/
Meg
|
1004.146 | An elaborate lie of this enormity would take a decade. | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 10 1991 15:05 | 12 |
|
If you plan to do it, Tom, you'd better start 10 years ahead
of time (which means you'd have to guess who the nominee will
be) and you must sink years of your life working with the
person to build the scenerio.
Then, you must be willing to subject yourself to national
abuse (including being targeted by the White House) - and
accept the abuse that will be heaped on your family, too.
Sounds so simple, doesn't it? Go for it.
|
1004.148 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Thu Oct 10 1991 15:07 | 7 |
| I didn't say I planned to do it, and certainly wouldn't.
I was asking you if such an episode would be sufficient to nix
a nomination, my understanding of what you have written is that it
would be, and I wanted to know if my understanding was correct.
Tom_K
|
1004.149 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 10 1991 15:18 | 16 |
|
Please read what I wrote - I'm talking about a 10 year effort,
with the credibility that goes with it.
If someone walked up and said, "Oh yeah, I saw Thomas in an
elevator once in DC and he showed me his winky" - I wouldn't
have believed it without videotapes.
Prof. Hill's stature (and the 10 year extent of her situation
and descriptions) make her story more plausible than a Supreme
Court nominee who simply says "She's lying!"
The kind of effort it would take to make as plausible a charge
as Prof. Hill has made would be very, very, VERY unlikely to
be successful (if false.) It's unlikely enough to be successful
even as a *true* charge (without proof.)
|
1004.150 | | 4629::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Thu Oct 10 1991 18:49 | 0 |
1004.151 | | 4629::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Thu Oct 10 1991 18:50 | 0 |
1004.150 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:41 | 13 |
| Did anyone see Larry King Live last night? He was interviewing Sen.
Hatch, and it was a real demonstration of 'the little woman doesn't
know what she's talking about.' Hatch continually harped on the
fact that the allegations are 10 years old, that 'Prof. Hill' is
probably a very nice woman, etc. etc. It was sickening to watch. The
same old run around; the tone being that 'oh she's just being a b*tch,
she has no sense of humor.'
If anyone took this interview seriously, then I'd say Prof. Hill is
dead in the water, or at least, her credibility is.
Maia
|
1004.151 | Cred*lity | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:46 | 9 |
| No, but I saw the network news. It seems that at one point Thomas
said, ~Yes, I asked her out, but she declined and I dropped it.~ but
later he said, ~No, I never asked her out.~ Do you think that will
diminish his credibility? Then they showed those staffers who had
never had Thomas so much as look at them crosseyed. Well, unlike
Hill, they cannot sing 1:5 from the Song of Songs, and that could
make a difference.
Ann B.
|
1004.152 | | FMNIST::olson | friend of the family | Fri Oct 11 1991 16:01 | 17 |
| I happened to be on a rowing machine plunk in front of the tv at the
fitness club this morning at 8:30am PDT, and surprise! Prof Hill was
at that moment beginning her opening statement to Biden's committee
(I assume the Judiciary) from 11:30am EDT, for around 20 minutes. She
spoke plainly of her birth, her family, her religious upbringing, and
her educational background; undergraduate at Oklahoma U, Law degree from
Yale in 1980. She described starting work at a DC law firm, her meeting
with Thomas, her periods of working with him at the Dept of Education,
the initial incidents she found objectionable, how she reacted, how she
hoped it was all over; why she accepted Thomas' offer to follow him to
work at the EEOC, how the incidents began again, of what sorts of
statements and situations he instigated that she again objected to;
she told her story quite simply and with dignity. I think she was a
very credible witness and I hope the Senate treats her with the respect
she deserves.
DougO
|
1004.153 | the week before | CSC32::M_EVANS | | Fri Oct 11 1991 16:15 | 9 |
| Nah,
suzzane it's just PMS. you *know* how women are at *that* time of the
month.
Remember, women are hormonal, that why you can't trust anything they
say, do, or let them control their own bodies and destinies.
Meg
|
1004.154 | Notes editing collision - RE: .153 Meg | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 11 1991 16:17 | 16 |
| If any of you have seen the latest news, there is now a SECOND
WOMAN charging harassment - and (of course!!!!) our wonderful
Administration is already saying that she is lying, too.
Gee, if 20 women came forward to charge Thomas with sexual
harassment, I wonder if the Administration would claim that
they're all menstruating or something. :-}
At least I hope that the folks here who claimed they would
listen if a second witness came forward are now willing to
see Prof. Hill's charges in a different light.
(Probably not, I bet.)
I think I'll go camp out in the Primal Scream Topic for a
few weeks (I think I'm going to need it more and more.)
|
1004.155 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Fri Oct 11 1991 17:07 | 11 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.154 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> At least I hope that the folks here who claimed they would
>> listen if a second witness came forward are now willing to
>> see Prof. Hill's charges in a different light.
>> (Probably not, I bet.)
You're wrong. Jim?
Roak
|
1004.156 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Fri Oct 11 1991 17:30 | 129 |
| Note, this was written offline while WOMANNOTES was coughing and sputtering;
at that time no one else had stepped forward to accuse Thomas of SH. I hope
this reply can be read in that light.
Re: <<< Note 1004.144 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
RE: .143 Roak
>>Look - I majored in Symbolic Logic for my Philosophy degree. I have
>>not abandoned Logic in this incident (not by a long shot.)
And I've taken classes in Traditional and Modern logic, not to mention Boolian,
Combinational and TTL logic as well :-) Now that we've finished strutting,
back to the discussion at hand...
>> We are
>>simply failing to communicate well enough for the message to have
>>gotten through to you.
Funny, I thought it was the other way around... :-)
>>When I picked up the paper and saw the story about charges of sexual
>>harassment (last minutes ones,) my first thought was: "Oh, no. Not
>>some convenient last minute stuff to stop the confirmation. It won't
>>work."
Based on zero information, you were actually biased against Hill. I admit that
I was biased in the same way when I first heard the news...
>>Then I saw the photo of Prof. Hill (she was being hounded by a bunch
>>of reporters as she went to work) - she looked positively HORRIFIED
>>at the attention. I said to myself, "Oh, my God." No publicity-
>>seeking person (hoping for big book rights later) here, I thought.
Translation: "She looked honest and sincere" -- correct me if I'm wrong.
Also bear in mind that the same description fit Ted Bundy (used merely to
highlight how fallible looks are, not to equate Hill with Bundy)
>>I looked at what she claimed - not that he wore women's underpants to
>>work or flashed her in the elevator - but that he did something pretty
>>damn ordinary in our culture (wrong, but very, very, VERY common.)
Translation: No outrageous claims, just "standard" (whatever that is, but not
ment to be downplaying) sexual harrassment.
>>I also saw that she treated him with civility afterwards (which is
>>very, very, VERY normal among the women I've known who have gone through
>>things like this.)
Do people who make false claims have a track record of non-civility? This can
only be used as a datapoint if false accusers have a track record of
non-civility...
>>I read her credentials - and saw how reluctant she was to be identified
>>as the one making the complaint.
Translation: She looked honest.
>> Every single thing I read about what
>>she claimed, her approach to the Senate (in making her statement,) the
>>corroboration of other people she told about it (back when it happened)
Translation: She sounds honest.
And she says they're others that can corroborate her story; this I'll have to
reject as a datapoint, since it already assumes that she's telling the truth,
(and told the corroborators the truth) -- this is very much like using the word
you're trying to define in the definition.
>>- and I believed her story.
Obviously.
I don't see many hard facts, but I do see warm and fuzzy feelings. That's ok,
if you're running on feelings, I can't argue with them... The feelings
established the premisies, and as you point out, based on those premisies you
logically came to a sound conclusion. I often run on feelings, or hunches
(hunches solved a lot of software bugs for me) or "my gut", but it's important
to acknowledge to yourself and others you're running on feelings and when you're
running on fact.
As I stated, I run on feelings much of the time. But not this time, and due to
the lack of information I will lend equal creedence to both parties until more
information is available.
>> So why doesn't he say, "I didn't know it would bother
>>her" or "I didn't mean to offend her - I didn't know she would regard
>>it as harassment"?
What if he hadn't harrassed her? Would you still have him apologize for
something he hadn't done?
>> So why doesn't he admit it?
Because maybe, just maybe, he didn't do it!
>> So why doesn't he admit it? This is the problem I have with his
>> nomination. You may say he could be telling the truth. I believe
>> Prof. Hill's testimony, so I have to doubt his denials.
Ok, let's say, for argument's sake that he really didn't do anything. How would
his denials of him not doing anything when he didn't differ from denials of him
not doing anything when he did? (boy, does that really parse in the English
language? :-))
>> You may not agree with what I'm saying, but I have every right in the
>> world to say it.
You're absolutely right. Just as Thomas has every right to be innocent unless
proven guilty. Or is the Bill of Rights just a menu that you pick and choose
from, depending on what YOU think is applicable in each case, depending on each
person?
>> If you have further questions of the logic I used
>> to come to this decision - ASK ME!!!
Both Jim and I did several times...
Roak
Bottom line: We have two credible witnesses with conflicting stories. Until
more information comes forward, my take is to treat them as equals, a lost
concept, even in WOMANNOTES it seems...
BTW, the only argument that Thomas is less than credible is that he's been
grilled in the public eye for several weeks, his testimony dissected carefully
bit-by-bit. Hill hasn't. Is that a fair comparison to base "Thomas is not
credible becuase he's made some slip ups, but Hill is even though she hasn't
had the chance to?"
|
1004.157 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Fri Oct 11 1991 17:34 | 31 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.145 by TOMK::KRUPINSKI "Repeal the 16th Amendment!" >>>
>> So, when the next Democratic President tries to nominate
>> a left wing extremist to the Court, all I need to do
>> to nix the confirmation is to fabricate a plausible
>> accusation against that candidate?
Let me put it this way, Tom, if she says "no" she's got a lot of backpedaling to
do...
Re: <<< Note 1004.146 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> If you plan to do it, Tom, you'd better start 10 years ahead
>> of time (which means you'd have to guess who the nominee will
>> be) and you must sink years of your life working with the
>> person to build the scenerio.
Naah, once the person started the nomination process, you just go back and find
someone that knew them ten years ago. You find someone who looks honest, they
make no outragious claims [easier to fabricate something if it's simple], they
behave civily toward the accused and you leak it at the last minute to make it a
media circus, rather than a hearing.
[of course, this scenerio is totally fictional and any similiarity to people or
events, past or future is merely coincidental]
BYW, With the new peron stepping forward, I'm leaning toward the conclusion that
Hill is telling the truth. That does not in any way dillute Sue's dangerous
line of reasoning, which I feel must be played out...
Roak
|
1004.158 | I *am* glad you're leaning toward believing Prof. Hill now, tho. | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 11 1991 17:50 | 18 |
| When juries listen to conflicting testimony, they base their
convictions and acquitals on whose testimony they believe.
Lawyers spend a lot of time on "credibility" issues with witnesses,
both building it up and tearing it down (depending on which side
the individual attorney is on...)
So, Roak, please don't try to treat me like some sort of touchy-
feely idiot for being willing to tell you (after repeated badgering
from you) why I find Prof. Hill's story more believable than the
"She's lying" denials from Thomas and the White House.
If it's a dangerous way to regard conflicting testimony, then I
suggest you change our whole legal system (criminal and civil
law.)
See you when you're done with that. Meanwhile, please get off
my back, ok?
|
1004.159 | Look again | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Oct 11 1991 17:55 | 13 |
| Roak,
1. No, Suzanne did not say Hill looked "sincere". She did not look
"sincere". I (We all?) worry about people who look sincere. She
looked aghast, bothered, miserable; i.e., her appearance led Suzanne
to conclude that she was sincere. Perhaps it was because she made
no effort to look "sincere".
2. The noter's name is Suzanne. If you can't figure out what someone's
name is, do you think that anyone with sense will give much credence
to your observations and conclusions?
Ann B.
|
1004.160 | :-{ | SPARKL::BROOKS | | Fri Oct 11 1991 18:00 | 6 |
|
If I hear that reporter (Nina Totenberg?) say "Judge" Thomas and
"Anita" Hill once more, I'm going to scream...
D.
|
1004.161 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 11 1991 18:00 | 9 |
| By the way, I wasn't "biased against" Prof. Hill when I first
heard about the sexual harassment charges. I hadn't yet heard
her name nor had I read the story yet at the point where I had
an "Oh no, not a last minute attempt to block the confirmation"
response to a newspaper headline.
Yes, I was bothered by the timing of the public announcements
of the charges - but I got over it when I read the story.
|
1004.162 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Fri Oct 11 1991 18:17 | 9 |
| <<< Note 1004.155 by PEAKS::OAKEY "Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II" >>>
>You're wrong. Jim?
Thomas is toast.
Jim
|
1004.163 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 11 1991 18:35 | 36 |
| By the way, speaking of "how easy would it be to launch false
charges of sexual harassment against a Liberal Supreme Court
Justice candidate?"...
Someone could "set someone up" for murder the same way:
1. Follow X for months to find a night when X is alone
and has no one present to verify where X was that
night.
2. Go out and kill someone.
3. Find one or more persons willing to perjure themselves
to say that X committed the murder.
4. Steal items belonging to X to place at the scene of
the crime (to "place" the person at the scene.)
5. Establish the basis for "motive" (supply prosecutors
with a "reason" why X would want to kill this possibly
complete stranger.)
It could be done. Our legal system makes it possible, albeit
illegal (with severe penalties if caught.) It still happens, tho.
So should we ban all convictions based on witness testimony (since
human beings have the capacity to lie under oath?)
If we accept that human testimony under oath has an important place
in our legal system, then we should be willing to accept women's
testimony about sexual harassment with the same standards that ANY
witness testimony is given.
It is sexism to decide that women's testimony about these things
should be discounted as "her word against his" because it is about
an action that far, far, far more often is committed towards women.
Women are *NOT* more likely to lie under oath than any other person,
so our legal system shouldn't treat women as if we are more likely
to be suspected of it.
|
1004.164 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Fri Oct 11 1991 18:45 | 13 |
| <<< Note 1004.163 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> By the way, speaking of "how easy would it be to launch false
> charges of sexual harassment against a Liberal Supreme Court
> Justice candidate?"...
False premise. For one thing murder must be proved beyond a
reasonable doubt. Plus your scenario incorporates the use
of physical eveidence.
Neither of these situations is relavent to the current debate.
Jim
|
1004.165 | Get serious! | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 11 1991 20:31 | 21 |
|
RE: .164 Jim
False premise??
Ever seen the documentary "The Thin Blue Line" showing how a man
was sent to death row for a murder he didn't commit (based on testimony
from the man who NOW admits to having committed the murder)??
Shall I list other cases for you?
Besides, I didn't say a murder case was LIKE the present case
- I was trying to demonstrate that even "proof beyond a
reasonable doubt" MURDER cases can be faked with false testimony
if someone is determined enough.
I was trying to point out the fact that the "danger" of believing
witness testimony extends to the most serious criminal cases we
have in our courts (in many cases) - so it isn't preposterous to
suggest that testimony should be given credence in sexual harassment
cases.
|
1004.166 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Fri Oct 11 1991 20:44 | 17 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.159 by REGENT::BROOMHEAD "Don't panic -- yet." >>>
>> 2. The noter's name is Suzanne. If you can't figure out what someone's
>> name is, do you think that anyone with sense will give much credence
>> to your observations and conclusions?
I would have hoped that if she had been offended be me calling her "Sue" (I
usually shotern people's names to one syllable -- it's just a habit), she would
have told me.
I will start calling her Suzanne from now on.
If a habit of shortening people's name to one syllable makes all my arguments
null and void, so be it. Odd litmus test of what makes a valid argument,
though...
Roak
|
1004.167 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Fri Oct 11 1991 20:53 | 25 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.161 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> By the way, I wasn't "biased against" Prof. Hill when I first
>> heard about the sexual harassment charges. I hadn't yet heard
>> her name nor had I read the story yet at the point where I had
>> an "Oh no, not a last minute attempt to block the confirmation"
>> response to a newspaper headline.
Note that your first thought was not about the legitimacy of the charges, but
that it was an attempt to block the nomination. In other words, you thought
it was a farce. That's biased. You had that bias but then:
"...I got over it when I read the story."
Your bias was against the claim and therefore Hill, even though you did not yet
know her name or her background...
Kinda like not liking Mexian food because it's too hot. If someone puts a dish
down in front of you, you carry that bias with you to the first taste. If you
like it, you've overcome the bias.
Just not knowing the names of those involved does not mean that you're not
biased against them...
Roak
|
1004.168 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Fri Oct 11 1991 21:24 | 46 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.165 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> Ever seen the documentary "The Thin Blue Line" showing how a man
>> was sent to death row for a murder he didn't commit (based on testimony
>> from the man who NOW admits to having committed the murder)??
Oh Suzanne! Pointing out the damage of believing the accusor over the accused
was *not* what you wanted to do... Sexual harrassment cases are quite the
opposite, where the "guilty" get off far too often due to lack of evidence.
A bad tactical error in the debate, but I chalk it up to a mistake that doesn't
really have any impact on the discussion...
>> I was trying to point out the fact that the "danger" of believing
>> witness testimony extends to the most serious criminal cases we
>> have in our courts (in many cases)...
Good point, so I assume this supports he assumption that coming into a trial the
accusor should not be given any priority over the acussed. That in the course
of the trial each person's reliability and truthfullness will be exposed, based
on your point earlier about how hard it is to fabricate a lie. Am I correct
so far?
>> ...so it isn't preposterous to
>> suggest that testimony should be given credence in sexual harassment
>> cases.
Are you saying it isn't? Does not the accusor and accused get to meet in
court, each being examined and cross-examined by each other lawyers? I guess
I'm a bit confused by your statement.
To simplify the questions to which I'm seeking answers (and add a few more):
Should both the accusor and the accused enter the court room on even ground?
Should, in the course of the trial, an attempt be made to determine who is more
reliable and truthful?
Should a decision be rendered based on the above information?
In the case where a clear determination cannot be made (in terms of reliability
and truthfullness) between the accusor and the accused, which way should
the decision be made?
Do you feel that testimony of either the accusor or the accused is not given
even weighting in today's judicial system?
Roak
Ps. Sorry, haven't read your mail response from last night, yet...
|
1004.170 | Try to resist this as a permanent rathole, ok? | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 11 1991 21:25 | 14 |
| Well, as you mentioned earlier, Roak - the timing of the charges
"going public" was not the greatest.
But luckily, I have an open enough mind to move past my initial
reaction to a newspaper headline.
I brought this point up to show you that I didn't automatically
think "AHA, Thomas sexually harassed someone!!!" before I
read the story. If anything, I was already inclined to be
suspicious of any GENERAL charge against him at the last minute.
On second thought, never mind. Just forget I said anything about
this. I'm not in the mood to spend the next 10 years explaining
and clarifying a momentary thought of mine (brought up in passing.)
|
1004.171 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Fri Oct 11 1991 21:33 | 37 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.170 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> -< Try to resist this as a permanent rathole, ok? >-
Actually I think we have some closure coming up here...
>> Well, as you mentioned earlier, Roak - the timing of the charges
>> "going public" was not the greatest.
Agreed. I have no problem here...
>> But luckily, I have an open enough mind to move past my initial
>> reaction to a newspaper headline.
My open mind merely stayed open a little longer than yours, we had a difference
in required information level, that's all. We're not one in the same person,
that's to be expected. We've beat that point to death, so if you think that's
a fair statement, we can close this one...
>> I brought this point up to show you that I didn't automatically
>> think "AHA, Thomas sexually harassed someone!!!" before I
>> read the story. If anything, I was already inclined to be
>> suspicious of any GENERAL charge against him at the last minute.
Though I originally thought you did automatically think of this, you did clarify
that later on. I have no problem here...
>> On second thought, never mind. Just forget I said anything about
>> this. I'm not in the mood to spend the next 10 years explaining
>> and clarifying a momentary thought of mine (brought up in passing.)
Then do you want to move on? I get the feeling that you think the current legal
system doesn't work very well in the case of sexual harrassment. I'd like to
know both what doesn't work and what you feel needs to be changed. As is
evident by my questions at the end of reply .168...
Roak
|
1004.172 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 11 1991 21:36 | 32 |
| RE: .168 Roak
> Oh Suzanne!
Thanks for getting my name right. :)
> Pointing out the damage of believing the accusor over the accused
> was *not* what you wanted to do...
Wrong again, Roak. It was exactly what I wanted to do.
> Sexual harrassment cases are quite the opposite, where the "guilty"
> get off far too often due to lack of evidence.
Ah - the guilty get off because testimony is not given the same kind
of credence that other types of "witness" testimonies are given (due
to the "oh, no, what if the woman LIES to screw over an innocent man???")
I was trying to point out that believing witness testimony is ALWAYS
a danger in our system - but that doesn't mean we refrain from ever
putting anyone on trial (for murder or any other crime) out of fear
that citizens will convinct a whole bunch of innocent people by lying
under oath.
> A bad tactical error in the debate, but I chalk it up to a mistake
> that doesn't really have any impact on the discussion...
No such thing, of course. It's just another one of your many errors
in the course of pre-judging me. You'll learn. :)
Perhaps you should confine more of these messages to mail, though,
where your mistakes can be corrected with a bit more privacy.
|
1004.173 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Fri Oct 11 1991 21:41 | 8 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.172 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
Rather than respond to your replies to everything but my bottom line questions,
I'll request that you respond to them; perhaps I misjudge you due to a lack
of information -- the answers would go a long way to clear up any
mis-communication we may have...
Roak
|
1004.174 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 11 1991 21:43 | 8 |
| RE: .171 Roak
> I get the feeling that you think the current legal system doesn't work
> very well in the case of sexual harrassment.
Do you know how the current "legal system" handles cases of sexual
harassment now?
|
1004.175 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 11 1991 21:49 | 18 |
|
RE: .173 Roak
> Rather than respond to your replies to everything but my bottom line
> questions, I'll request that you respond to them;
Well, I decline to be cross-examined (sorry, if this word sounds a bit
harsher than intended.) I've responded to a number of your notes so
far, but I'm not interested in a whole new round based on your critique
of my ideas.
> perhaps I misjudge you due to a lack of information -- the answers
> would go a long way to clear up any mis-communication we may have...
I'd prefer you not judge me at all (and I'll reciprocate by not judging
you.)
Deal?
|
1004.176 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Fri Oct 11 1991 21:55 | 15 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.174 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> Do you know how the current "legal system" handles cases of sexual
>> harassment now?
From the mail you've sent me I can tell you are very, very dissatisified with
how it operates. There's a palitible frustration and anger in almost every
sentence when you discuss the current wrongs of the system and how women occupy
the "lower tier" (my words, not Suzanne's). Do you disagree with my evaluation
of the tone of your mail?
So the questions in .168 remain, and directed you, asking YOUR opinion. Through
this process I hope to be educated.
Roak
|
1004.177 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Fri Oct 11 1991 22:05 | 17 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.175 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> Well, I decline to be cross-examined (sorry, if this word sounds a bit
>> harsher than intended.) I've responded to a number of your notes so
>> far, but I'm not interested in a whole new round based on your critique
>> of my ideas.
We get past all the Hill and Thomas stuff, finally getting to the heart of the
matter and you pull the plug?
I'm seriously interested in your proposals; I may or may not agree with them,
but I am interested. If the major problem is that you do not want to clutter
up the WOMANNOTES file, mail would be acceptable, heck even lunch would be
acceptable. If you want to stop dead in the water, that's acceptable too (but
frustrating for me!)
Roak
|
1004.178 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Sat Oct 12 1991 07:07 | 8 |
| RE: .177 Roak
Well, in the past, you've asked me if I'd like to go with you and
your wife to a firing range one of these days. I may take you up
on the offer sometime this fall.
[Before anyone has a heart attack, 2nd Amendment rights are one thing
Roak and I do agree on!!]
|
1004.179 | An amazing couple of days... | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Sat Oct 12 1991 21:04 | 27 |
| Well, Thomas hearings have been shut down for the day (to pick
up again tomorrow at noon, EDT.) Four witnesses are ready to
testify that Prof. Hill told them about the harassment at the
time it occurred.
Judge Thomas is not holding up well at all (emotionally.)
I've never heard someone make as many public references to
death in as short a period of time as I've heard him make
in the past 24 hours.
He says he would rather have been shot by an
assassin than go through all this.
He says the Senate Judiciary Committee is a
high-tech lynch mob.
He says he would rather die than withdraw
his nomination.
He says he has already died (and is no longer
the man he was when they first started
the confirmation process.) He said,
quite literally, "I died."
He has my sympathy for his emotionally distraught state, but
I believe Prof. Hill's testimony as much as ever (after having
seen both Judge Thomas and Prof. Hill testify.)
|
1004.180 | Anyone else depressed? | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Sun Oct 13 1991 23:42 | 11 |
| Is anyone else feeling incredibly, personally affected by all of this
testimony?
I find myself getting obsessed, feeling sick to my stomach, and being
on an emotional roller coaster with each set of witnesses.
The Democrats don't seem to be effective questioners at all. I think
I've been suggesting better questions that they have. If Thomas gets
confirmed, he'll have them to thank.
judy
|
1004.181 | A depressing insight into the running of government | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Mon Oct 14 1991 00:45 | 9 |
| The Democrats (with the possible exception of Biden) are coming
across as ineffective questioners. The Republicans, and especially
Specter (?) and Hatch, are coming across as "anything to get our
side across, and facts be d*mned" - whenever Specter starts up I
generally want to throw something at the set. Based on the overall
testimony, there's no way to tell whom to believe, but it's clear
that the way it's being approached is puerile, completely
partisan, and totally confirming to my general [negative]
impressions of politicians and lawyers as a class.
|
1004.182 | | SLOANE::DAVIESA | Passion and Direction | Mon Oct 14 1991 05:59 | 7 |
| This isn't getting too much coverage in the UK....but...
...I heard this morning that she's passed a lie detector test.
Is this admissable evidence in your courts?
Will that change the picture much, do you think?
'gail
|
1004.183 | | BALMER::MUDGETT | One Lean, Mean Whining Machine | Mon Oct 14 1991 09:33 | 50 |
| re the last couple,
1. The lie detector is not admissable in a court of law unless
a number of agrrements are made, because of it percieved
unreliability. I've taken one and the experiance really really
sucks. The Senete is not a court they merely use most court
procedures because court procedures are familiar to them and the
place is full of lawyers.(those are my opinions)
2. For those of you who feel the democrats are lousy questioners
take heart! They don't have to be very aggressive because;
a. They are the majority party and they have almost enough
votes for the confirmation and agressivness would alienate
more votes they need for confirmation.
b. This isn't a court and noone can bring criminal charges
against anyone here so, I think, Anita Hill's case is
strong enough to damage CT's chances of being confirmed.
You should remember that confirmation is the goal here
not the sexual harrassment issue.
c. The republican side can use prosecutorial approach
but it isn't going to gain them anything because this
isn't a courtroom. So Thomas supporters can feel better
but tragically they aren't going to find any smoking gun
anywhere.
3. My daughter was in a high school production of the play "To Kill
a Mockingbird" she was a townsperson and her line was..."thems just
chilens." Which I might add we got on video and she did an admirable
job delivering. The play was interesting because to me it showed the
value of derailing a system of procedure with irrationality and emotion.
When the alleged victim of rape was questioned too closely she argued
with the defense lawyer about how the men in the town were cowards and
didn't stand up for the "honor" of a woman. Anita Hill I think has used
the same stradegy. Especially with the lie dectector evidence.
4. Finally this is history in the making. I grew up with
the spector of the McCarthy hearings as American government being used
to cynically distroy peoples lives. I've wondered which side of the
arguement I would have supported. I wondered if I would have had courage
enough to speak against McCarthyism. Well we have it now. There really
isn't a middle ground here. Either CT or Anita Hill have lied there is
no misunderstanding. The Senete is really getting its feet put to the
fire, maybe one of the Kennedy's will write a book about the courage it
takes to make a decision about this case. I think this is democracy at
its best.
Fred Mudgett
|
1004.184 | didn't Freud start this one? | SPARKL::BROOKS | | Mon Oct 14 1991 10:28 | 8 |
|
I had to tune out early last night...what's this about the Republicans
claiming that yes, Professor Hill is telling the truth in the sense
that she believes "those things" happened, but she's only fantasizing,
because she wanted them to happen? Did someone actually say this, does
anyone know?
Dorian
|
1004.185 | | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | kindofanupstart-butigotawarmheart | Mon Oct 14 1991 10:53 | 35 |
|
i spent the better part of the weekend watching the testimony given to
the senate judiciary committee.
i found prof. hills testimony more credible than that of judge thomas.
with respect to the corroborative witness for each side:
i found john carr, joel paul, and judge hoersener (sp??) very
credible. i believed the testimony given by the second wmn on the
panel, whose name escapes me, but i got the feeling that she was a
pretty close friend of anita hill's and was speaking from her loyalty
to that friendship. [which there is nothing necessarily wrong with,
but i didn't get that impression from the other three.]
as i watched the two panels of thomas supporting witnesses, i only
found three individuals, out of eight, to be credible. one was
assistant prof. hitch, and the other two were men on the second panel
who had seen prof. hill in aug 1991. i also had no problem with dianne
holt's (??) testimony.
i was left either completely unimpressed or aggitated by the balance of
the witnesses brought forth on thomas' behalf.
what i found incredible was senator hatch's characterization of someone
who may behave in the manner that prof. hill alleges of judge thomas.
his effort to paint this behavior as something completely bizarre,
"sick", perverted, OUT OF THE ORDINARY - really makes me wonder just
how much time he has spent as a woman in the workplace.
i believe the allegations are true.
my hope is that the senate does not confirm judge clarence thomas to the
supreme court.
~robin
|
1004.186 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | a good dog and some trees | Mon Oct 14 1991 10:54 | 21 |
| most overused line in these hearings:
"well I'm not a psychiatrist but..."(*)
and goes on to deliver an opinion on (a)why Prof.Hill might have concocted a
story, or (b)why Judge Thomas might feel lynched.
Dorian, the trash about how AH might believe but be fantasizing, comes from the
above and from the fact that she volunteered for, took, and passes a lie
detector test.
And from the fact that BOTH of these people SEEM sincere, competant, honest, and
no one knows who to believe (unless one is such a partisan that they had made
up their mind about Judge Thomas before Prof. Hill's allegations got leaked).
oh, for five minutes as a telepath!
Sara
(*)interesting... personally have my doubts as to whether a psychiatrist has
much of a better shot than you or I at figuring out the motivation of
whichever one of them is lying in this.
|
1004.187 | They are all ganging up on her | HELIX::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Mon Oct 14 1991 11:04 | 18 |
| There is very simple reason why democrats are not asking the right
question. Professor Hill has put not only Judge Thomas on defensive,
but the senate and in particular, the judicial committee has found
itself in hot water by their callous attitude towards her charges.
Simply put, senate would be much happy if they can discredit Professor
Hill.
Otherwise why were these question not asked to Judge Thomas
1. Would you take lie detector tests?
2. Did you ever talk "dirty" with anyone from the office?
3. Did you have a habbit of watching pornographic movies and then
making comments about it with your colleagues?
4. Do you fantasize?
5. Have you ever lied?
- Vikas
|
1004.188 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | a good dog and some trees | Mon Oct 14 1991 11:12 | 8 |
| I heard questions 2 and 3 asked of Judge Thomas, on Friday night.
I myself don't think that lie detectors are called for. Prof.Hill's use of the
test is interesting, but I have strong hesitations about requiring anyone to
take such a test.
Question 4 is irrelevant. Question 5 is a useless question - the answer and
tone etc are the same whether he's a liar or not.
|
1004.189 | | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | kindofanupstart-butigotawarmheart | Mon Oct 14 1991 11:12 | 12 |
|
i tend to agree with some tv journalists assessment of the democrats
"backing off" in their questioning of judge thomas.
judge thomas' suggestion of racism being a factor of this investigation
has the democratic senators treading a lot more carefully than they may
have otherwise. senator hatch was making every effort to play up this
particular part of judge thomas' testimony.
i'm glad i don't live in utah [strom thurmond may be senile, but i
question his capacity for effective deviousness {-%].
|
1004.190 | Let them know how you feel! | ROYALT::HECHT | | Mon Oct 14 1991 11:17 | 23 |
| Anyone desiring to contact the Senate Judiciary Committee can
telephone:
Senator State Phone
Biden D-DE 202/ 224-5042
DeConcini D-AZ 224-4521
Heflin D-AL 224-4124
Kennedy D-MA 224-4543
Kohl D-WI 224-5653
Leahy D-VT 224-4242
Metzenbaum D-OH 224-2315
Simon D-IL 224-2152
Brown R-CO 224-5941
Grassley R-IA 224-3744
Hatch R-UT 224-5251
Simpson R-WY 224-3424
Specter R-PA 224-4254
Thurmond R-SC 22405972
Over the weekend most of the Senator's offices were taking polls on
how the public felt. You can make a difference in this thing!
|
1004.191 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Mon Oct 14 1991 11:34 | 20 |
| The hearings have affected me personally too. I guess for me the
most depressing thing has been the display of stereotypical "catty"
behavior by witnesses Alvarez and Barry against Professor Hill.
Also the thought that Professor Hill may have been living with
these things for ten years. I agree with the assessment that the
Democrats are sitting there like bumps on logs, and hope the person
who said they are confident that they have enough votes is right.
Even so, I am grateful to Kennedy and Leahy, and occasionally one or
two of the others for actually doing some cross-examining. Questions
I would have like to see asked:
Of Barry: Were you attracted to Judge Thomas? (She testified
that "any woman" would be). Were you jealous of Anita Hill? (Barry
described the office as very competitive). To Alvarez and Barry:
Do you see an inconsistency between Judge Thomas testifying that
he did not co-mingle his personal and professional lives and your
testimony that you are close personal friends? Did he ever discuss
Professor Hill with you outside of work? To all of them: If Judge
Thomas did do the things alleged, do you feel he should be confirmed
anyway? I think they all felt that the charges were irrelevent.
Linda
|
1004.192 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Mon Oct 14 1991 12:17 | 10 |
| Did anyone else smell a rat when Thomas' talking about racism gave
Hatch the perfect lead in for his insinuation that Hill had lifted
the "Long John Silver" reference from an Oklahoma harrassment case and
the "pubic hair in my coke" reference from "The Exorcist". The whole
episode felt planned and staged to me. Maybe I'm just becoming
paranoid.
- Vick
P.S. ... and Hatch was leading the witness (Thomas) so unabashedly
that I kept wanting to jump up and yell "I object, your honor!"
|
1004.193 | do you mean "Long Dong Silver"? | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | kindofanupstart-butigotawarmheart | Mon Oct 14 1991 12:23 | 1 |
|
|
1004.194 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Mon Oct 14 1991 12:35 | 4 |
| Oh, well, I have never seen it written, and that's what I heard, but
it makes more sense spelled that way. (Blush)
- Vick
|
1004.195 | | CFSCTC::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, OO-R-US | Mon Oct 14 1991 12:54 | 16 |
| Overall, while I can't be absolutely positive, the indications are very
strong that Judge Thomas did in fact do the things Prof. Hill accused
him of; I found her story to be credible and those of her supporting
witnesses. In fact, I had no problem whatsoever empathizing with her
plight back in the early days of her career. I wish I lived in Utah or
PA or Arizona so I could vote against Hatch, Specter, and DeConcinni
(sp?), respectively.
The lie detector test just further confirms my opinion. FWIW: the lie
detector test was administered by a former FBI lie-detector expert and
his conclusion was that she was telling the truth on all of the
questions she was asked. I'm appalled that this isn't being put into
the official logs as simply another piece of evidence -- you can bet
money it would have been a major uproar had she failed!
Jim
|
1004.196 | *MY* opinion. | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:05 | 36 |
| ...further, if you had watched late last night, this guy
Doggett was virtually screaming at the senators. I was amazed
that he was able to get away with his massively intimidating tone.
Even the other three men with him seemed repelled by him.
From where I sit, these would be my thoughts/opinions.
1. It is clear that Thomas has changed, if he was ever as he
was described (and isn't this the ultimate desire?)
2. Anita Hill "sold out" and is experiencing remorse now (not
being timely with the information.) Also, parenthetically,
I can understand her fear and reluctance.
3. Hatch must live in a world of ozone...how can he possibly
represent people who live in a "real world" of sexual expression,
etc.?
4. The things that Anita Hill reports do not sound so awful to me...
granted that they may have been inappropriately used.
5. If Anita is correct, too bad Thomas didn't admit responsibility,
remorse, and explain himself (emotionally lonely at the time,
etc.) Otherwise, he's not only casting doubt on himself, but
causing Anita Hill great damage. Also, Thomas could have said,
"I became aware of my inappropriateness, immediately changed my
behaviors...and I'm sorry for not having apologized to Anita" etc.
6. Though this guy Doggett annoyed me a great deal, he did make a
point I share...if women are as sensitive as some are implying
that they are, they will never be trusted by men...will never
be hired for fear of lawsuits and discrimination charges...will
never make men feel that they can be treated as equals. (I
admit this may already be the case, I admit that perhaps some
of the reverse is currently true, but I also believe that
180 degree energy is counter-productive...there must be a bit
more tolerance than many would like...)
7. I do not care for Thomas, he's far too rigid for my tastes, but
I do not believe Anita Hill's testimony should be the determining
factor for his confirmation or not.
Frederick
|
1004.197 | stress detector tests | ZFC::deramo | the radio reminds me | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:10 | 7 |
| Lie detector tests aren't credible if you don't announce in
advance when and where you are taking it. If you take a test
secretly and fail or it is indeterminate, you simply don't
announce it. When you've got the routine down and can pass
it, you announce it. This is supposed to be convincing?
Dan
|
1004.198 | | FDCV07::KING | Can't think of anything clever....... | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:25 | 4 |
| Plus, if you keeping tell the same lie the lie becomes fact to you.
Then the lie detector is useless....
REK
|
1004.199 | | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | kindofanupstart-butigotawarmheart | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:36 | 13 |
1004.200 | | FDCV07::KING | Can't think of anything clever....... | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:41 | 4 |
| You want to know what's really sad abut this.. Look at the 12 that are
questioning the witnesses.....
REK
|
1004.201 | | KOALA::TEST | No brag, Just fact. | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:41 | 10 |
|
One thing you have to consider about the lie detector test, before you
take it as gosple. She took the test without any witnesses. And she
initiated it. So if she failed the test, then no one needs to know what
the results were. If she passed the test, then she could publish them.
It would definetly add more credibility to her story if she took the
test in front of impartial witnesses. Which by the way she is refusing
to do.
|
1004.202 | write down everything | ZFC::deramo | the radio reminds me | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:44 | 29 |
| Every piece of advice I have seen on harassment says
to write everything down. Who said what. Who did what.
When and where did it happen. What was your response.
Who else was present.
Write down everything.
Maybe you think after the initial incident that it isn't
necessary to keep detailed notes, because this was a one
time aberration that won't happen again. Then after the
second incident you decide you still won't report it, so
still no notes. Eventually, you decide it would have been
good to have kept notes from the beginning, but it seems
too late to start now.
Anita Hill is bright, educated, articulate, even worked
for the EEOC which puts out the above advice. She must
have known the advice. But for whatever reason, she
decided that she didn't need to follow the advice about
writing everything down, that she could handle the
situation her way. Yet despite everything she has going
for her, things seem to have gotten out of hand.
It makes you wonder what would have happened if she had
come forward with a ten year old notebook dug out of a box
in the attic, containing complete details of all the alleged
incidents?
Dan
|
1004.203 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:44 | 9 |
| .179
I don't feel any sympathy for him at all; I think he is grandstanding.
Now if a woman were to use all those references to death, she just
might be considered unstable, suicidal, dramatic, or pre-menstrual.
argh.
|
1004.204 | Probably the 20th time it's been said but... | JUMBLY::BATTERBEEJ | Kinda lingers..... | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:47 | 45 |
| Here is my reckoning on what has and will happen :-
Thomas did sexually harass Hill
Hill did keep quiet for the usual reasons (wanting career to continue
etc)
Hill upon realising that Thomas was to a a SCJ decided to come out
(Why keep quiet when he was going for a Judgehood? She should have
spoken up then)
Thomas denies the allegations. Well he would wouldn't he. He is either
lying or believes that his harassment wasn't harassment. He may not
have harassed Hill at all. I think that unlikely.
Eventually Thomas will be made a SCJ anyway. What else do expect when
he has the Presidents backing. He probably won't make a v.good SCJ
because all his decisions will be under intense scrutiny and possibly
influenced by this.
Hill will be discredited (read ripped to shreds) by the press and
have a hard time in the future.
This whole thing will put the sexual harassment eradication campaign
back ten years. Men will be even more reluctant to employ females. It
will probably result in 1000's of women not reporting any type of
harassment case in the future when they would otherwise have done. I
reckon a very large number are unreported already.
In Utopia, Thomas would admit his guilt, publically apologise, and
stand down as a SCJ nominee and remain as a "lowly" judge. Hill
would receive aclaim for having the guts to come forward. Wait a
minute, in Utopia there would be no harassment at all.
As you can probably gather I know very little of the case other than
what I've read here, but I find myself tending towards believing Hill.
But I do not rule out the remote possibility that Thomas is innocent.
Jerome.
|
1004.205 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:53 | 8 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.202 by ZFC::deramo "the radio reminds me" >>>
>>Anita Hill is bright, educated, articulate, even worked
>>for the EEOC which puts out the above advice.
Was the advice "write everything down" being given out 10 years ago?
Roak
|
1004.206 | Oh, the subtlety of it all | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | As magnificent as that | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:53 | 40 |
| I'd like to make a point on just how subtle sexual discrimination can
be, using .196 as my material. I am not taking shots at Frederick!
Frederick, by my count you mention four people by name in your note:
o John Doggett, twice
o Clarence Thomas, four times
o Anita Hill, five times
o Orrin Hatch, one time
Your citations of the men's names are not once accompanied by the given
(first) name of the person named. Your mentions of the woman's name do
not once *omit* the individual's given name. One citation, in fact,
uses *only* the person's first name.
This, while subtle, is sexual discrimination; it is commonly recognized
as diminution of the woman so treated. But it's not harassment. What
Clarence Thomas is alleged to have said far exceeds this level of
discrimination and does indeed fall under the EEOC's carefully worded
definition of harassment. But this isn't what I'm getting at.
My point is that if a listener/witness is so thoroughly habituated to
the subtle bias displayed in .196, that witness isn't in a position to
judge cases involving that bias. It was my impression that at least
10 of the 14 Senators on the Judiciay Committee are so habituated. How
can they claim to treat these claims dispassionately? Some of them did
not even display the common decency to acknosledge that the problem
exists at all. These men are not alon ein their biases; there are more
Senators like them. How can they judge Hill's claims in a fair
atmosphere? Nobody proved anything this weekend. It still comes down
to "he said/she said." Clarence Thomas isn't in a position to determine
what happens to this country; the U.S. Senate has usurped that right
from him.
What a travesty -- and I don't even want Thomas confirmed!
-dick
|
1004.207 | Why she didn't. | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | As magnificent as that | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:57 | 8 |
| Re: .204
I remind you, Jerome, that Hill stated that she would not have come
forward *this* time were it not that her statements were going to be
made public anyway. She wasn't similarly threatened at the time of
any of Thomas' previous confirmation hearings.
-dick
|
1004.208 | Unfortunately, he WILL be confirmed | HELIX::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Mon Oct 14 1991 14:03 | 57 |
| I never recall following news hearing in the media or being brought up
at the hearings. The judge was very adamant that he was not going to
answer any questions relating to his sex life. Really, it seems much
more possible that he "fantasized" about his own sexual prowess and
then "bragged". Prof Hill has nothing to gain but everything to lose
by fabricating the allegations. On the contrary, Judge Thomas has lot
to gain by denying them. "Have you ever lied, Judge Thomas?" Is there
any adult in US who has not discussed the abortion?
Look at it now. After 10 years, after she has established her
credentials as a tenured professor, United States senators have the
audacity to insinuate that she is "unstable", "imagining things",
"insane". I shudder to think how she would have been treated if she
had come out 10 years ago.
Personally, his evasiveness in answering questions tells me much more
than his outward indignation
- Vikas
Article: 1023
From: clarinews@clarinet.com
Subject: Woman says Thomas talked to her of pornography
Date: 11 Oct 91 15:16:49 GMT
Lines: 30
BOSTON (UPI) -- A woman who attended Yale Law School with Clarence
Thomas says the embattled Supreme Court nominee's descriptions of
pornographic movies became a standing joke among his classmates.
But Lovida Coleman told the Boston Herald in an interview published
Friday that she found Thomas's accounts of an X-rated film ``amusing''
and ``not offensive.''
Senate hearings began Friday into allegations that Thomas sexually
harassed Anita Hill while she worked for him at the Education Department
and Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Hill, now a law professor
at the University of Oklahoma, reportedly has told the FBI Thomas asked
her out on dates and described pornographic movies to her in lewd
detail.
Coleman, now a Washington lawyer, said Thomas related the events of
an X-rated film ``Behind The Green Door'' to her, but ``the nature of
the conversation was not offensive.''
The conversations ``didn't even focus on the sexual acts. They were
just amusing,'' Coleman said.
Coleman said Thomas, while a law student at Yale, sometimes went with
friends to a theater in New Haven, Conn., that featured X-rated films.
``He didn't go for sexual kicks. He did it for amusement --
recreation,'' she said. ``I would not say it was a frequent or regular
occurrence.''
However, Coleman said Thomas's descriptions of ``Behind The Green
Door'' became a standing joke among his classmates.
``He'd come into the dining room and we'd say, 'Clarence, got any
good stories today?''' Coleman said.
``But even though Clarence wasn't afraid to talk about X-rated films
in law school to me, I've never heard him mention them since,'' said
Coleman, who said she has been a friend of Thomas for 14 years.
|
1004.209 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Mon Oct 14 1991 14:03 | 12 |
|
I don't have a problem with Thomas becoming a SCJ today having
done these things 10 years ago. I *do* have a problem with his
becoming a SCJ today given his lieing today (which I believe
he is).
To me, he seemed almost bordering on hysteria on the stand when
I listened to him on Sat. morning. He sounded like an arrogant
blathering idiot, and yes, I understand he's under a great deal of
pressure, but I would have thought someone of his stature could
handle himself a *bit* better than that.
|
1004.210 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | a good dog and some trees | Mon Oct 14 1991 14:05 | 19 |
| Dan has put his finger on the what has bothered me about Prof.Hill's credibility
in this story from the beginning. Now, other folks, women included, have told
me that I am unusual in this, but I knew 20 years ago that I had recourse if I
was harrassed and the harrassment didn't stop when I confronted it. If I knew
it 20 years ago, and if I knew it 10 years ago, then how does it figure that
the Anita Hill of 10 years ago didn't?
Bear in mind - she is not an ordinary woman herself. She came up from very
modest beginnings, the last of 13 children. She worked hard to get what she
did. She was a civil rights lawyer at the EEOC for at least part of the period
of harrassment. Even before all the testimony (from both sides) describing
her as tough and tenacious and a strong-willed woman, I thought she must be an
extraordinarily strong woman to have achieved so much, so young. That image
of a strong and competant adult just doesn't jive with the image of a woman so
meek and unsure of herself that she does not even tell a man that he is being
offensive, let alone fight for the principle of the thing in her job in an
agency dedicated to principle.
I'm soooo confused. But one thing is clear: politicians are pond slime.
|
1004.211 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Mon Oct 14 1991 14:13 | 26 |
|
re .210:
Sara, it's obvious (to me, at least) why Hill didn't press this
10 years ago. Her career ambitions were at stake. It *really* is
that simple.
Don't give me the line "oh, she's a black female from Yale Law
school - she could go anywhere and do anything she wanted."
Hill had/has ambition beyond what these things could automatically
give her. Nothing wrong with that. An aside, being "black and female"
may get you *in* the door more easily, but there are still thousands
of subtle "little discriminations" that happen against employees who
are the least little bit different that *cannot* be legislated away
(that happen once you're in the door).
10 years ago this was the case - Hill's ambitions were at stake.
Today, she's made it. She's established herself as an excellent
employee with a solid track record of 10 years (something she did
*not* have to fall back on 10 years ago). She can afford to come
out with her story now. Her ambitions and reputation may very well
have suffered had done so she 10 years ago - even to the EEOC.
Word gets around - Sara, you should know that.
|
1004.212 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Shivers and Tears | Mon Oct 14 1991 14:16 | 22 |
| Gut reaction. IMHO He's guilty. He harrassed her. He did suggest and
say everything that she said he did. The Senate is deliberately leading
the questioning to make her look like a deluded person with an
overactive fantasy life, so that their friend Judge Thomas will get
on the SC. Partly because they want to molify the President.
The only other people that I feel badly for besides Ms. Hill, is Judge
Thomas' family. What they must be going through. This whole thing has
caused me to lose faith in the way the people who operate our gov't.
actually operate.(Like I didn't during Watergate and the Vietnam war,
right) I have also gained some respect for the way our gov't. is
supposed to operate, because with Ms. Hill's testimony, the TRUTH is
being allowed out in the open and despite whatever happens, the people
will know the TRUTH. Maybe something can be sone in the future.
Also just as important, maybe some people will think twice before
making stupid, insulting, disgusting comments to others. And yes, I
can admit that there was a time when I was guilty too. Not of any of
the many extreme things that Judge Clarence has been accused of, but
smaller, but no less offensive things. Working in a Gas station/garage
does that to one, if only to be a "part of the crew". (IOW to survive)
PJ
|
1004.213 | A minor casualty | TRIBES::LBOYLE | Are you now, or were you ever. . | Mon Oct 14 1991 14:21 | 9 |
| One minor casualty of the Thomas hearings:
The president of Ireland is over in the U.S. at the moment
on a short visit and was scheduled for a major interview with,
I think, NBC today. The interview was cancelled because of
the live coverage of the Thomas hearings and this was to be
the major media event of her visit.
Liam
|
1004.214 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Mon Oct 14 1991 14:44 | 34 |
| > Sara, it's obvious (to me, at least) why Hill didn't press this
> 10 years ago. Her career ambitions were at stake. It *really* is
> that simple.
That does not explain why she didn't document anything, particularly given her
inclination to document _everything_ about work. She testified that she feared
she would lose her job because of Clarence Thomas so she began to document
her assignments with precision. When she was given the assignment, what
actions she took, what the eventual outcome of the assignment was. She claimed
that she wanted to have documentation in case he tried to bust her down or
have her fired. And yet she did not document a single instance of this
harassment? It seems incongruous to me.
But of course it is possible that things occured precisely as she has
testified. Clearly Judge Thomas has a strong incentive to lie (assuming
the charges are factual.) On the other hand, I regard his behavior to be
right in line with what I would consider to be expected of a man falsely
accused.
So where does this leave us? We have two apparently credible people telling
two completely different stories. One or both is lying. It is very likely that
the full scope of the truth will never be known.
In my opinion, we take this heightened sense of awareness of sexual harassment
and use it to make progress on this issue, and give the benefit of the doubt
to the nominee because I believe the burden of proof has not been met. I don't
believe that these accusations have been substantiated sufficiently to warrant
changing anyone's mind about whether the nominee belongs on the supreme court.
Regardless of the outcome of this issue, both Prof Hill and Judge Thomas
are going to lose. And government has once again shown that it deserves our
disrespect.
The Doctah
|
1004.215 | | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Mon Oct 14 1991 14:51 | 8 |
| re.214
Well, _I_ certainly haven't changed my mind about Thomas's nomination
to the SCOTUS.
I never _did_ want him confirmed.
Annie
|
1004.216 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Mon Oct 14 1991 14:55 | 2 |
| Oh, I didn't think this series of hearings was going to influence too many
people to make that particular switch. ;^)
|
1004.217 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Mon Oct 14 1991 15:01 | 25 |
|
re Doctah:
I can try to give a couple of possible plausible explanations of
why she didn't document the actual abuses at the time they occured:
1) She actively decided against pressing charges or bringing
to the EEOC at the time (that's what she says), so she may well
have believed that she'd never need to have documentation, and
she'd just as well try to not think about such horrible things
heaped upon her very hard, especially if she had to keep working
with the man - and writing something down definitely requires one
to think hard about it.
2) About her writing other work-related things down - she felt there
was a good possibility she'd need these things in a very small
(relatively) time from the time she wrote them down. There was
much more to be gained by writing these than writing abuses at the
time.
3) She knew she could remember very clearly what happened -
my gosh, if the "Coke" incident happened to me, well, shoot,
I sure wouldn't need a pen and paper to know it happened and
remember exactly how and where!
|
1004.218 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | a good dog and some trees | Mon Oct 14 1991 15:32 | 18 |
| Hi, Ellen. I don't disagree all that strongly with what you say; I know all
those things can happen. But it just doesn't fit too well with the mental
image I have of a woman who could have accomplished so much, so young. Also
it probably makes a difference to me that her employer was EEOC, not a private
law firm or <insert name of fave conservative regimented large corporation>.
My questions about Anita Hill's decisions 10 years ago are not helping me to
decide who to believe, or why.
Like every woman who works where men also work, I have experienced sexual
harrassment, and inappropriate interest and conduct, at work, at the hands of
one or more men. I know it happens. What I don't know is if it happened in
this one case. The evidence is not the kind that lends itself to objective
judgement.
Sigh. I wish it was!
Sara
|
1004.219 | It's Just Not That Big a Deal.... | BOOTKY::MARCUS | Good Planets Are Hard To Find | Mon Oct 14 1991 15:44 | 30 |
| RE: .27 and .110 -
That's the crux of the matter, Suzanne....It's really intense to
see the it's ONLY a woman what's the matter can't she take a
joke come out, and THEN have folks say, ah well, that was then
and now is now, so why not give the guy a try?
>Another thing that bothers many men (at least myself) is that
>we can UNKNOWINGLY commit this offense and unless the woman
>does choose to say something we have NO IDEA that we did
>anything "wrong". We can not even attempt to correct the behavior
>that the woman finds offensive. And then someday in the future
>this will come back to haunt us. Somehow there's a lack of
>fairness in all of this.
Jim, that's the whole point with sexual harassment...the onus is
always on the women to point out what's wrong and then let you know
how you should behave. Does the same hold true for you when you
deal with people of other races? Would you be apt to tell someone
of another race or ethnic background that you had NO IDEA that you
"did anything wrong?"
*I think* that the problem is that I heard the word TRIVIAL far
too many times this week-end. I guess that puts the Senate's mind
set in perspective for me.....
Thomas will probably be confirmed after all is said and done. After
all, what's the big deal?
Barb
|
1004.220 | those who don't know history... | ZFC::deramo | the radio reminds me | Mon Oct 14 1991 15:52 | 21 |
| re .217,
Even if you "know" you aren't going to press charges, it makes
sense to document everything, if only to defend yourself against
a bad review (she documented her work performance, why not
document the motive for the bad review?). As for (3), which is
more convincing,
"That's something you don't forget, Senator."
or
"Here are my notes of that incident, dated dd-mmm-yyyy,
and signed by my friend J. Doe as having been read by
hir two days later."
If anything constructive is to come out of all of this, I would
hope it to be for people to realize the importance of learning
and following the list of recomended things to do if harassed.
Dan
|
1004.221 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Mon Oct 14 1991 15:55 | 30 |
| > 1) She actively decided against pressing charges or bringing
> to the EEOC at the time (that's what she says), so she may well
> have believed that she'd never need to have documentation,
I could understand this if she did not fear for her job. She says she feared
for her job (in contradiction to what we know Thomas' power to be in that
regard but ignoring that for a moment); would she have used all of her
documented stuff regarding her work and remained quiet about the harassment
if the decision were unfavorable? I find that to be most unlikely. Why strap
your strong hand behind your back in a very important fight? Seems to me
that you want to keep all options open, particularly if you are worried
that you will lose your source of income. I think that we are not seeing
everything in a clear light.
>There was
> much more to be gained by writing these than writing abuses at the
> time.
I don't understand why this would be true. In fact, it occurs to me that
the opposite would be true. Can you explain how you reached this conclusion
please?
> 3) She knew she could remember very clearly what happened -
> my gosh, if the "Coke" incident happened to me, well, shoot,
> I sure wouldn't need a pen and paper to know it happened and
> remember exactly how and where!
I concur.
The Doctah
|
1004.222 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:01 | 13 |
|
re Doctah:
I don't think she was worried about her income - as has been stated,
she was a black female with a Yale law degree. She could have found
a *job* - but it was her career, with high, high ambitions that would
have (I *do* believe this) at stake. Once she pressed charges with
the EEOC, word *would* get around among the law community and other
potential high-powered employers that she's the type that "makes
waves". Believe me - it doesn't take much and her chances for the
highest positions in her field would have been extremely jeopardized.
I do believe that, even *with* documentation.
|
1004.223 | | FDCV06::KING | Can't think of anything clever....... | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:02 | 4 |
| One point I would like to make here. If he did sexually harassed her
why did she follow him to another department?
REK
|
1004.224 | What is harassment, discrimination? | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:03 | 36 |
| re: .219 (Barb)
One can't argue with your points too hard, but "for the
record," there are many cases where the reverse is true. Just
a couple of weeks ago, for example, right here in this DIGITAL
building, several women (in the response center) were made to
remove calendars, paintings, photographs, etc., of bare-chested
young men, etc. Was that sexual harassment? That's stretching
it, but it's conceivable that maybe *a* type of male (or even
female) would find it offensive and therefore harassing.
Over a decade ago, I filed a "reverse" (this is what it
was officially called) sex discrimination suit with the EEOC.
(I also simultaneously filed a mental handicap suit--but it
was dismissed--I filed the mental handicap suit because my
supervisor said I had an analytical mind and was not suited
for the work.) This job, by the way, was as a letter carrier
with the U.S. Postal Service. I had to wait a year for the
"hearing." Just prior to the hearing, the judge, who was a
woman, told me that sex discrimination is extremely difficult
to prove, and that reverse sex discrimination is even tougher.
She recommended that I settle before the hearing. I did.
Was I sexually harassed? Not really. I sort of enjoyed
the attention...until I found out that it was being used against
me. Was I discriminated against? There was definitely a bias
there...but it was complicated by several other factors. The
EEOC was, unfortunately, an inadequate means of seeking compensation,
but the only one I could afford (I had approached attorneys, ACLU,
etc., prior to the EEOC.)
Often, it seems to me, women do similar activities, and for
whatever reason, don't ever recognize it for what it is. It takes
education and dialog and expression of feelings to remedy this.
All this circus is/will be of value...or at least won't be a net
loss.
Frederick
|
1004.225 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:07 | 20 |
|
re .220, Dan:
>
> "Here are my notes of that incident, dated dd-mmm-yyyy,
> and signed by my friend J. Doe as having been read by
> hir two days later."
Do you understand, Dan, how *enormously* *difficult* this would
be - for *any* woman - high-powered, or not - two days after the
"Coke" incident? You still don't seem to get it, Dan.
She told the Senate, and I believe her, that she had to deal
with her feelings of victimization for years. It makes a lot
of sense to me that she's only able to bring her story out now,
after dealing with the personal consequences for many years.
What I said in .217 stands - not as why she didn't, but as a
plausible explanation as to why she didn't.
|
1004.226 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:12 | 8 |
|
re .218, Sara:
I guess I was assuming that Hill's enormous accomplishments, great
intellectual ability, and Yale law degree doesn't make her all that
much different from you and me and other women or any "better"
inately at handling harassment.
|
1004.227 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:13 | 11 |
| Making waves in government employment is not a great way to improve
your career. The government has shown over and over again that it
doesn't want trouble-makers. I think it's quite possible that Prof.
Hill was, even then, pretty tough and savvy and wasn't about to jeopardize
her career over some low-intensity harrassment. The very fact that
she was working for the EEOC was even more reason to make no waves. If
you've decided you aren't going to make waves, why write down the
details? The sexual harrassment did not make her fear for her career; the
thought of blowing the whistle made her fear for her career.
- Vick
|
1004.228 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:16 | 31 |
|
Sara,
If Anita Hill was harassed by Thomas, head of the EEOC at the time,
where do you think she could have gone to complain at the time?
I heard that - because of the level of the man she was accusing -
she would have had to go to a Senate committee that oversaw the
EEOC, or else to Reagan at the White House. I don't think a 25 year-
old woman, no matter where she went to school, would have
won out if she had tried to do this.
The fact that she didn't leave at the time, or raise a ruckus or
whatever, is counted against her but it makes perfect sense.
She was a bright, ambitious young woman from a family so poor
they didn't have indoor plumbing till she was 13. It wouldn't
be so easy for her to throw away an important job. She probably
thought the best she could do was put up with it till she had a
resume. She says the only reason she came forward now was
because she was asked direct questions on the subject by the FBI.
I think people can look at the case of who's telling the truth
on an objective basis. What motive has Hill to lie? None.
What motive has Thomas? Plenty.
The people who testified in support of Hill said that she told
them she was being sexually harassed by Thomas years ago. What
motive do they have to lie? What motive would Anita Hill have
had for telling them lies on the subject ten years ago, well before
Thomas was being considered for the Supreme Court.
Sue
|
1004.229 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:24 | 9 |
| >What motive has Hill to lie? None.
What motive did Charles Stuart have to murder his wife? If you asked that
question last year, most poeple would have said "none." Now of course a much
different picture has come to light. I'll agree that there isn't anything
obvious, but I fall short of stating categorically that she has nor reason to
lie. It seems obvious that she harbors very deep feelings against him. They
could be for the stated reason or they could be for some reason which has
remained hidden even now.
|
1004.230 | a small, but important, nit | MR4DEC::EGRACE | Friend of Sappho | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:32 | 10 |
| RE: 196
>If Anita is correct, too bad Thomas....
Frederick, if you are going to call Judge Thomas "Thomas", please call
Professor Hill "Hill", not "Anita".
Thank you,
E Grace
|
1004.231 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:33 | 17 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.219 by BOOTKY::MARCUS "Good Planets Are Hard To Find" >>>
>> Does the same hold true for you when you
>>deal with people of other races? Would you be apt to tell someone
>>of another race or ethnic background that you had NO IDEA that you
>>"did anything wrong?"
Whether the "race" obfuscation is in the above question or not, the answer is
"yes". If I insult Mr. Percival, without knowing it, I'll never know I insulted
(or harrassed or whatever) him unless I'm told about it, right? This assumes I
have of course made some attempt to learn how NOT to insult Mr. Percival to
begin with. In other words, "I didn't know" is an excuse if it isn't based on
ignorance.
How would it work any other way?
Roak
|
1004.232 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:35 | 46 |
| <<< Note 1004.219 by BOOTKY::MARCUS "Good Planets Are Hard To Find" >>>
>Jim, that's the whole point with sexual harassment...the onus is
>always on the women to point out what's wrong and then let you know
>how you should behave.
I don't think that it's the woman's "place" to tell me how to
behave. I think the issue is more one of pointing out sensitivities.
Every definition of harrassment I've heard in the last week clearly
indicates that it's in the eye of the beholder. The comments that
Prof. Hill attributed to Judge Thomas are clearly harrassment to
almost (note ALMOST) everyone concerned, but there are those that
might not take offense.
My wife and I discussed this at length over the weekend. She related
several instances where her boss(es) had made "ribald" remarks to
her. In all cases she did not take offense, and in fact could "give"
as good as she "got". I have to admit that the remarks she repeated
were CLEARLY harrassment in my opinion, but since she did not, THEY
WERE NOT.
The "line" is very gray. You can't point to something and automatically
say "This is wrong"/"This is OK".
Back to the Thomas confirmation hearings.
I listened to a fair amount of the testimony by both Prof. Hill and
her supporting panel. I listened to the first panel of Thomas
supporters and to a bit of the second panel. I missed Thomas' response
to Prof. Hill charges (other than the sound bites that made the news
reports).
Having heard the witnesses I'm afraid that I've come to the conclusion
that she is lying. Why she would do this is something I have absolutely
no idea about. I think that trying to attribute motives to Prof. Hill
is wrong and that it really serves no purpose.
As far as the "second woman" is concerned, through some deal with the
Committee she did not testify, therefore her "evidence" does not
exist (at least not in my determination of my personal position).
I believe that Thomas SHOULD be confirmed. Whether or not he actually
will be or not is still very much up in the air.
Jim
|
1004.233 | Thanks, Binder and Noonan... :-) | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:36 | 11 |
| re: .230 (E Grace)
I'll try...it's hard for me to say "Clarence" for some
reason. Also, I suppose calling a woman by her last name seems
masculine, somehow, to me. Am I biased? Yes, but I'll work to
overcome it to my own standards...
So, to you and Dick, who already pointed it out, thanks
for calling it to my attention.
Frederick
|
1004.234 | Not Justifiable | BOOTKY::MARCUS | Good Planets Are Hard To Find | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:45 | 22 |
| Frederick,
My answer to some of your questions is that it is not *in my
opinion* right to harass another whether done by men to women or
women to men (and, yes, I do think those posters were a form of
harassment).
My point is that harassment of men to women is trivialized,
especially in the workplace. Unless there is severe threat of
"job for sex" or physical threat, it is fairly well thought of as
"drumming something up."
That make the insidious, day-to-day, continual comments/jokes/
proposals/etc. that many to most women have dealt with over a
LIFETIME of a career, something meaningless or harmless (trivial).
If anything is made of it, then re:some back, you will never be
trusted or hired into any position of meaning because you "might
file a lawsuit."
What a perfectly fitting straight-jacket!
Barb
|
1004.235 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:49 | 17 |
| I feel frantic and despairing at the thought that Thomas might
be appointed to the Supreme Court. A person of good reputation
has come forward and accused him of behavior that constitutes
sexual harassment. There is no reason that anyone can see why
she would lie (she's the same race, is also a Republican, stood
to gain a lot if she had a former employee on the Supreme Court).
In this case, when there is a doubt about a man's character like
this, he shouldn't be appointed to the Supreme Court. We're
not talking about a trial or a conviction where Thomas would
deserve the benefit of the doubt - we're talking about a life
appointment to the Supreme Court. People can doubt Anita Hill
all they want but it's horrendously unfair to put a man on the
Supreme Court when a good percentage of the country believes
he's a lying sex harasser.
Sue
|
1004.236 | YOU take the repsonsibility | BOOTKY::MARCUS | Good Planets Are Hard To Find | Mon Oct 14 1991 17:08 | 59 |
| <<< IKE22::NOTE$:[NOTES$LIBRARY]WOMANNOTES-V3.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Topics of Interest to Women >-
================================================================================
Note 1004.231 Thomas nomination to Supreme Court 231 of 234
PEAKS::OAKEY "Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II" 17 lines 14-OCT-1991 14:33
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Re: <<< Note 1004.219 by BOOTKY::MARCUS "Good Planets Are Hard To Find" >>>
>> Does the same hold true for you when you
>>deal with people of other races? Would you be apt to tell someone
>>of another race or ethnic background that you had NO IDEA that you
>>"did anything wrong?"
<Whether the "race" obfuscation is in the above question or not, the answer is
<"yes". If I insult Mr. Percival, without knowing it, I'll never know I insulted
<(or harrassed or whatever) him unless I'm told about it, right? This assumes I
<have of course made some attempt to learn how NOT to insult Mr. Percival to
<begin with. In other words, "I didn't know" is an excuse if it isn't based on
<ignorance.
<
<How would it work any other way?
<
< Roak
I am not being snide or facetious when I say that you make it YOUR
responsibility not to be ignorant - ESPECIALLY in the workplace. The
other point in this discussion is that it is far easier - meaning,
frankly, that most just don't try - to plead ignorance when it comes
to sexual harassment than when it comes to race/ethnic/etc. Gosh,
I didn't know that would upset/bother you!
>My wife and I discussed this at length over the weekend. She related
>several instances where her boss(es) had made "ribald" remarks to
>her. In all cases she did not take offense, and in fact could "give"
>as good as she "got". I have to admit that the remarks she repeated
>were CLEARLY harrassment in my opinion, but since she did not, THEY
>WERE NOT.
That is a clear misconception, Jim. Because your wife did not think
certain remarks were harassment does not mean that they were indeed
not harassment. If your wife choose not to pursue or deem remarks as
harassing, that's certainly up to her. But in fact, in the workplace,
there are remarks that are harassment regardless of how given or how
received. In fact, if your wife could "give" out those remarks, as
you said above, she has probably "given harassment." If you and your
brother were fist fighting (as example, obviously I don't know whether
or not you have a brother) and he clocked you one, would it not be
assault just because you said it wasn't? Believe me, I am not trying
to be difficult, but, being "one of the boys" is frequently an
unconscious adjustment and at some point internalized.
I agree that it is tremendously hard to work these issues because they
underlie decades/centuries of how we deal with each other. I
certainly admire the effort of trying to come to grips with it. I
learn much as I go, and I thank everyone who pushes me just a little
bit more on that road.
Barb
|
1004.237 | More food for thought.... | MAST::HOFFMAN | Joan, 223-5168 | Mon Oct 14 1991 17:33 | 32 |
|
Some people will believe Hill; some will believe Thomas. I think the
truth lies somewhere between. Nothing will be decided, and I think
Thomas will be confirmed. How can they not confirm him, where so many
have "skeletons in their closets"? G-d forbid that Senators come under
close scrutiny! They will close the old-boy network and protect each
other. Hopefully, the issue of sexual harrassment has been elevated in
some people so they will think about it, but knowing how naive most
folks are, they won't consider it for long.
But, the real issue, to my mind, is that the Senate was on trial. We,
the American people, have given this "august" body of folks too much
power, and like the old saying, "Absolute power corrupts absolutely".
There seem to be two sets of rules - one for our national leadership and
one for the rest of us. It is up to each of us to be sure that this
ceases - no not in our lifetime or our children's lifetime, but perhaps
by our grandchildren's?
I have never heard such grandstanding as this week-end. Look at the
two sides of the Judiciary Committee. The Democrats had, amongst
others, DeConcini (who should have been drummed out of the Senate along
with the other Keating (S&L) cohorts), and Kennedy (who isn't the most
"moral" person!). On the Republican side, I think only Hatch showed
the least bit of sensitivity. Specter(sp?) should receive an academy
award for Bush's prosecutor!
We vote on whom we want to represent us. Let's remember this, and the
S&L fiasco and the bad checks, etc. in November. Perhaps there will be
a clear choice, and not the "lesser of two evils".
Cynically yours,
|
1004.238 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Mon Oct 14 1991 17:35 | 22 |
| <<< Note 1004.236 by BOOTKY::MARCUS "Good Planets Are Hard To Find" >>>
>That is a clear misconception, Jim......
Barb, I don't know if the word "clear" or "common" should apply.
As to your example using assault.
Both of these terms have legal definitions and in both cases
(my wife with her boss AND the time my brother whacked me for
seven stitches worth [Good example by the way] ;-)) the actions
did NOT fufill the legal definition of the words.
Now if we progress to "Was it morally wrong" we get into another
area entirely. But even so, I think "harrassment" requires a
"harrassed" party. And that definition is left to the recipient
of the behavior, no?
Jim
|
1004.239 | | 32FAR::LERVIN | Roots & Wings | Mon Oct 14 1991 17:50 | 19 |
| I find some of the opinions expressed about sexual harassment in the
workplace very disturbing. It is not o.k. for women or men to be
subjected to unwanted sexual advances, language or innuendoes.
I think that there are times when 'signals' between adults can be genuinely
misinterpreted. There is a big difference between someone asking you if
you'd like to have dinner some evening because that person thinks you are
attracted to him/her and a co-worker coming up to you and saying, "I find
you very attractive and I want to have sex with you..." and then repeating
this request every opportunity that s/he has, even though you've told that
person this behavior in unacceptable and must stop.
And it is mistaken to think that sexual harassment is limited to inappropriate
behavior between people where there is a supervisory/power imbalance or
the threat of "sleep with me or lose your job."
Ridiculing women and men by saying that they are "too sensitive" or
attempts to rationalize that comments about other people's anatomy are
appropriate are just another form of blaming the victim.
|
1004.240 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Mon Oct 14 1991 18:07 | 29 |
|
re .232, Jim:
> My wife and I discussed this at length over the weekend. She related
> several instances where her boss(es) had made "ribald" remarks to
> her. In all cases she did not take offense, and in fact could "give"
> as good as she "got". I have to admit that the remarks she repeated
> were CLEARLY harrassment in my opinion, but since she did not, THEY
> WERE NOT.
Not every boss would take so kindly to having it "dished back out",
appearing to challenge him, you know. Glad it worked for your wife,
though.
Do you understand that if the comments your wife got were directed
toward another woman the comments may very well be sexual harassment?
This is the thing that *makes* it sexual harassment - when it's a man
in a position of authority and power over a female subordinate. He's
not just Joe-random-Shmoe to her! He's got salary power, promotion
power, and dozens of subtler ways to make her job less-than-desirable.
For me, it's easy to imagine myself "giving" it back better than
"getting it", as you put it, when it comes to Joe-random-Shmoe that
I met through friends or an activity. But it's an entirely different
matter to be put in this position with a person of authority and
dealing with it similarly. Dealing with it would be much more of a
problem - for me, at least.
|
1004.241 | | MR4DEC::EGRACE | Friend of Sappho | Mon Oct 14 1991 18:21 | 6 |
| No, it does not need to be any certain person in any certain position
of power. The law very clearly states that sexual harrassment is
*anything* that makes an employee feel that the workplace is
uncomfortable or hostile, due to gender issues.
E Grace
|
1004.242 | | ZFC::deramo | the radio reminds me | Mon Oct 14 1991 19:17 | 22 |
| re .225, Ellen,
> >
> > "Here are my notes of that incident, dated dd-mmm-yyyy,
> > and signed by my friend J. Doe as having been read by
> > hir two days later."
>
> Do you understand, Dan, how *enormously* *difficult* this would
> be - for *any* woman - high-powered, or not - two days after the
> "Coke" incident? You still don't seem to get it, Dan.
Yes, I think I can understand how difficult that would be.
That doesn't at all change the facts that writing everything
down is the standard advice that is given, is the best
advice that I've seen, would have helped Prof. Hill immensely,
and is the best thing that anyone here could do if faced with
the same or a similar situation in the future.
Saying that something is the best thing to do isn't the same
as saying that it will be easy.
Dan
|
1004.243 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Mon Oct 14 1991 20:48 | 20 |
| <<< Note 1004.240 by BLUMON::GUGEL "koatamundi whiteout" >>>
> Do you understand that if the comments your wife got were directed
> toward another woman the comments may very well be sexual harassment?
Yes I do, in fact it's the whole point of my confusion in dealing
with this issue. If I had heard the comments that he made to her
I would have called him on it (even if she wasn't my wife). If
someone who worked for me made the comments and I heard them
I would take corrective action with the employee.
BUT, my wife tells me she did not consider it harrassment, didn't
feel harrassed, wasn't depressed, threatened or IN ANY WAY made
to feel negative about the situation.
So was it "harrassment"?
Jim
|
1004.244 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Mon Oct 14 1991 20:56 | 21 |
| If we decide (no matter WHAT the nature of the material) that
harassment does not occur until the woman (or whoever) DECIDES
she (or he) feels harassed, then we've brought it down to the
level of harassment being "her (or his) fault for being offended
at something that most [read: reasonable] people would have been
able to 'handle' without being bothered."
In another conference, I saw someone write over the weekend
that if WOMEN (in general) can't take the heat of the workplace
(meaning if we can't 'HANDLE' the way men talk) - then we should
go back to our kitchens.
It would be much more fair if we decided that it isn't appropriate
for ANYONE to get into certain sexual areas of discussion at the
workplace (or risk being accused of harassment) - rather than say
"Well, it's only harassment if Mary or Louise can't 'HANDLE' it
and call it harassment. Meanwhile, Paula and Shirley are 'cool'
because they listen to this stuff all day and it doesn't phase
'em."
See what I mean?
|
1004.245 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Mon Oct 14 1991 21:08 | 3 |
| The talk in myy office was full of Professor Hill bashing
today. Incredible. I am hiding out in the lab.
Linda
|
1004.246 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Mon Oct 14 1991 21:21 | 47 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.236 by BOOTKY::MARCUS "Good Planets Are Hard To Find" >>>
>> Does the same hold true for you when you
>>deal with people of other races? Would you be apt to tell someone
>>of another race or ethnic background that you had NO IDEA that you
>>"did anything wrong?"
>><Whether the "race" obfuscation is in the above question or not, the answer is
>><"yes". If I insult Mr. Percival, without knowing it, I'll never know I insulted
>><(or harrassed or whatever) him unless I'm told about it, right? This assumes I
>><have of course made some attempt to learn how NOT to insult Mr. Percival to
>><begin with. In other words, "I didn't know" is an excuse if it isn't based on
>><ignorance.
>><
>><How would it work any other way?
>><
>>I am not being snide or facetious when I say that you make it YOUR
>>responsibility not to be ignorant - ESPECIALLY in the workplace. The
>>other point in this discussion is that it is far easier - meaning,
>>frankly, that most just don't try - to plead ignorance when it comes
>>to sexual harassment than when it comes to race/ethnic/etc. Gosh,
>>I didn't know that would upset/bother you!
I don't think we disagree that total ignorance is no excuse.
The question pivots on if someone makes an honest attempt at avoiding
harassment, but they do totally by accident and unknowingly, is "I didn't
know" an excuse? My take is that if they take that information, which they
did not know before, and make sure they don't make that mistake again, it is.
A good example that comes to mind is how we've gone from "Physically
Handicapped" to "Physically Challenged" to "Differently Abled" in the space of
about a year, each step of the way [it seems to me] the previous term being
laden with negative connotations, such that you're very, very, wrong if you use
the "old term".
Now, you may be the most sensitive guy or gal this side of the Mississippi, but
if you're not online to personnel on a day-by-day basis, you may not know the
latest and greatest "phrase" and make a major blunder without the slightest
malice intended...
So again, if a person, who's trying not to be harassing, makes a blunder
without malice, AND this is transgression is brought to their attention, AND
they correct their actions, is "I didn't know" an excuse?
Roak
|
1004.247 | All is not lost. | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Mon Oct 14 1991 23:34 | 36 |
| RE: .245 Linda
> The talk in myy office was full of Professor Hill bashing
> today. Incredible. I am hiding out in the lab.
Back when my first manager at Digital took a seminar on
Sexual Harassment in 1982, we joked with him that it was a
"How to" course. Seems ironic to me now, somehow.
In reality, Sexual Harassment is a giant exercise in cultural
lip service. Even members of the Senate Judiciary Committee
would rather believe that an attorney, a Professor of Law at
a University, is more likely to be unable to distinguish fantasy
from reality than be telling the truth about having been sexually
harassed.
What amazes me the most about this whole thing is how ANYONE can
question why Prof. Hill wouldn't come forward about the harassment
10 years ago after watching the way she is being treated NOW for
bringing this up (with less than 10 years to go in this century!)
It's absolutely pathetic. And, by the way, I agree with what
someone said earlier about having no sympathy for Judge Thomas
(with all his death talk.) If Prof. Hill had gone on and on
about how she'd rather have been shot with a bullet than to go
through all this, the Committee would have discounted her as an
hysterical female (and would have shoved her out the door yelling
for her to go get counseling as she fell down the front stairs.)
I do believe, though, that at least Judge Thomas will not be
confirmed in the vote tomorrow. The vote was expected to be
extremely close in the first place - I believe it's likely
that this will be enough to keep him out. If not, I won't be
terribly upset. He'd be a permanent reminder to all of us
that much work remains to be done in the area of sexual
harassment (and his lifetime term would NOT be fun for him.)
|
1004.248 | fear of truth | GEMVAX::BROOKS | | Tue Oct 15 1991 09:56 | 7 |
|
I think a lot of people are afraid to believe Professor Hill, or are afraid
to admit they believe her. I suppose this is because the truth about sexual
harassment, like the truth about other forms of abuse of women, cuts too
close to the bone. It's easier not to face it.
Dorian
|
1004.249 | | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | kindofanupstart-butigotawarmheart | Tue Oct 15 1991 10:02 | 8 |
1004.250 | ??? | GEMVAX::BROOKS | | Tue Oct 15 1991 10:12 | 6 |
|
I understand there are three Democratic senators, one from Florida and
two from Connecticut, who are undecided...does anyone have their names
and phone numbers?
Dorian
|
1004.251 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Tue Oct 15 1991 11:50 | 23 |
| <<< Note 1004.244 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> at something that most [read: reasonable] people would have been
> able to 'handle' without being bothered."
The example I'm using is when "reasonable people" (including myself
I hope) would DEFINITELY call the comments sexual harrassment, but
the "victim" does not. What then are we to do?
> It would be much more fair if we decided that it isn't appropriate
> for ANYONE to get into certain sexual areas of discussion at the
> workplace (or risk being accused of harassment)
I agree. But then, of course, if there WERE straightforward definitions
then we would not need this discussion. The difficulty for me, as a
man, is knowing where the "line" is placed. And realizing that the
line is different for individual women. Some totally innocent remark
CAN be construed as harrassment AND some completely vulgar remarks
may not be received as harrassment by the different women involved.
That's the problem.
Jim
|
1004.252 | My set of opinions... | BOOTKY::MARCUS | Good Planets Are Hard To Find | Tue Oct 15 1991 11:55 | 20 |
|
.....It is NOT o.k. just to get awareness of this situation and
say, yea but we all learned something. We will still have
Judge Thomas on the Supreme Court for LIFE.
.....I wish I had your faith, Suzanne. I believe Judge Thomas
will be confirmed because the men of the Senate neither accept
nor understand sexual harassment.
And now for a wish:
I clearly wish that any woman who believes her
Senator voted in this confirmation without proper
understanding of or sensitivity to sexual
harassment votes him out of office. THAT is the
only message that will be understood.
Barb
|
1004.253 | | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Tue Oct 15 1991 11:55 | 18 |
| The Connecticut senators are Christoper Dodd and xxx Lieberman.
I'd love their numbers, if anyone has them.
It looks like he's going to get confirmed, unless the American
public can convince the Senators that Thomas doesn't deserve it.
Once again the senate is using polls to decide, rather than what they
heard in the hearings.
I heard Paul Simon speak on this issue in 1988. He said that he
believed it was his job to go with his conscience, and not his
constituents wishes. He used forcing the Japanese Americans into the
camps in World War II as his example. Most Americans favored that
decision too. (Apparently his father was in politics and voted
not to do this.)
judy
|
1004.254 | A Question | BOOTKY::MARCUS | Good Planets Are Hard To Find | Tue Oct 15 1991 11:58 | 8 |
|
Jim,
Maybe you could help me here. Could you give me an example of
a totally innocent remark/question that you think could be
interpretted in different ways by different women?
Barb
|
1004.255 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Tue Oct 15 1991 12:14 | 15 |
| I think Thomas will be confirmed and I am tremendously discouraged
about what this says about this country. When the Senate confirms
someone for the Supreme Court they are giving that person a job
for life and the responsibility to make decisions that will affect
Americans for generations. It is not a trial, where one is given
the benefit of the doubt, and it is not a popularity contest where
the 48% of the people who believe him win out over the 35% who don't.
It is a matter of hiring the best man for the position. When over
a third of the country believes that Thomas lied under oath, and that
he sexually harassed a woman when he was head of the EEOC (and
thus responsible for protecting women against harassment), how,
in the name of everything holy, can anyone say he is the best man
for the job! I feel like screaming.
Sue
|
1004.256 | | CADSE::KHER | Live simply, so others may simply live | Tue Oct 15 1991 12:17 | 5 |
| Suzanne, I hope you are right. I heard on NPR this morning that polls
showed that support for Thomas hasn't decreased. He maybe confirmed
after all.
manisha
|
1004.257 | other perspectives | GUCCI::SANTSCHI | violence cannot solve problems | Tue Oct 15 1991 12:27 | 24 |
| sometimes people may make comments that are inappropriate. if they
have been told that the remarks are inappropriate and unwanted, and
they choose to continue to make these kinds of remarks, then that is
harassment.
everyone should be given the benefit of the doubt, once. they should be
told that their behavior is unwanted and inappropriate. most
reasonable people will stop. some will try it on someone else and
continue the cycle of offending and being told the remarks are
unwelcome and then try it on someone else. habitual offenders are hard
to find unless people talk about the offenses and that is unlikely to
happen. thus it is possible for an offender to be told by several
different people that their remarks are unwelcome, but if they stop
making remarks to those who mention it, then they can make remarks to
others.
also, i have been subjected to jokes and remarks that i found offensive
but i didn't pursue it because 2 women senior to me laughed at the
jokes. i wouldn't have been taken seriously and could have really
jeopardized my job. as a single mother with a mortgage, i could hardly
afford to "make waves". so i took my indignation and disgust and
walked away. the jokes and remarks continued.
sue
|
1004.258 | | GWYNED::WALKER | Dancing on Jello | Tue Oct 15 1991 12:41 | 11 |
| There is a question hanging in my mind, Thomas is presently a judge and yet he
stated that he chose not to listen to the testimony of Hill. After not listening
to testimony he was able to deny that what she said happened. Is this an
accepted procedure in his current job as a judge? Will this be an acceptable
procedure if or when he becomes a supreme court judge?
I found his testimony to be delivered in a manner of someone emotionally
distraught. If he did nothing wrong, in his mind, why did he react the way he
did?
Martha
|
1004.259 | My .02 cents | POBOX::SCHWARTZINGE | I'm going Shopping! | Tue Oct 15 1991 12:54 | 17 |
| Just my .02:
I completely changed my mind on the AH/CT issue after watching and
listening all weekend. I surprised myself.
I believe that "something" took place, but not to the degree that AH
states. I also believe that she mostly is grandstanding (lie detector
test, etc.)
I also think they are both very good lawyers and know how to "act" in
public.
If I had to vote today, it would be for Judge Thomas to be confirmed.
Jackie
|
1004.260 | | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue Oct 15 1991 13:18 | 6 |
| I would vote for
The Senate Judiciary Committee to be disbanded. I can't make up my
mind about anything else.
ed
|
1004.261 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Tue Oct 15 1991 13:25 | 28 |
| re: Sue Kallas
You believe that it is "horribly unfair" to put a man on the Supreme Court
when there is a "good percentage" of americans who believe he's a "lying
sex harasser." I believe it is horribly unfair to deny a seat as justice
on the Supreme Court to anyone based solely or mostly on an unprovable
accusation, even if the accusation sounds credible, unless the refutations
by the defendent do not seem credible. For to allow this opens the process to
an even greater level of politicization and bastardization than already exists.
To deep six a nomination, all that must occur is a credible accusation of
unacceptable behavior be leveled at the nominee. Guess what, with that
criterion, no one is going to pass muster.
A question- were you in favor of the nominee gaining confirmation before
the Hill accusations came to light or opposed?
re: Martha Walker
>I found his testimony to be delivered in a manner of someone emotionally
>distraught. If he did nothing wrong, in his mind, why did he react the way he
>did?
If you were falsely accused of sexual harassment in front of the world would
you tend to be emotionally distraught? Your reply sounds to me to directly
parallel the comments coming from pro-Thomas forces who have been accused of
"blaming the victim."
The Doctah
|
1004.262 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo, zfc::deramo | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:00 | 9 |
| One of the supposed gender gaps is in the importance
placed on following due process. The people voting on
the nomination will be Senators thinking about how they
would want to be treated, if they were accused of
something in an our-word-against-theirs manner. If they
follow the golden rule they will treat Judge Thomas as
they would wish to be treated themselves.
Dan
|
1004.263 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:01 | 19 |
|
re .261:
Every day managers at Digital interview people for positions
and if something smells "wrong" or just not completely right,
the candidate is not offered a job. There's rarely any remorse.
And we have no "requirement" to prove "beyond a reasonable doubt"
that a candidate cannot handle the job. We go with our gut
instincts.
Why on earth should this case be any different?
There's a strong case that he *may* have committed these acts.
No, not hard proof.
But we're not talking about a job where we can just "give him
a chance" on a provisional basis!!! We're talking about a
LIFE appointment, people!! Doesn't that bother you??
|
1004.264 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:04 | 13 |
| If Thomas were accused of murder by a witness who had no physical
evidence (and roughly half the Senate believed the witness,) you
can bet that Thomas would not be confirmed. It wouldn't be enough
to say, "Well, the evidence wasn't conclusive, so we should give
him the benefit of the doubt."
The problem is that the accused offense is *ONLY* sexual harassment.
"Big deal - so a woman had to listen to him talk about his winky at
work. If she couldn't 'handle' it, she should have gone back to
the kitchen. Give the guy his lifetime job."
It really is pathetic.
|
1004.265 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:31 | 20 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.264 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> If Thomas were accused of murder by a witness who had no physical
>> evidence (and roughly half the Senate believed the witness,) you
>> can bet that Thomas would not be confirmed. It wouldn't be enough
>> to say, "Well, the evidence wasn't conclusive, so we should give
>> him the benefit of the doubt."
>> The problem is that the accused offense is *ONLY* sexual harassment.
Suzanne, do you feel that sexual harassment should be punished by death or a
life sentence in prison?
Or can you admit that sexual harassment is not a bad as murder, despite throwing
them together to further confuse a confusing issue?
Roak
Ps. I think you tried this unfair comparison before, only to have Percival
refute this line of reasoning...
|
1004.266 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:36 | 11 |
| I agree that there are many people (and senators) who think
that even if he did the things alleged, that is no reason to
block his nomination. Hopefully the senators will vote based
on what they have seen in the hearings, rather than on public
opinion. Most people have seen only a subset of the evidence.
I don't see how the testimony of the four people whom she told
about the harassment can be ignored. It creates in my mind
at the very least reasonable doubt. I'm glad that the allegations
were made public, as it has forced many people to examine their
feelings about sexual harassment.
Linda
|
1004.267 | RE: .265 | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:38 | 12 |
| If Thomas were accused of stealing, or child molestation, or taking
bribes as a judge - he wouldn't be confirmed if roughly half the
Senate believed a witness against him.
Now, you'll probably tell me again that sexual harassment isn't
as "serious" a crime as these - and that's my whole point!!!
Sexual harassment isn't regarded as a serious offense (or at least
not serious enough to keep someone from being confirmed for a
lifetime post as a Supreme Court Justice, evidently.)
Thanks for helping me make my point, Roak.
|
1004.268 | my opinion: | RDGENG::LIBRARY | A wild and an untamed thing | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:50 | 5 |
| I don't feel that the point really should be whether he sexually
harassed someone ten years ago. If he doesn't do it *these days*, then
his past shouldn't stop him being nominated.
Alice T.
|
1004.269 | If the accusations are true, then Thomas lied under oath! | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:52 | 5 |
| The point, Alice T., is that if Prof. Hill's testimony is true
(and I believe it is,) then Thomas LIES "these days," whether
he still sexually harasses anyone anymore or not.
This makes him inappropriate as a Supreme Court Justice.
|
1004.270 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:56 | 20 |
| <<< Note 1004.254 by BOOTKY::MARCUS "Good Planets Are Hard To Find" >>>
>Maybe you could help me here. Could you give me an example of
>a totally innocent remark/question that you think could be
>interpretted in different ways by different women?
Barb, How about, "Your're all dressed up today" in response to a female
co-worker that does not normally "dress up" for work, but on a
particular day has a presentation to make and so is wearing a dress,
etc.
BTW, I would also make the same remark to a male co-worker that might
be wearing a coat and tie for the same reasons.
After all the discussion, I now feel that I can still make the
comment to the men, but I would think twice before using the same
words (inflection, etc.) with the women.
Jim
|
1004.271 | | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:59 | 18 |
| re.268
While it's true that the incidents in question took place [or not] 10
years ago, Judge Thomas's position on them today has a great deal of
bearing [in my mind anyway] upon his fitness to serve as a Justice of
the Supreme Court of the United States.
I can stand [or type] before all today and state categorically that
there are things I did 10 years ago that I wouldn't _dream_ of doing
today. I'd be horrified and deeply embarrassed to have them come to
light. Yet, I wouldn't deny having done them.
I don't know what happened between Thomas & Hill 10 years ago; but I
find Hill believable.
I just don't know.
Annie
|
1004.272 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:01 | 5 |
| entered by request=>
EEO laws specifically prohibit employers from asking candidates if they
have been arrested or accused of crimes, because such unproven information
is prejudicial and has nothing to do with job performance.
|
1004.273 | | TERZA::ZANE | for who you are | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:10 | 9 |
|
Small nit...
I'm tired of hearing people say "... go back to the kitchen." I don't
have to put up with it in the kitchen, either.
Terza
|
1004.274 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:11 | 5 |
|
RE: .273 Terza
Right on!
|
1004.275 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:12 | 11 |
|
re .272:
In this case, I think it *does* have to do with "job performance",
as a judge in the highest court of our land.
Sure, I wouldn't care if he'd done those things if he were looking
for a job here at DEC as an engineer (given he had the qualifications).
Besides, he could be *fired* if he started up again at any point.
This is a job he can *never* be fired from!
|
1004.276 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:27 | 44 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.267 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
>> If Thomas were accused of stealing, or child molestation, or taking
>> bribes as a judge - he wouldn't be confirmed if roughly half the
>> Senate believed a witness against him.
These are all criminal acts (as pointed out by Jim previously). If Thomas was
accused of any of the above, he would have to appear in court. If found guilty,
he would serve time and not be confirmed. If not found guilty, to not confirm
him to the court would be a travesty of justice, becuase that would imply
"Guilty even when found not guilty".
>> Now, you'll probably tell me again that sexual harassment isn't
>> as "serious" a crime as these - and that's my whole point!!!
I'm trying to figure out if YOU think sexual harassment is as "serious" as
the above. Currently SH is a civil matter, not criminal. Should it be
criminal? And if so, should the punishment be on par with a child molester?
And if it is as serious as child molestation, and a criminal offense, then
the accused's guilt should be proven beyond a shadow of a doubt, which is
an even more stringent requirement than exists today. Is that what you want?
If you answer "no" to any of those three questions, even YOU don't think it's as
serious a crime.
>> Sexual harassment isn't regarded as a serious offense (or at least
>> not serious enough to keep someone from being confirmed for a
>> lifetime post as a Supreme Court Justice, evidently.)
An argument built on the conclusion that Thomas is guilty. If you don't
subscribe to that conclusion, the argument doesn't make sense now, does it?
I assume what you're trying to say is that the accusation of SH should be enough
to block a nomination. I don't subscribe to that. If Hill can convice enough
senators that she is telling the truth, then Thomas should not be confirmed. If
Thomas can convice enough senators that is was telling the truth then he should
be confirmed. Exactly how would you change the process?
>> Thanks for helping me make my point, Roak.
What point? Most every time I ask a question, you shift your position
slightly. At the very least dig in and defend *a* position...
Roak
|
1004.277 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:28 | 22 |
| re .275
> This is a job he can *never* be fired from!
Wrong.
US Constitution:
Article. III. Section. 1:
The Judges, both of the supreme and inferior Courts,
shall hold their Offices during good Behavior...
If the Judges behavior does not continue to be good, the Judge
may be fired.
Recall the Justice Abe Fortas was either fired, or resigned
because he would have been fired (I don't recall which) for
improper behavior.
Tom_K
|
1004.278 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:37 | 18 |
| RE: .276 Roak
If Prof. Hill's testimony is true (and I believe it is,) then Thomas
has lied under oath (which is most definitely a crime.)
You can obfuscate all you like, but my point remains the same.
It's not a matter of "innocent until proven guilty" alone that makes
it somewhat acceptable to confirm a Supreme Court Justice who has been
accused of sexual harassment. The fact that his offense is ONLY sexual
harassment makes it less serious than other offenses (even ones such as
slander or libel.)
Meanwhile, Roak, get your shoes off my back. I'm not going to go
through the trouble of telling you a second time that I have no
intention of submitting myself to your cross-examinations.
I'm not on trial here.
|
1004.279 | re: is sexual harassment serious? | NAVIER::SAISI | | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:49 | 10 |
| Sexual harassment is serious because it interferes with a person
doing their job. It may actually prevent a person from continuing
to hold a job that is important to them. It impacts productivity
in terms of the emotional stress on the victim, and getting the job
done if a person has to avoid their harasser and communication with
that person is an important part of their job. Transferring to
another position is not a solution. It means that your right to
hold your job has been taken away from you. How many people would
take kindly to this?
Linda
|
1004.280 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:49 | 16 |
|
re .276:
>...If not found guilty, to not confirm
>him to the court would be a travesty of justice, becuase that would imply
>"Guilty even when found not guilty".
No, Roak, it wouldn't be a "travesty of justice". Read my previous
reply. Just because a manager can't "prove" a candidate will make
a bad employee, doesn't mean at all they can refuse if they have any
*doubts* about that candidate. Is this a "travesty"? Of course
not - that's absurd.
Bottom line for me (if I were a senator): there's reasonable
doubt about the man's character. Do not vote to confirm.
|
1004.281 | IMHO | GRANPA::TTAYLOR | fortress around my heart | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:54 | 32 |
| I truly believe that any manager (male/female) who is in a position of
power and uses that power against someone or intimidates someone for
their own devices doesn't deserve to be:
1) a manager of people
2) in a position of power
While I sympathise with Judge Thomas' family for what he is going
through publicly, I cannot fathom why ANY woman (or man, for that
matter) would have their good name dragged through the mud unless they
strongly believe in what they are representing. And by admitting to
these allegations, Miss Hill is going against a stronger power than
herself, allowing herself to be "raped" publicly, and held to public
scrutiny, and is setting herself up for a lifetime of mega-problems
as far as a career is concerned. She must have known this going into
it, and it still didn't deter her. She seems like a very rational
person, one who has a lot of trusted and believable people to back her
up. Mr. Thomas, on the other hand, seems like he has a very volatile
temper and an erratic personality. I cannot see how "racism" falls
into the picture at all, for the accuser and the accused are from the
same racial group. I cannot see how "black male stereotypes" fall into
this picture either. Some of his comments are so stupid I can't
believe it.
I would not want a Supreme Court Judge sitting on the bench based on
his past and based on his erratic personality. No woman I know would
subject themselves to what Miss Hill is going through unless they TRULY
were sexually harrassed. I know of one manager here at work that was
brought to HR for alleged "sexual harrassment" and he has always been
pleasant and professional to me. You just never know about people ....
|
1004.282 | | FMNIST::olson | friend of the family | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:56 | 8 |
| And whether or not Sexual Harassment in general or in abstract, Roger, is as
serious or not as child molestation or other crimes, IN THIS SPECIFIC CASE,
against someone who was serving as head of the Equal Employment Opportunity
Agency, it is a serious accusation, in that it suggests dereliction of duty.
If the head of EEOC committs harassment, how well could he have been doing
the job of vigorously protecting victims of harassment?
DougO
|
1004.283 | | 57689::HAMPTON | Zipperphobia? *BUTTON* your Fly! | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:56 | 8 |
| According to CBS radio
Thomas has 48 yes votes (7 democrats) and has a few more democrats
'leaning' his way.
It looks like he will be confirmed.
Hamp
|
1004.284 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:56 | 32 |
|
re .277:
> US Constitution:
>
> Article. III. Section. 1:
>
> The Judges, both of the supreme and inferior Courts,
> shall hold their Offices during good Behavior...
Oh great. That's so vague as to be worthless! At least I
can't imagine how it would be enforced. And I have no doubt
whatsoever if he were to start sexually harassing a staff member
it wouldn't even be considered grounds for dismissal under this
rule.
> If the Judges behavior does not continue to be good, the Judge
> may be fired.
Who's the authority that can do the firing? Does this imply
that a SCJ *does* "report" to someone or group (the senate?)
I guess my point was that for every job in the land employers
can take into account a potential employee's *past* - on what
else can you reasonably base a hiring decision? But in this case,
many, many people are asking that we put aside all that and hire
hire him anyway. I don't buy this.
|
1004.285 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Tue Oct 15 1991 16:07 | 35 |
| <<< Note 1004.278 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> If Prof. Hill's testimony is true (and I believe it is,) then Thomas
> has lied under oath (which is most definitely a crime.)
This is true, stated in this way. Of course it assumes that Prof.
Hill was telling the truth. You have come to that conclusion,
I have come to a different conclusion.
>The fact that his offense is ONLY sexual
> harassment makes it less serious than other offenses (even ones such as
> slander or libel.)
I don't think so. If Thomas HAD said the things that Hill accused
him of, then I would not want to seem him confirmed. That's a given
with most of those that I've talked with and, in fact, is what
most of the Senators that have been interviewed have said as well.
Now everyone, and in particular the Senators, will have to "decide"
which of the parties they believe.
If they believe Thomas, then their vote should not change from what
they would have done a week ago.
If they believe Hill then they should vote not to confirm.
As I stated before, after listening to Hill and "her" witnesses
AND listening to "Thomas'" witnesses I have come to the conclusion
that Hill is not telling the truth.
Since I had no problem with the nomination before this all started
(other than the fact that there ARE more qualified jurists), I have
no problem with it now.
Jim
|
1004.286 | | CSC32::P_PAPACEK | | Tue Oct 15 1991 16:21 | 19 |
|
In Thomas's opening statement he said how he has agonized over this and
has racked his brain trying to remember what he may have said or done
to Anita Hill that would cause her to say these things.
Then he refuses to listen or watch Hill's testimony. He catagorically
denies everything before even listening to her testimony. Seems to me
if he wanted to help jog his memory he would have watched instead of
being briefed on her testimony.
Will he treat other cases like this?
I also agree with an earlier note. This is the equivalent of a job
interview. An employer with doubts doesn't have to prove guilt
without a doubt.
Pat
|
1004.287 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Tue Oct 15 1991 16:36 | 8 |
| re .284
> Oh great. That's so vague as to be worthless!
I expect former Justice Fortas has a somewhat different opinion
as to the worthlessness of that clause.
Tom_K
|
1004.288 | telegram to delegation? | CIVIC::ROBERTS | Solyent Green is People | Tue Oct 15 1991 16:36 | 7 |
|
I am unable to get through to the Capital switchboard or to my
delegation. I'd like to send a telegram ... has anyone tried this
approach?
thanks,
Carol
|
1004.289 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Tue Oct 15 1991 16:47 | 32 |
| re: 261, Mark Levesque
You asked if I were against Thomas before this. Well, I'll
confess I'm almost as much of a knee-jerk liberal as you are
a knee-jerk conservative, so I wasn't thrilled with the idea
of Thomas. On the other hand, I figured that with Bush as
prez if it wasn't one conservative yes-man it would be another,
and I'd rather see one who was black than white, so I really wasn't
against the Thomas confirmation until Anita Hill came forward.
And, yes, I still think that if a credible person makes serious
charges against a candidate for the Supreme Court, and if that
person has corroborating testimony from four other credible people,
and if a third of the country believes them, that that nominee has
no business being on the Supreme Court. I don't think that
is asking too much. What would your standard be? That he not be
a convicted felon?
I don't think Thomas's refutations were all that believable. He
said he'd been tearing himself apart wondering what he could have
said to a person he thought was a friend in order for her to have
made such charges, that he'd been wracking his brain for days
wondering if there was something she'd taken the wrong way.
Then he said he hadn't bothered to watch her testimony.
I think it takes tremendous gall for anyone who supports Thomas'
nomination to say that any good has come out of this regarding
sexual harassment. What has it shown? That even a very
composed, articulate law professor will not be believed, will
be villified.
|
1004.290 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Tue Oct 15 1991 16:49 | 20 |
| For those of you who feel that Thomas should be confirmed: can you
honestly believe that he told us anything? He told us *nothing*; first
of all he denied all allegations, and then admitted he didn't watch
Prof. Hill's testimony. So how did he know what to deny? The rest
of the 'show' consisted of the teary eyed Clarence talking about
death..
IS he stable?
How about the fact that the senators *know* that Thomas used
pornography while at Yale, and yet, felt they didn't want to 'bring
that up'. Has it nothing to do with this issue?
To quote Thomas, "this is a travesty." Women everywhere have been
insulted; actually both men and women. Are men truly as naive and
unconscious as those senators portrayed themselves?
Well, it's probably too late; he'll be on the bench; hopefully, he slip
up (which he will) and they can debench him.
Maia
|
1004.291 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Tue Oct 15 1991 16:56 | 9 |
| <<< Note 1004.290 by BOOKS::BUEHLER >>>
> How about the fact that the senators *know* that Thomas used
> pornography while at Yale,
How does one "use" pornography? He may have "viewed" it, although
that it not in the official record. But "used"????
Jim
|
1004.292 | Solomon, where are you now that we need you | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Tue Oct 15 1991 16:59 | 16 |
| I've agonized over this one for several days now, i.e., what would
I do?? I want to believe Hill, but unfortunately that isn't the
way things work. The senators do not have to decide WHICH ONE THEY
BELIEVE!! Thomas does not have to prove his innocence.....Hill
MUST prove her allegations. Sorry, but that's the way our
American system of law works. It's clear to me she hasn't
proven anything yet, thus the nod goes to Thomas, wrong as it
may be.
So who's lying? Bush lied like hell when he nominated Thomas.
"the best-qualified person in America" my sweet patootee!!
Thomas lied his way through the hearings. Senators lied about
their positions. Our government lies so much to us that we have
come to expect it. And then, along comes Hill and we really
want to believe her...but how do we know whe isn't lying too?
|
1004.293 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:05 | 5 |
| re. .292
Lennard, this isn't a trial, the benefit of the doubt doesn't
go to Thomas. This is a confirmation. The benefit of the doubt
should go to all us poor Americans.
|
1004.294 | o.k. I'LL be the one | BOOTKY::MARCUS | Good Planets Are Hard To Find | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:05 | 37 |
| Titled as such because some will not see past the surface to the
message (might be a bit of agreement with you Jim on feeling it
makes it more real).
I say this will all honesty and in all sincerity. I doubt that
sexual harassment will either be understood or accepted unless
you are female - with, of course, some notable exceptions (as
there always are).
I have worked in this industry for approximately 15 years and I
have yet to have a year go by in which I was not sexually
harassed in one form or another - truthfully, more in the verbal
terribly uncomfortable position than anything else. What's more,
I have YET to meet a single woman that I work with who has NOT
met with a situation of sexual harassment.
This is maybe where the agreement comes in, Jim.
Maybe you (general you, not Jim) don't "see it" or give it
credence because you don't feel it. Maybe you don't understand
exactly how terrible you can make someone feel because of a
"comment or a joke." Maybe you just can't believe that anyone
would take offense at that because it doesn't offend you. Hey!
What's the big deal?
Maybe this discussion is drawn along gender lines because the
women who listened to Professor Hill said to themselves, "Yes,
that's exactly how I felt...this rings true..." and the men
simply couldn't relate a feeling in the pits of their stomachs
to Professor Hill's words (or perhaps a sudden burst! in blood
pressure).
And maybe, the Senate had better learn how to get in touch with
that feeling before a good deal of their contstituency figures
out how very little they know.
Barb
|
1004.295 | | GEMVAX::BROOKS | | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:07 | 7 |
| .292
> Hill most prove her allegations...
Gee, I thought that was only in a court of law. Is that what this is?
D.
|
1004.296 | From the center, I say... | ABSISG::WAYLAY::GORDON | Wanna dance the Grizzly Bear... | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:14 | 8 |
| re: .295
If it was was a 'flaming liberal' being nominated and accusations
were flying from the conservative side, you can bet the liberal line would
be 'can you prove those allegations?'
--D
|
1004.297 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:20 | 6 |
| re: 296
I suppose that might be true, but I don't think there are any liberals
in the Senate who would be as big a ninny as Orrin Hatch, with all
his foolishness about "someone like you've described would have to
be in an insane asylum." Where does he live? Disneyworld?
|
1004.298 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:26 | 30 |
| <<< Note 1004.294 by BOOTKY::MARCUS "Good Planets Are Hard To Find" >>>
Barb, I think you are starting to see some of my problem with this issue.
Please be sure that I'm not trying to minimize the seriousness
of the offense. I'm trying to cope with adjusting behavior to
a moving target.
When my wife (someone I have great respect for) tells me that a certain
word string is not harrassement, I could make the mistake of using that
same string with a different woman and find myself out of a job. I KNOW
that the words are not acceptable with ANY of my female colleagues, but
my wife found them acceptable. How can this be?
It is possible for some of my behavior to be unacceptable without my
knowing it and given the reluctance I am told that women have in
confronting such behavior, I can unwittingly continue to offend, even
though my nature is to correct any offensive behavior. How can I be
educated?
Advising that there me an insurmountable gender gap on this issue is
certainly no comfort, becasue that means I'll never understand.
Would my advice to women to "confront the behavior" be well received?
After all, it's my belief that the vast majority of men in the work
place are not "pigs" and would gladly change our behavior if we new it
was offensive.
Jim
|
1004.299 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:26 | 20 |
|
re .292:
> I've agonized over this one for several days now, i.e., what would
> I do?? I want to believe Hill, but unfortunately that isn't the
> way things work. The senators do not have to decide WHICH ONE THEY
> BELIEVE!! Thomas does not have to prove his innocence.....Hill
> MUST prove her allegations. Sorry, but that's the way our
> American system of law works. It's clear to me she hasn't
> proven anything yet, thus the nod goes to Thomas, wrong as it
> may be.
I have yet to hear anyone sincerely refute my argument that
this is really an employment situation. You have a grave doubt
about a candidate - you don't hire him or her! Nothing *needs*
to be proven.
What on earth is so "terrible" about that?
|
1004.300 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:36 | 42 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.290 by BOOKS::BUEHLER >>>
>> For those of you who feel that Thomas should be confirmed: can you
>> honestly believe that he told us anything? He told us *nothing*; first
>> of all he denied all allegations, and then admitted he didn't watch
>> Prof. Hill's testimony. So how did he know what to deny?
This seems to be exactly the model for an innocent man. If truely innocent,
he could tell us nothing because nothing happened. If nothing happened, what's
the point to listening to false allegations? And if nothing happened, he would
of course deny all those false allegations, right?
So, Thomas is innocent, right? I don't know. I'm pointing out the blatently
wrong conclusion that can be drawn when your premise is "Thomas is guilty".
[the following no longer a response to Maia]
I do not have all the information in front of me that the Senate has; for that
reason I'll have to accept whatever the Senate does as "the right thing".
I'm very willing to admit that SH *is* a problem in the workplace, and there has
to be a better solution to the problem than exists today. Why I've been so hard
on some people is that I see, hiding in the backgrounds of some responses, ideas
and suggestions that'd make Hitler cringe.
To be acceptable, a solution must be fair AND CONSISTENT!
I've heard a lot of complaining about what is going on; Ok, fair enough, the
difference between a whiner and a problem solver is that a problem solver puts
forward solutions. What solutions do you have to offer to the confirmation
process? What about SH in the workplace and when it spills out of the workplace
into the courts? What should change?
And yes, if I feel that what somone is proposing is flawed, I'll argue it with
them. You'll convice me that I'm wrong, I'll convince you that you're wrong
or we'll reach a stalemate.
If you're proposing a solution, I expect that you're willing to defend it. When
I propose a solution, I have an emotional and logical investment in that
solution. I assume this is the case with others.
Roak
|
1004.301 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:44 | 15 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.299 by BLUMON::GUGEL "koatamundi whiteout" >>>
>> I have yet to hear anyone sincerely refute my argument that
>> this is really an employment situation. You have a grave doubt
>> about a candidate - you don't hire him or her! Nothing *needs*
>> to be proven.
You may have a point here; I'm turning it over in my head; something rings
inconsistent about it, but I can't put my finger on it, and in fact it
may be consistent.
(I like to think things very carefully through before I agree and take on the
responsibility of defending a belief...)
Roak
|
1004.302 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:45 | 13 |
| Roak,
I don't think there is anything wrong with the system itself.
What is wrong is a president and a senate who are more concerned
with the maintenance of their own power than anything else.
There were other women who came forward to say that Thomas had
spoken in a similar fashion to them. The senators knew that,
the prez knew that, but they were not heard. Bush announced
that Thomas was obviously innocent before Hill even testified.
Other than voting these people out - which I keep trying to do -
I have no solution. If you think of one tell me, cause I'm
very discouraged.
|
1004.303 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:47 | 14 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.296 by ABSISG::WAYLAY::GORDON "Wanna dance the Grizzly Bear..." >>>
>> -< From the center, I say... >-
Careful, you can count all us "undecideds" on two or three fingers... :-)
>> If it was was a 'flaming liberal' being nominated and accusations
>>were flying from the conservative side, you can bet the liberal line would
>>be 'can you prove those allegations?'
Speculation; holds as much water as building arguments from the "Thomas is
guilty" premise.
Roak
|
1004.304 | You should see me give recommendations... | ABSISG::WAYLAY::GORDON | Wanna dance the Grizzly Bear... | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:56 | 27 |
| But Ellen, if you're going for a job, and I claim you "sleep with
small furry creatures" (to borrow a phrase from another argument in another
conference) and "spend too much time in the afternoon eating ice cream with
your friends" to your new boss, don't you think it would be nice for your
new boss to at least check to see if there were some merit in my accusations?
And suppose that both I, and the person who recommended you are
reasonably influential, and that either decision could have negative impact
on your boss. (Large segments of American voters are going to be upset no
matter which way this thing goes.) Your new boss is going to want a CYA
no matter which way he decides. It may be he denies you the job, and tells
your sponsor that I gave him cause to think you might be a problem, or that
he gives you the job, tells me he found no evidence on the furry animals, but
you'll be warned to keep your ice cream meetings to a minimum.
I do think you need a bit more than 'unease' in this case. Certainly
to change your mind from being pro to being con. You're trying to change the
majority opinion here, and neither side is beyond doing anything in their
power to press their advantage.
--D
Disclaimer:
I've known Ellen for a while, and we have even had ice cream in the
afternoon together, but the above sample accusations are works of fiction, and
bear no resemblence to any noter, past or present, living or dead. OK.
|
1004.305 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:58 | 65 |
| >Well, I'll
>confess I'm almost as much of a knee-jerk liberal as you are
>a knee-jerk conservative, so I wasn't thrilled with the idea
>of Thomas.
I'm not nearly the conservative demon that I am made out to be, preferring
to be on the moderate side of conservative. Except for gun rights. On that
issue I am decidedly conservative. :-)
I sense that you would have opposed Thomas if any good reason came along,
because of his ideology. Is that a fair assessment?
>and if that
>person has corroborating testimony from four other credible people,
The testimony given does not equate to corroboration in each case. At least
two of the "corroborators" testified that the identity of Prof. Hill's
alleged harasser was never given to them and that they inferred it must
be Thomas. Of course, being inclined to believe the allegations, you might
not view this detail as significant.
>What would your standard be?
Good question. It seems to me that I would be disinclined to change my position
based on these allegations even if Thomas were a liberal. On the one hand,
we have a credible witness with vile accusations, and on the other we have
a credible nominee refuting the allegations categorically. If I play the
"what if" game, I can see that the two worst scenarios are that Clarence Thomas
is denied a seat based on this testimony when he in fact did not do what he
was accused of and that his nomination is confirmed when he did in fact do
what he is accused of doing.
If he is denied a seat only because of what amounts to a political
assassination of his character, then I believe a great injustice has been
perpetrated. If he manages to sleaze by, then an injustice has been perpetrated
upon Prof. Hill and all women.
I don't believe that allegations which cannot be proved ought to prevent
a nomination from being confirmed by themselves. To allow this would unleash
the potential for even more egregious political quackery than occurs now
(which by now most americans must know is inordinate.) Think about what this
would mean- to stop any nomination one needs do nothing more than convince
a "credible" witness to make scurrilous but unprovable accusations. Talk about
government grinding to a halt.
I watched perhaps 8-10 hours of testimony. I cannot be certain who is telling
the truth and who is lying- the Charles Stuart case taught me nothing if
not to question the obvious. Under these circumstances, particularly since the
alleged behavior is long distant, I cannot agree that the mere fact that
allegations were brought is sufficient to torpedo the nomination. If the
allegations were of behavior that occurred two years ago, if Prof. Hill had
any documentation whatsoever, if other credible witnesses came forward and
established a pattern of this type of behavior, or if there were more
pertinent information available I'd have to seriously consider the nominee
to be unfit to serve. Each individual aspect of Prof. Hill's testimony that
is bothersome to me by itself is virtually meaningless, but in aggregate they
create enough doubt in my mind that the charges could be false that I believe
it would be an injustice to the nominee to use them as the basis for rejecting
the nomination.
Frankly, as one who is sensitive to this issue, this is a horribly difficult
decision for me. I wish there were some way to _know_. There is no such easy
out.
The Doctah
|
1004.306 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Tue Oct 15 1991 18:00 | 11 |
| One of things I've noticed on talk radio shows - if someone calls
in who thinks Thomas is guilty of harassing Hill, they're asked if
they supported Thomas before the allegations. If they say no then
they are immediately jeered and considered candidates for tar and
feather. So I guess you're only entitled to an opinion if you
loved Thomas in the first place. On the same line, one of the
"defenses" of Anita Hill was that she was a Reagan Republican.
God help us liberals.
p.s. Roak, you don't really consider yourself "undecided", do you?
It seems to me that you're not.
|
1004.307 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Tue Oct 15 1991 18:09 | 15 |
| > I have yet to hear anyone sincerely refute my argument that
> this is really an employment situation. You have a grave doubt
> about a candidate - you don't hire him or her! Nothing *needs*
> to be proven.
This isn't quite the same. Judge Thomas is not just one of many applicants
trying for a cherry job. He is someone who has been appointed, for better or
worse, by the nation's foremost governmental power. The nomination is
made "with the advice and consent" of the senate. What "advice and consent"
means is a topic which could easily fill this disk and the next. What I'm
suggesting here is that for a senator to vote to reject the nominee, s/he
ought to have a good reason to do so. Not quite the same as putting down one
resume and picking up the next.
the Doctah
|
1004.308 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Tue Oct 15 1991 18:10 | 20 |
| re: .305
Mark, as I said before, I feel certain that Bush's next candidate
for the Supreme Court will be as conservative as Thomas so I wasn't
against Thomas per se until Hill came forward. Now that I believe
Thomas to be a man who lied under oath, who abused his position
of authority in order to harass women, I don't want him on the
court. I would prefer another Bush flunky.
I don't think your comparison to the Stuart murder case is apt.
In that case, once someone had suggested Charles Stuart murdered
his wife, many plausible motives were suggested. Their have been
no plausible motives suggested why Hill came forward in this
way. There is no evidence that she's crazy, no evidence of a
diabolical liberal plot.
To me, the Republican party has become the party of rich white men.
I think they're cynically pushing Thomas through the system, not
caring whether he's guilty or not.
|
1004.309 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Tue Oct 15 1991 18:12 | 32 |
|
> But Ellen, if you're going for a job, and I claim you "sleep with
>small furry creatures" (to borrow a phrase from another argument in another
>conference) and "spend too much time in the afternoon eating ice cream with
>your friends" to your new boss, don't you think it would be nice for your
>new boss to at least check to see if there were some merit in my accusations?
Cute, Doug.
As far as I am aware, "sleeping with small furry creatures" doesn't
have anything to do with any job of which I'm aware. Even that of
a Supreme Court Justice. There are some doubts that Thomas is
telling the truth. I think that's an important qualification for
most jobs. Truthfulness. But I'm funny like that.
As far as "spending too much time in the afternoon eating ice cream
with my friends". Well, you've got me there. Indeed, there may
be a potential employer who decides not to hire me on that basis.
I've been turned down for a job before with a lot less justification
than that, though.
Also, I find it laughable (within Digital engineering at Spitbrook,
anyway) that anyone would try to use the "ice cream" argument
with a potential employer about anyone. At least I can't imagine
doing so.
As for "being nice for my new boss to at least check to see if
there were some merit in your accusations" - I thought that's what
the hearings over the last few days were supposed to be about.
After hearing the testimonies, I find there's too much doubt about
Thomas' character.
|
1004.310 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Tue Oct 15 1991 18:23 | 7 |
| .307
'cherry job'
???
|
1004.311 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Tue Oct 15 1991 18:28 | 18 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.306 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
>> p.s. Roak, you don't really consider yourself "undecided", do you?
>> It seems to me that you're not.
I really, truely am. Why you see such venom in some of my replies is due to
some ideas presented by people that truely scare the bejibies outta me.
In the same reply that I assume sparked your question, you'll note that I argued
against someone that was more-or-less siding with Thomas.
I try to be fair and consistent. 98% of the replies in here have already
hung Thomas, so of course most of my replies take the opposite stance, because
the anti-Thomas position is all I have to work with...
Roak
How do you spell Bejibies? What are Bejibies?
|
1004.312 | 54 to 46 is what I heard | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Tue Oct 15 1991 18:35 | 13 |
| I just heard that Thomas has 54 votes for confirmation.
I'll be on WEVO (NH Public Radio) tomorrow morning at 8:30 to give NH
NOW's perspective on this.
I'm angry, sad, and tired right now.
The only good that I can see coming from this experience is that it may
get more women involved in a political forum. It certainly has not
seemed to enlighten anyone on sexual harrassment, like I hoped it would
a week ago.
judy
|
1004.313 | Open your mind... | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Tue Oct 15 1991 18:37 | 10 |
| RE: .300 Roak
> Why I've been so hard on some people is that I see, hiding in the
> backgrounds of some responses, ideas and suggestions that'd make
> Hitler cringe.
You're chasing after a pre-judgment you've made about some/many of
us (based on your own prejudices.)
Your pre-judgment is quite mistaken.
|
1004.314 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Tue Oct 15 1991 18:39 | 2 |
| 'cherry job' :== easy job with great compensation, a job everybody
wants which doesn't require much effort, a "cushy" job.
|
1004.315 | I hate being such a cynic... | ABSISG::WAYLAY::GORDON | Wanna dance the Grizzly Bear... | Tue Oct 15 1991 18:51 | 27 |
1004.318 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Tue Oct 15 1991 19:29 | 25 |
| <<< Note 1004.312 by PROSE::BLACHEK >>>
>It certainly has not
> seemed to enlighten anyone on sexual harrassment, like I hoped it would
> a week ago.
judy, I don't think this is true. I know it's not true in my case. I am
certainly giving it a lot more thought (just see my exchanges with
Barb). I don't claim to understand it, but I am working toward that
goal.
I have no problem with those that opposed Thomas before, opposing
him now. I do have a problem (not a big one) with those that say
"He did it!" based on the evidence that we've heard so far. I just
don't believe that there was "enough" to convince me of that. I admit
that I worry about people that say "Well, there's some doubt" so don't
confirm him based on the doubt. NOW opposed Thomas for what they
considered legitimate reasons before, and THOSE reason still exist.
If Prof. Hill had totally repudiated her statement during questioning
in front of the Committee, NOW wowuld STILL not have supported Thomas.
Would they?
Jim
|
1004.319 | he's only 43 | GNUVAX::QUIRIY | we are all one people | Tue Oct 15 1991 20:17 | 4 |
|
He's in: 52 for, 48 against. Closest vote in this century.
Cq
|
1004.320 | ...and we have several decades in which to voice objections. | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Tue Oct 15 1991 20:29 | 3 |
|
There will be hell to pay for this.
|
1004.321 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | Thinking globally, acting locally! | Tue Oct 15 1991 21:25 | 47 |
| Suzanne:
> There will be hell to pay for this.
No there won't. No matter how much apathy I've learned to expect
from the American liberal Left, they never fail to amaze me by ex-
ceeding my expectations, and I'm sure they'll do it again.
In addition, no matter how cynically I view the Right's actions,
*THEY* never fail to amaze me by exceeding my expectations either.
Willie Horton, Quotas, *AND NOW* Anita Hill! Wow! I wonder how
many more times they can run that play before people catch on?
Probably no more than one or two dozen more times...
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Here's a really cynical prediction:
"A verdict that overturns Roe v. Wade will be issued sometime
between December 1992 and the end of that Supreme Court session
in July."
Rationale: There's no way that the Right will let a verdict be
announced before the '82 presidential elexction, when lots and
lots of folks, women and men, white and Hispanic, will re-elect
George Herbert Walker Bush for the outstanding job he's done of,
among other things:
o Proving his manhood by snuffing Iraqis and restoring freedom
to women all over the Arab Middle East,
o Bringing America out of that Nasty recession that Jimmy Carter
caused,
o Ensuring that all Americans pay their equitable share of
taxes,
o Cleaning up Boston harbor,
o Raising our educational standards to the highest in the world,
and, last but positively not least,
o Keeping women, minorities, homosexuals, Democrats, etc. in
their place so we white men can maintain our positions of
privilege and power.
Atlant
|
1004.323 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Tue Oct 15 1991 21:47 | 5 |
| Would someone please post the list of Senators who voted to
confirm Thomas (when you get the chance?)
Thanks.
|
1004.324 | rathole alert | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | Validation out the wazoo! | Tue Oct 15 1991 22:40 | 14 |
| re: .321
> o Raising our educational standards to the highest in the world,
huh? with all the cuts in spending on education I doubt it.
raising our standards while reducing the education level of the average
american and not enabling assistance to be available to
college-desiring and college-qualified financially "challenged"
students.....maybe
-Jody
|
1004.326 | | GNUVAX::QUIRIY | we are all one people | Wed Oct 16 1991 00:01 | 12 |
|
Speaking of ratholes, I had to laugh when I heard some senator say
what a fine man Clarence Thomas was and then, to illustrate this, said
something about how when Thomas was "so poor" he sold his car to keep
his son in college. I immediately wondered if Thomas had any daughters
and then I thought about how much I'd get for my car if I had to sell
it for the money -- it might keep someone in one of the Massachusetts
state colleges, but not for long! I bet Clarence's son wasn't going
to a cheap school, and Thomas probably had something a bit better than
a used Toyota with 138,000 miles on it to sell.
Cq
|
1004.328 | Surely he should need 66% to get in ?!!! | JUMBLY::BATTERBEEJ | Kinda lingers..... | Wed Oct 16 1991 07:24 | 11 |
| I've just heard that Thomas has been nominated by 52 votes to 48.
Too ruddy close for my liking. I just hope that some good rather
than bad comes out of all this. Namely that women will still come
forward and report harassment cases, hopefully be more inclined to,
and also that the numbers of cases of harassment actually drop in
real terms (ie not just a drop in reported cases but a drop in any
harassment - reported or not). I fear that the reverse will be the
case.
Jerome.
|
1004.329 | The "AYE"s... | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | Thinking globally, acting locally! | Wed Oct 16 1991 09:16 | 62 |
| Voting to Confirm:
DEMOCRATS: (11)
Boren (OK)
Breaux (LA)
DeConcini (AZ)
Dixon (IL)
Exon (NE)
Fowler (GA)
Hollings (SC)
Johnston (LA)
Nunn (GA)
Robb (VA)
Shelby (AL)
REPUBLICANS: (41)
Bond (MO)
Brown (CO)
Burns (MT)
Chafee (RI)
Coats (IN)
Cochran (MS)
Cohen (ME)
Craig (ID)
D'Amato (NY)
Danforth (MO)
Dole (KS)
Domenici (NM)
Durenberger (MN)
Garn (UT)
Gorton (WA)
Gramm (TX)
Grassley (IA)
Hatch (UT)
Hatfield (OR)
Helms (NC)
Kassebaum (KS) (Woman)
Kasten (WI)
Lott (MS)
Lugar (IN)
Mack (FL)
McCain (AZ)
McConnell (KY)
Murkowski (AR)
Nickles (OK)
Pressler (SD)
Roth (DE)
Rudman (NH)
Seymour (CA)
Simpson (WY)
Smith (NH)
Specter (PA)
Stevens (AK)
Symms (ID)
Thurmond (SC)
Wallop (WY)
Warner (VA)
|
1004.330 | The "NO"s... | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | Thinking globally, acting locally! | Wed Oct 16 1991 09:25 | 58 |
| Voting not to Confirm:
REPUBLICANS: (2)
Jeffords (VT)
Packwood (OR)
DEMOCRATS: (46)
Adams (WA)
Alaka (HI)
Baucus (MT)
Bentsen (TX)
Biden (DE)
Bingaman (NM)
Bradley (NJ)
Bryan (NV)
Bumpers (AR)
Burdick (ND)
Byrd (WV)
Conrad (ND)
Cranston (CA)
Daschle (SD)
Dodd (CT)
Ford (KY)
Glenn (OH)
Gore (TN)
Graham (FL)
Harkin (IA)
Heflin (AL)
Inouye (HI)
Kennedey (MA)
Kerrey (NE)
Kerry (MA)
Kohl (WI)
Lautenberg (NJ)
Leahy (VT)
Levin (MI)
Lieberman (CT)
Metzenbaum (OH)
Mikulski (MD) (Woman)
Mitchell (ME)
Moynihan (NY)
Pell (RI)
Pryor (AR)
Reid (NV)
Reigle (MI)
Rockefeller (WV)
Sanford (NC)
Sarbanes (MD)
Sasser (TN)
Simon (IL)
Wellstone (MN)
Wirth (CO)
Wofford (PA)
|
1004.331 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Wed Oct 16 1991 11:12 | 30 |
| I think that anybody who claims to "know" the truth of Thomas and Hill's
interactions is fooling hirself. You are free to believe what you want to
believe, but making definitive statements is intellectually bankrupt in
my opinion.
I saw Prof. Hill's statement yesterday, and I wondered if she were telling
the truth. I felt bad for her, for having gone through a torturous process
with essentially nothing to show for it. (Except for the receipts from the
inevitable book.) In many ways, I wanted both of them to "win." Unfortunately,
it was a zero sum game.
I will always wonder whether the correct decision was made. Of one thing
I am certain- this process has changed Clarence Thomas irrevocably. And
I believe for the better.
I will disagree with Judy that the nation has not had its collective
consciousness raised regarding sexual harassment. I believe it has. It
had been a hidden issue, one that most men casually dismissed as being
unimportant. Some will contionue to do so, but many of us only now are
beginning to realize the pervasiveness and outrageous nature of the so
called "working" relationships that women frequently must endure to be
a part of the working class. It is my hope that men will pressure other
men who engage in such behavior to stop, because I believe that men that
do engage in this behavior won't react simply due to the fact that women
tell them to stop- they need to be discouraged by the male power structure
and the law. How to make it easier to halt sexual harassment while
preserving the rights of the accused is a difficult problem. But it must
be overcome.
The Doctah
|
1004.332 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Wed Oct 16 1991 11:38 | 5 |
| .314
Yes I know what "cherry" connotes. But do you?
|
1004.333 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Wed Oct 16 1991 11:43 | 9 |
|
I feel as if the good ole boys just told all of us ladies to "go take
a Valium."
sigh.
Maia
|
1004.334 | IMHO, of course | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Wed Oct 16 1991 11:48 | 14 |
| I'm glad to hear that two of you think that people are being educated
about sexual harassment. I guess I've heard a few too many times:
"What does she mean she was harassed? He didn't touch her, or
anything." AARRRRRGGHHHH!
One thing that people can do is pressure their legislators to pass a
civil rights bill that is fair to victims of sexual harassment. The
current bill (which is on Bush's desk, btw) limits the compensation to
victims of sexual harassment. It doesn't limit the compensation for
any other victim of a civil rights case, and is clearly sexist.
judy
|
1004.335 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Oct 16 1991 12:01 | 13 |
| > -< ...and we have several decades in which to voice objections. >-
>
>
> There will be hell to pay for this.
Yes. The American people spoke, and what they said was that the
allegations were not proven, that Clarance Thomas should be confirmed.
The 48 Senators who defied the will of the American people will be
called to account for their actions.
Tom_K
|
1004.336 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Wed Oct 16 1991 12:12 | 25 |
| I really doubt that Professor Hill is the type of person to
write a book about this experience. Time will tell. While
the hearings were going on I thought that the allegations were
having a positive effect because everyone was realizing that there
was a threat of repurcussions. Since that time I think the
impact has changed to one of sexual harassment is not an important
issue. Some quotes I have heard (from women and men):
"She needs to lighten up."
"Even if he did do it, that's no reason not to confirm
him."
"She got what she deserved."
If I ever were going to try to make a sexual harassment case
against someone I would run out and buy one of those voice
activated tape recorders. But what if it involved touching?
There is no way to prove that unless there are witnesses and
of course there never are, unless the person doing the harassing
is ignorant.
I am not much more pleased with the senators who voted not
to confirm than with the others. I feel like an opportunity
was missed to know the truth in that the democratic senators
rolled over and played dead. I don't think they tried very
hard to find out the truth. It is a sad week.
Linda
|
1004.337 | Get behind Jerry Brown---lots of integrity with him. | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Wed Oct 16 1991 12:52 | 23 |
| To veer from this a bit, and perhaps it's worthy of it's own
note, in response to voting Bush out of office to change the country
into a more positive place: Up until this time, no Democrat had
entered the political ring for the nomination who seemed to have any
chance of winning. Well, Jerry Brown of California has entered the
ring. I like Jerry Brown. I liked him when he was governor here.
Lots and lots of conservatives disliked him and they and their cronies
came up with lots of derogatory names for him, mocking him, casting
doubts in minds that otherwise had no other information. He is
not a panacea, but then neither is any other man. What he *is*,
however, is a man of high principles, lots of character, and lots
of integrity. I strongly urge any and all of you who would like to
see the Bush circus end to consider backing this man of substance.
No other person, male or female, is likely to be able to unseat
Bush. Brown probably wouldn't, either, unless some of the grass-roots
necessary to sway minds begins to engage itself. This is where you
come in. Dismissing him will find us without any other viable
opponent to Bush. For those who fear another potential Bush nomination
to the Supreme Court in the next five years, this is *an*
opportunity to work to derail that.
Frederick
|
1004.338 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 16 1991 12:53 | 6 |
|
RE: .335 Tom_K
There are more "American people" than the only ones who usually
matter when it comes to political issues...
|
1004.339 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:00 | 12 |
| re: .331 Mark Levesque
I haven't seen anyone claiming they "know" what went on between
Hill and Thomas. After listening to both testify, and listening to
their supporters testify, a reasonable person could form an
opinion of went on. If that opinion cast serious doubts on Clarence
Thomas' character, a reasonable person could object to Thomas
being appointed to the Supreme Court. I think you miss the point
that I and others have tried to make - there does not have to be
incontrovertible evidence that a nominee is a criminal; strong
suspicions that a man is a liar and a sex harasser should be
enough to keep him off the court.
|
1004.340 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:09 | 12 |
| I'm curious what will happen now to Arlen Specter's claims that
Anita Hill perjured herself. My bet is that nothing will happen
because the Republicans fear that closer inquiry into the issue
would only provide more evidence that Hill was telling the truth.
I read today that a man at the law firm Hill worked at prior to
going to work for Thomas had provided an affidavit saying that
he fired Hill from that firm because her work was poor. The
heads of that firm say that they have no idea why he would say
such a thing. He only worked there briefly and was never in a
position to fire Hill; they say that she left the firm on good
terms. I wonder why this man would say such a thing.
|
1004.341 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:14 | 27 |
| > After listening to both testify, and listening to
> their supporters testify, a reasonable person could form an
> opinion of went on.
Absolutely. But a reasonable person might also allow for the potential
that one's opinion may not necessarily correlate to the facts. When I
see people stating that Prof. Hill _is_ a liar or that now Justice Thomas
_is_ a sex harasser, I believe those people have concluded that they _know_
what happened because they are speaking definitively.
>I think you miss the point
> that I and others have tried to make - there does not have to be
> incontrovertible evidence that a nominee is a criminal; strong
> suspicions that a man is a liar and a sex harasser should be
> enough to keep him off the court.
I didn't miss that point, Sue. Really. Various people may come to
different levels of suspicion that Thomas was guilty of wrongdoing,
and indeed different opinions on what the actual wrongdoing may have
been. I was not convinced that there was a sufficient level of proof
that wrongdoing occurred, moreover, that the wrongdoing (if any) occurred
was not sufficient to prevent the nomination in and of itself. [I might
take this opportunity to state that if I believed Thomas did indeed
behave in the manner that Prof. Hill described, particularly given his less
than outstanding judicial credentials, I would have opposed his confirmation.]
the Doctah
|
1004.342 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:20 | 7 |
| re .338
I was referring to the polls which indicated that both men and
women believed both the Thomas should be confirmed, and that the
allegations against him were not proven.
Tom_K
|
1004.343 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:22 | 6 |
| RE: .341 The Doctah
What's the matter, Doctah - did someone forget to offer copious
disclaimers to make sure you knew beyond all reasonable doubt
that an opinion was being expressed?
|
1004.344 | The people you mention have no REASON to seek hell to pay. | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:24 | 11 |
|
RE: .342 Tom_K
A majority of people believed that the charges were not proved
and that Thomas should be confirmed (which he was.)
Do you really think these people will hunt down and "kill" (in
a political sense) the Senators that kept the confirmation from
being unanimous? I didn't see any polls indicating that these
people were demanding a unanimous confirmation, did you?
|
1004.345 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Available Ferguson | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:31 | 8 |
| > I will always wonder whether the correct decision was made. Of one thing
> I am certain- this process has changed Clarence Thomas irrevocably. And
> I believe for the better.
Yeah, there's nothing like lying and getting away with it for
strengthening a personality.
Ray
|
1004.327 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:37 | 17 |
| In an interview with Judge Thomas tonight, he said he hopes the
country will put all this behind us now (and "heal")...
I thought, "Yeah, I *bet* you hope we'll all forget it."
Prof. Hill was interviewed as well - she said she is glad she
came forward to tell the truth and hopes her experiences won't
prevent other women from coming forward.
One of the very next stories on CNN Headline News was a lengthy
feature about sexual harassment on Wall Street (past and present.)
They put great emphasis on the fact that most women refuse to
report it for fear of jeopardizing their careers.
The "healing" Judge Thomas asks for will come to us in the form
of ever-increasing awareness that what I believe he did to
Prof. Hill is far more common than most people realized.
|
1004.346 | A real soap opera | NODEMO::DITOMMASO | I cant get use to this lifestyle | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:43 | 24 |
|
Unfortunately I have been away on business, and missed all this writing
about the hearings. Well maybe thats fortunate!
I glanced over quite a few of the notes so far, ... I wonder if anyone
cares about his qualifications?
Judge Thomas was only appointed to an appeals court six months ago.
Six months of experience ... doesn't anyone think that someone appointed
to the supreme court should have a little more experience than that.
There are so many judges out there who are so much more qualified than
Judge Thomas .. who are legal experts on constitutional law, who are
not even considered for nomination because they do not fit the "agenda"
set by the president. (anti abortion, anti ERA, ...)
No, I'm not a lawyer, just related to a couple who brought up this point.
They were commenting on why not nominate the most qualified people - ones
who write the text books on constitutional law, with years and years of
experience on a court of appeals? ... Naawwww, that makes too much sense.
paul
|
1004.347 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:47 | 32 |
| <<< Note 1004.339 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
>After listening to both testify, and listening to
> their supporters testify, a reasonable person could form an
> opinion of went on.
This is most certainly true.
>If that opinion cast serious doubts on Clarence
> Thomas' character, a reasonable person could object to Thomas
> being appointed to the Supreme Court.
This is also most certainly true.
>strong
> suspicions that a man is a liar and a sex harasser should be
> enough to keep him off the court.
We get into a bit more of a grey area here. I guess it boils down to
what the term "stong suspicions" means. A single accuser with four
non-direact witnesses opposed by a single accused supported by 17
witnesses that new/worked with both parties does not lead me to
the same "reasonable" conclusion as it did you. I'd have to say
that I have suspicions that we have not heard the whole story,
but I do not have stong suspicions that Justice Designate Thomas
actually said the things Prof. Hill accused him of saying.
Of course reasonable people can come to different conclusions in
this matter.
Jim
|
1004.348 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 13:56 | 6 |
| I think any senator who believed Anita Hill might be telling the
truth, even if he wasn't completely convinced, but went ahead
and put Thomas on the Supreme Court for the next 30-40 years
anyway, behaved in a cynical, immoral way. So what else is new?
|
1004.349 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 14:01 | 24 |
| <<< Note 1004.346 by NODEMO::DITOMMASO "I cant get use to this lifestyle" >>>
>I wonder if anyone
> cares about his qualifications?
There is no doubt that Thomas was not the most qualified jurist
in the country for this appointment (I've said so in several
replies). But the question is not "Is he the MOST qualified?".
The question before the Senate was "Is he qualified?".
The last time a truly qualified nominee was proposed, someone
who HAD written seriously on Constitutional law, he was soundly
rejected becasue of his interpretations. Bush learned from this
experience and began appointing judicial non-entities to the
Court.
It is very curious to me that the (pardon the label) Liberals
that worked so hard to reject Bork becasue of his views, NOT
his "qualifications", now cry that Thomas and Souter are not
the "best" candidates for the positions and that more qualified
candidates should be found.
Jim
|
1004.350 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Oct 16 1991 14:08 | 12 |
| re .344
First, as I certainly am not the first to note, the big winner
in this is the concept of term limitations for politicians.
Second, I expect that the supporters of Anita Hill will likely
try to replace the current set of incompetent liberal Senators
with folks who at least know how to run a proper railroad.
I further expect that the people who's Senators vote was at
variance with their desires will take that into account at election
time.
Tom_K
|
1004.351 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 14:09 | 13 |
| Two doting parents are interviewing candidates for the job
of live-in nanny for their baby. They have a likely candidate.
They check her many references. Most of them are glowing and
are from her friends. But one reference, Anita, says that the candidate
is a child abuser. You check further and find out that Anita is
a credible responsible person with no apparent motive to lie. Four
other people call you and tell you that Anita told them about the
child abuse years ago when it happened. Do the doting parents
go ahead and hire the candidate for nanny? Probably not. Because
their child's welfare is paramount to all else, they can't
afford to take the chance.
|
1004.352 | Datum | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 16 1991 14:22 | 11 |
| Well, as far as I can gather, it isn't one accuser and four confirmers
against one defendant and seventeen confirmers, it is two accusers,
etc. The sworn testimony of Angela Wright was entered into the
record of the Senate Judiciary Committee at the end of the Sunday/
Monday session. Her complaints are alleged to be similar to those
of Anita Hill. (She certainly has the same type of face as Anita
Hill, and I can well imagine a man who found one attractive finding
the other one attractive as well.) Yes, her testimony had to have
been sworn; the Committee could not have entered it if it were unsworn.
Ann B.
|
1004.353 | Not just the Prez | LJOHUB::CRITZ | | Wed Oct 16 1991 14:33 | 25 |
| Somewhat on a tangent..., but does anyone besides me
think the actual confirmation process needs some
revamping?
I think it would be better, initially, for the President
(and his advisors) and the de facto "leader" of the
other party to hammer out some viable nominees before
the actual confirmation process begins.
For example, instead of President Bush just nominating
Clarence Thomas, Bush and a recognized Democratic "leader"
would come up with a list of possible nominees for the
position. Then, we could assume that both parties could
"live" with all the nominees.
I don't think any President should have the absolute
authority in this process. If both parties could hammer
out a list of possible nominees, the process might be
less of a circus. And, the nominees might be more qualified.
Am I off base, or is this something that could improve
the process?
Scott
|
1004.354 | | 32FAR::LERVIN | Roots & Wings | Wed Oct 16 1991 14:48 | 9 |
| In case anyone wants to send a letter of support to Professor Hill:
Professor Anita Hill
University of Oklahoma
300 Timberdell Road
Norman, OK 72019
I can well imagine that she has gotten, and will continue to get a pile
of poison pen letters.
|
1004.355 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 14:58 | 20 |
| <<< Note 1004.353 by LJOHUB::CRITZ >>>
> I think it would be better, initially, for the President
> (and his advisors) and the de facto "leader" of the
> other party to hammer out some viable nominees before
> the actual confirmation process begins.
I think this is exactly what the Framers of the Constitution
had in mind when they used the words "with the advice and consent
of the Senate".
But in pratical terms the process has become SO political that
I doubt that compromise list could be worked out.
> I don't think any President should have the absolute
> authority in this process.
He doesn't. Hence the purpose of yesterday's vote.
Jim
|
1004.357 | | PORI::SCHMIDT | Atlant G. Schmidt -- ATLANT::SCHMIDT | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:01 | 22 |
1004.358 | | GEMVAX::BROOKS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:03 | 5 |
|
.354
Thanks very much!
|
1004.359 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:06 | 25 |
| <<< Note 1004.351 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
Folks, this is getting a little old. We have been treated to
comparisons of this episode as wife beating, robbery, murder
and now child abuse.
Your analogy is extremely flawed. The 17 witnesses that testified
in favor of Thomas were not just "friends" they we co-workers to
BOTH he and Hill.
Given your scenario, they would be the equivalent of 17 parents
that had left their children with the "nanny" over a long period
of time. "Anita" in your scenario would have been 1 parent that
claimed abuse.
And then of course the issue of "Why didn't you brings charges?"
would of course be FAR more serious in your scenario than in the
present case.
And as long as we're on the subject. Does anyone recall the family
that ran the day-care center in California and was railroaded on
just such unsubstatiated charges?
Jim
|
1004.360 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:10 | 13 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.334 by PROSE::BLACHEK >>>
>> One thing that people can do is pressure their legislators to pass a
>> civil rights bill that is fair to victims of sexual harassment. The
>> current bill (which is on Bush's desk, btw) limits the compensation to
>> victims of sexual harassment. It doesn't limit the compensation for
>> any other victim of a civil rights case, and is clearly sexist.
Does the bill itself refer only to female victims of sexual harassment? If not,
and you're accusing it of being sexist, then it's you that's being sexist,
right?
Roak
|
1004.361 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A spider's kiss | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:11 | 8 |
| re: Mardy
> Bush rails about the special interest groups which he says control
> Congress, while at the same time he is controlled by the NRA and he
It might be helpful if you actually knew what you were talking about. Bush
has sold out the NRA. So there. :-P (He's planning on doing it again.)
|
1004.362 | | LJOHUB::CRITZ | | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:12 | 13 |
| RE: .355
Jim,
When I said the President should not have absolute
authority in this process, I meant in choosing the
nominee. The reason, of course, is because the
process is so political (as you mentioned).
I think the process would be miles ahead if both
parties came up with a list of potential nominees.
Scott
|
1004.363 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:13 | 18 |
| <<< Note 1004.352 by REGENT::BROOMHEAD "Don't panic -- yet." >>>
> -< Datum >-
I was VERY disappointed that Ms. Wright decided not to testify
in front of the Committee. What was entered into the record
was a result of her questioning by "staffers" (both Repub and
Dem).
If she HAD testified, I might have come to a very different
conclusiuon in this matter.
As to whether what was entered was "sworn" was not made clear.
What it contained was even less clear. I do have a suspicion
that if it backed up Prof. Hill's tesitimony to the degree that
you imply, there is no way the Democrats would have allowed her
to NOT testify.
Jim
|
1004.364 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:17 | 20 |
|
re .359:
> Your analogy is extremely flawed. The 17 witnesses that testified
> in favor of Thomas were not just "friends" they we co-workers to
> BOTH he and Hill.
> Given your scenario, they would be the equivalent of 17 parents
> that had left their children with the "nanny" over a long period
> of time. "Anita" in your scenario would have been 1 parent that
> claimed abuse.
That's very flawed logic, Jim. Just because he didn't harass
17 coworkers, it *does not* follow that he didn't harass Hill.
If I were a parent, one charge would be all it would take.
That may be unfair, but as a parent, no one can make me choose
one nanny over another just because no one can "prove beyond a
reasonable doubt" that she/he *didn't* do it.
|
1004.365 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:20 | 15 |
| <<< Note 1004.362 by LJOHUB::CRITZ >>>
> I think the process would be miles ahead if both
> parties came up with a list of potential nominees.
Scott, Without a doubt.
Re: .357
Let's remember that the first REAL attempt to politicize the
Court was made by FDR. If he had succeeded we would have 13
Justices in stead of 9.
Jim
|
1004.366 | | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | kindofanupstart-butigotawarmheart | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:22 | 22 |
1004.367 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:25 | 17 |
| <<< Note 1004.364 by BLUMON::GUGEL "koatamundi whiteout" >>>
> That's very flawed logic, Jim. Just because he didn't harass
> 17 coworkers, it *does not* follow that he didn't harass Hill.
As people may have noticed I have an extreme problem with this
back door approach to Thomas' supposed "guilt".
> If I were a parent, one charge would be all it would take.
And those same feelings ruined the lives of an entire innocent
family in California.
Sorry, you and I do not share the same value system. We may as
well leave it at that.
Jim
|
1004.368 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:27 | 8 |
| <<< Note 1004.366 by RAVEN1::AAGESEN "kindofanupstart-butigotawarmheart" >>>
> i believe that sexual harassment involves a position of power.
Does this mean that a person cannot be "sexually harrassed"
by a subordinate? An equal? Someone you don't even know?
Jim
|
1004.370 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:37 | 10 |
|
RE: .350 Tom_K
Your definition of "hell to pay" is significantly different
from mine. Perhaps you should have checked with me to see
what mine was before you countered my statement with your
own (and pulled us into this meaningless rathole.)
Unless, of course, you consider countering me too much fun
to resist. :-) (Just kidding.)
|
1004.371 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:44 | 19 |
| Jim,
Arguing over analogies can get tedious. Let me just say that I can
think of as many good reasons why a parent wouldn't want to put
their child in court testifying about abuse as I can why a woman
wouldn't want to go to court about sex harassment.
Angela Wright's testimony was sworn to and is part of the Senate
hearings. I hope it soon becomes available to the public. And
she was not the only woman who said she'd experienced what Hill
described. A third woman, Suleika something-or-other, said that
she'd experienced the same thing and had transferred to another
job as a result. Suleika's testimony, unlike Angela Wright's,
did not go into the Senate record. I don't know why the
Democrats didn't insist on Angela Wright testifying publically -
from what I heard she was willing to - I think they wimped out
under Republican pressure, keeping their own individual jobs
was more important to them than really getting at the truth.
|
1004.372 | | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:47 | 8 |
| Re: .360
No, the bill doesn't only refer to female victims of sexual harassment.
However, since probably 99% of sexual harassment cases involve women, I
think it safe to say it is sexist to put a compensation cap on those
cases.
judy
|
1004.373 | Yeah, a real shame. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:51 | 16 |
| Jim,
Yes, her testimony was sworn. I repeat, "the Committee could not have
entered it if it were unsworn." ^^^^^
Committee members are not allowed to enter unsworn statements into
the record. Witnesses can.
I gather that at least one of the reasons Angela Wright did not
testify was that everyone was tired and cranky and wanted to go home.
A dark, cynical suspicion of another reason is that her testimony
would have been so clear and compelling that it would have made the
Committee look very, very bad, which was more important than anything
else in the whole world.
Ann B.
|
1004.374 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:57 | 10 |
| re: -1
It's also sexist that the statute of limitation is so short -
six months, I think. Specter and Hatch continually talked about
how the statute of limitation on this was short because it's so
hard to remember/prove etc. I kept thinking how stupid do they
think we are? are we supposed to believe it has nothing to do with
the fact that the laws are written by men?
Sue
[Standard disclaimer: I like men. Especially liberal men. ]
|
1004.375 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Wed Oct 16 1991 15:58 | 31 |
|
re Jim:
>> That's very flawed logic, Jim. Just because he didn't harass
>> 17 coworkers, it *does not* follow that he didn't harass Hill.
> As people may have noticed I have an extreme problem with this
> back door approach to Thomas' supposed "guilt".
So you believe that because 17 coworkers testified that they
were not harassed - that proves that Hill was not? That *is*
flawed logic, Jim! You don't have to pass 7th grade algebra to
figure that out. And yes, I've noticed you have a problem with
this particular case and that's clouded your ability to reason
properly and apply 7th grade logic.
> If I were a parent, one charge would be all it would take.
And those same feelings ruined the lives of an entire innocent
family in California.
> Sorry, you and I do not share the same value system. We may as
> well leave it at that.
I agree that that is unfortunate, but as a parent (I'm not, but if
I were), I would take *every* precaution within reason, to care
for a child - including ruling out people even accused of child
abuse. Do you have a child Jim? Wouldn't you take the same
precaution with him or her? Isn't your daughter or son worth more
to you than giving someone a job?
|
1004.376 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:04 | 10 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.372 by PROSE::BLACHEK >>>
>> No, the bill doesn't only refer to female victims of sexual harassment.
>> However, since probably 99% of sexual harassment cases involve women, I
>> think it safe to say it is sexist to put a compensation cap on those
>> cases.
Yup, I have to agree. My apologies.
Roak
|
1004.377 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:18 | 8 |
| The third woman who came forward, Sulieka something (I'll have to
check her name when I go home, it was in the paper yesterday), said
that it was well known at the EEOC that Thomas treated young attractive
black women differently from the other women (she said, among
other things, that she felt they were all being evaluated sexually.)
The EEOC workers who testified for Thomas were male, white, or (IMO)
not particularly attractive - unlike Anita Hill and Angela Wright,
who are both beautiful women.
|
1004.378 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:21 | 47 |
| <<< Note 1004.375 by BLUMON::GUGEL "koatamundi whiteout" >>>
> So you believe that because 17 coworkers testified that they
> were not harassed - that proves that Hill was not?
Nope, not what I said. I came to the conclusion the Prof. Hill
was lying based on all the tesitmony that I heard, not simply
the fact that 13 women could be found that he did not harrass.
But the implication of "Well he didn't harrass them, but that
doesn't mean he didn't harrass Hill, therefore he must have
done it" is a leap of "logic" that I'm unwilling to make.
> I agree that that is unfortunate,
"Unfortunate"? I WAS right, we do not share the same values.
>I would take *every* precaution within reason,
As would I. But I'm afraid that "within reason" means something
different to you and I.
>Do you have a child Jim?
Yes, a daughter (she'll be 12 in November).
>Isn't your daughter or son worth more
> to you than giving someone a job?
A somewhat loaded question, given the wording ( a good debating
tactic).
"OF COURSE!" is the answer (to the question as asked).
Now ask me if I would refuse to give someone a job based on
unsubstatianted charges and given the fact that the other 17
parents have given GLOWING recommendations covering YEARS of
service.
And of course it would be impolitic of me to ask the one parent
why she kept her child with this person and in fact followed this
abuser to a new location, wouldn't it?
Jim
|
1004.379 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:24 | 16 |
| <<< Note 1004.377 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
> The EEOC workers who testified for Thomas were male, white, or (IMO)
> not particularly attractive - unlike Anita Hill and Angela Wright,
> who are both beautiful women.
I think it's time for the Hill supporters to conceed this debate.
If the above represents the quality of your arguments you have, indeed,
lost.
I will admit that today I've learned a new definition of "sexist"
Jim
|
1004.380 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:36 | 10 |
| Jim-
sheesh, I wish I'd never made that analogy the way you keep
going on with it.
My take on why Hill followed Thomas to the EEOC:
it was a good career move and the harassment had temporarily
ceased; she is a bright ambitious person who thought she could
put up with some abuse in order to get ahead. It really did
bother her, enough to put her in the hospital for stress for
a week, but not enough to make her throw away her career.
|
1004.381 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:45 | 10 |
| re: Percival:
You've mentioned several times you were influenced by the
17 people who testified for Thomas. I thought they were
a particularly unimpressive lot (except for Doggett, who
was so amazing he ought to have his own show) and I think
it was worth pointing out that Thomas is alleged to have
a pattern of singling out young attractive black women
for sexual harassment.
|
1004.382 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:45 | 9 |
| <<< Note 1004.380 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
> Jim-
> sheesh, I wish I'd never made that analogy the way you keep
> going on with it.
Me too.
Jim
|
1004.383 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:53 | 10 |
|
> I think it's time for the Hill supporters to conceed this debate.
Oh, Jim, you're too funny. "Conceed this debate"? In =womannotes?
Don't make me laugh. It might be nice to "kid" yourself that
you've "won" some sort of debate, but on this issue on your side
in womannotes, it'll never happen.
Dream on.
|
1004.384 | | MR4DEC::EGRACE | INvalidation out the wazoo | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:56 | 5 |
| Why should I concede the debate, Jim, when I am now more afraid than
ever? Many of us believe Professor Hill, and are very very frightened
by this whole fiasco.
E Grace
|
1004.385 | A week of shame for the United States of America | CUPMK::SLOANE | Communication is the key | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:58 | 47 |
| Re: gender-free sexual harassment laws
Several men have already brought complaints of sexual harassment under the
present laws.
Re: Lots of other people saying Thomas didn't harass them.
It doesn't matter how many people he did *not* harass. It's the fact that at
least one person was claiming harassment.
How many times do you read in the paper that somebody is arrested for something,
and friends and next door neighbors all say they never would have suspected this
person could do a thing like that?
Or, if you're stopped for speeding, do you say, "Officer, I can't be speeding
now, because no other state troopers has ever stopped me before."
Re: Thomas' qualifications
Lots of other people have said it. He has minimal experience as a judge or
judicial scholar. There are *many* people who are more qualified to be a
Supreme Court justice, including numerous women, blacks, and black women.
Re: Thomas' moral fiber (or lack thereof)
I am convinced he lied when he said he has never discussed and has no opinion
on Roe v. Wade. That is a ridiculous statement for a man in his position to
make. Every person in the United States over the age of 15 who has an IQ more
than 50 has discussed or has an opinion on Roe v. Wade.
This has been a sad chapter for the entire country. If there is anything
positive that can come out of all this, I can hope that the country,
particularly men, have become more sensitized to problems of sexual harassment,
that women will be more apt to come forward with cases of sexual harassment
(doubtful -- probably the opposite), that the method we use to choose a
Supreme Court judge will be overhauled, that Anita Hill will have a lonng and
succesful career, and maybe become a judge, and that several
Senators who have been exposed as slime bags won't get re-elected.
In my more pessimistic (and more probable) mood, I feel like the only good that
will come out of it all is that I no longer have to look "harassment" up in
the dictionary to remember that it's spelled with one "r.' Oh well -- back
to L.A. Law and Monday night football.
Bruce
|
1004.386 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:01 | 11 |
| <<< Note 1004.381 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
>I think
> it was worth pointing out that Thomas is alleged to have
> a pattern of singling out young attractive black women
> for sexual harassment.
That is NOT what .377 said. My comments stand.
Jim
|
1004.387 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:01 | 10 |
| re: Jim Percival
was this a debate? I had no idea.
I already knew Hill supporters had lost, thank you. I knew that
on Sunday night when Biden said that Angela Wright's sworn
testimony (you must've been getting a snack at that point)
would become part of the hearings but that she wouldn't
testify. So, I readily concede. Thomas is now
on the Supreme Court. Congratulations.
|
1004.388 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:02 | 36 |
| RE: .378 Jim
> I came to the conclusion the Prof. Hill was lying based on all the
> testimony that I heard, not simply the fact that 13 women could be
> found that he did not harrass.
Aside from the testimony from some women he did not harass, what was
so conclusive to you about "He harassed me" versus "I did not" that
convinced you that Prof. Hill was actually lying (which is a much
more decisive stance than merely saying "She was unable to prove her
charges")?
> But the implication of "Well he didn't harrass them, but that doesn't
> mean he didn't harrass Hill, therefore he must have done it" is a leap
> of "logic" that I'm unwilling to make.
NO one has suggested this (explicitly or implicitly,) Jim.
By the way...
One of the witnesses who testified FOR Thomas said (under oath) that
she knew for a fact that Thomas did not harass Prof. Hill. Where are
all the calls for this witness to be charged with purgery??? No one
who wasn't surgically attached to Prof. Hill or Judge Thomas could
possibly testify under oath that they KNOW the harassment didn't
happen.
Obviously, it's unlikely that Thomas harassed every woman he's ever
worked with over the years, so testimony from the people he did NOT
harass is meaningless when it comes down to assessing the charges
that he did harass the women who came forward.
What else (other than these witnesses) brought you to the "conclusion"
that Prof. Hill's charges were outright lies? I'd like to know.
If you think she lied, what was her motive?
|
1004.389 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:12 | 27 |
| <<< Note 1004.387 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
> was this a debate? I had no idea.
;-)
> on Sunday night when Biden said that Angela Wright's sworn
> testimony (you must've been getting a snack at that point)
> would become part of the hearings but that she wouldn't
> testify.
Nope, I saw it. And as I said I was very dissapointed. Her
testimony would have clinched Thomas' defeat. Why didn't
she testify. If her direct testimony would have had this effect
then the Democrats would have REQUIRED her to show up, if
her statement to the staffers (if sworn it was an affidavit,
not testimony) was as damaging as you imply, the the Republicans
would NOT have allowed it to be entered without the chance to
cross-examine.
Sorry I don't think it's a bad for Thomas as some people say
(although I certainly WOULD like to get my hands on a copy).
BTW, she must have been "awfully eager" if it requried a
supeona.
Jim
|
1004.390 | | LJOHUB::MAXHAM | Kathy Maxham | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:18 | 18 |
| This whole thing really is depressing. Especially because it's been
such an effective reminder that women are just not in the picture in this
"government by representation." There were the orchestrations our
President and his Merry Men staged as they managed their candidate through
this. There was the Senate judiciary committee sitting there scared to death
to say anything for fear of alienating their voting consitituency in this
highly charged issue (and several of them were probably very scared that
they might draw forward some stories about things they themselves have said
and done). There was the drone of the roll call last night for
confirmation votes (Mr. ____, Mr. ____, ..... Mr._____).
Obviously, we've aiming too high with the Take Back the Night marches.
It's time for a Take Back the Day demonstration.
But it's *especially* time to vote in a President and a Congress that
are representative of the citizens of this nation.
Kathy
|
1004.391 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:28 | 45 |
| <<< Note 1004.388 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> Aside from the testimony from some women he did not harass, what was
> so conclusive to you about "He harassed me" versus "I did not" that
> convinced you that Prof. Hill was actually lying (which is a much
> more decisive stance than merely saying "She was unable to prove her
> charges")?
Hill's embellished testimony vs. what she had originally alleged
in either her statement OR to the follow up investigation by the
FBI. (BTW the FBI did, obviously, interview her. Someone in this
string stated rather flatly that they did not)
Her statement that she feared for her job, when she new perfectly
well that as a Schedule A Federal employee her job was secure.
Her statement that she did not know Phyllis Berry and that Phyllis
Berry did not know her, when in fact they worked together for
at least 4 years.
The testimony of the Former law school Dean regarding Hill's
behavior prior to driving Thomas to the airport.
The continued "social" phone calls to Thomas by Hill, that stopped
rather suddenly when she learned that he had just married.
The lack of a second witness (I really DO wish that Ms. Wright
had testified).
All of these and other things have brought me to this conclusion.
>Where are
> all the calls for this witness to be charged with purgery???
For what? A rather forceful statement of an opinion?
> If you think she lied, what was her motive?
I've no idea. And I'm already on record as saying that I think
that those trying to assess motives to Prof. Hill are wrong
to do so. They (and I) can very easily fall into the trap
of speculation. It is very easy to speculate, but it is much
harder to prove (as many have found out).
Jim
|
1004.392 | Think about it. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:34 | 12 |
| Jim,
Would you be eager to make truthful statements, while knowing
from what you saw, live, on television (not to mention from here
and there throughout your life) that you would be called a
"fantasist" and a "schizophrenic" for doing so?
If not, would you mind if throughout the future of Womannotes,
anyone who disagrees with you is entitled to call you a
fantasist or schizophrenic for making your views known?
Ann B.
|
1004.393 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:43 | 21 |
| <<< Note 1004.392 by REGENT::BROOMHEAD "Don't panic -- yet." >>>
> Would you be eager to make truthful statements, while knowing
> from what you saw, live, on television (not to mention from here
> and there throughout your life) that you would be called a
> "fantasist" and a "schizophrenic" for doing so?
Nope, not one bit.
Very early in this string I said that a second witness against
Thomas would seal his fate. When it was reported that this
second woman had come forward and would testify I stated very
clearly "He's toast".
When that witness did NOT testify and when neither side demanded
that she do so, I was forced to re-evalute the contents of her
"statement".
Just the facts. As I see them of course.
Jim
|
1004.394 | Even lesser-of-two-evils voting has me uncomfortable lately... | ABSISG::WAYLAY::GORDON | Wanna dance the Grizzly Bear... | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:48 | 9 |
1004.395 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:52 | 30 |
| re: .391
The Republicans made much of what they said were varying accounts
by Hill. What she said happened: the FBI spoke to her, asked
her to give them a general account of the harassment, and said
that she could include further specifics at a later date. When
she did this, she was accused of making up different versions
when it was all the same story, some with more details than
others.
The people who are saying that she could have stayed at the
dept. of Ed. are friends of Thomas and workers for the current
administration. I'm not sure their testimony is unbiased. She
says Thomas told her at the time her job was not secure without
him there.
When she said she didn't know Phyllis Berry it was in response
to a reporter saying that Berry has said you were sexually
interested in Thomas. She was using the word "know" in the
sense of being on close terms. I work with a lot
of people every day but I don't know many of them well enough
to say anything about who they are sexually attracted to.
An affidavit the Republicans presented from a man who said
he fired Hill from a previous job has already been proven
untrue by the partners of that firm. I think that the
current administration is willing to pull any dirty trick
it can to get what it wants.
|
1004.396 | | TALLIS::PARADIS | Music, Sex, and Cookies | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:53 | 15 |
| Re: .390, .394
> > But it's *especially* time to vote in a President and a Congress that
> > are representative of the citizens of this nation.
> I agree. But in all seriousness, who have you got in mind?
Well, for starters, I think we need to see a Bush/Quayle
ticket in '92...
That's Barbara Bush and Marilyn Quayle, that is 8-) They seem to be
the ones with the brains in their respective families 8-) 8-) 8-)
--jim [NOT a Republican, BTW]
|
1004.397 | A. Wright | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Wed Oct 16 1991 17:56 | 14 |
| A. Wright did not come forward because she would have been torn apart.
She was fired because she call a male co-worker a FA**OT. Nice lady,
worthy of this community's support.
Just a nit. Would this community be as outraged if the charges were
brought against a female supervisor by a male employee without proof
that it happened?? Somehow I don't think so.
Just remember men can say those magic words also. What is good for the
goose is good for the gander. I do hope I did not make anyone
uncomfortable.
Have a nice day
|
1004.398 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 16 1991 18:18 | 11 |
|
Magic words???? I must chuckle here.
The words used when coming forward to complain about sexual
harassment are most often used against the one who delivers
them.
If men started complaining about sexual harassment in large
numbers, it would probably HELP the situation more than
anything (since the line of reasoning would change to "Gee,
even MEN are complaining about this now, so it MUST be real.")
|
1004.399 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Available Ferguson | Wed Oct 16 1991 18:32 | 10 |
| > But it's *especially* time to vote in a President and a Congress that
> are representative of the citizens of this nation.
What scares me is that I think they are. They decide who's telling the
truth based on how they handle TV, and they think even if Hill's
telling the truth that it's not that big a deal. That's exactly what
I've been hearing from many citizens of this nation; it just gets a
little icing of hypocrisy in public Senate hearings.
Ray
|
1004.400 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 18:35 | 40 |
| <<< Note 1004.395 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
>What she said happened: the FBI spoke to her, asked
> her to give them a general account of the harassment, and said
> that she could include further specifics at a later date.
Yes, that is what she said. What one of the Senators said
was that "the FBI agents asked you to be as specific as
possible" and he, of course, was reading the FBI report.
The "be general" instruction does not "hang true". An FBI
agent is not going to interview a person and not ask them
to be specific. This is one of those "other things" I mentioned.
>She
> says Thomas told her at the time her job was not secure without
> him there.
Her civil service rating is an established fact. Not subject
to interpretation by either side. The law regarding her rating
and the rating itself are matters of public record. This was not
a poorly educated person that might wrongly believe that civil
service would not protect her, but a very sharp law school
graduate. Of all her statements, this one is probably the easiest
to prove as a falsehood.
>She was using the word "know" in the
> sense of being on close terms.
Reminds me of a bibilical quote, but never mind.
>I think that the
> current administration is willing to pull any dirty trick
> it can to get what it wants.
The Republicans do not have the "corner" on sleaze tactics,
I'm not saying that they don't use them, but they are certainly
NOT alone.
Jim
|
1004.401 | Surprise, surprise. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 16 1991 19:22 | 13 |
| Well, Wayne, can you guess who charged Angela Wright -- but not
under oath and not with all those caveats Some People have been
demanding of Anita Hill -- with using that term?
That's right: Clarence Thomas.
Thank you for one other thing: You have demonstrated, clearly and
viciously, that *any* woman who so much as speaks of harassment
by any man must be pure as new arctic snow before the likes of you
will even begin to consider that she just might, possibly, be telling
the truth.
Ann B.
|
1004.402 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 16 1991 19:31 | 21 |
1004.403 | | LJOHUB::MAXHAM | Kathy Maxham | Wed Oct 16 1991 19:36 | 36 |
| Replace the Prez and the Vice Prez with women. Replace all the men
in the House and Senate with women. Replace all the men on the Supreme
Court with women. Replace all the male governors, mayors, police commissioners,
and members of state legislators with women.
Inconceivable, right? Absurd, right? And hardly representative of our
citizenry, which does, after all, consist of roughly 50% men. But the
exercise of reversing the sexes does point out the complete absurdity
of having one sex making all the decisions and laws and policies for
both sexes.
And that's just the tip of the iceburg, 'cause that exercise doesn't
address the complete under-representation of racial and ethnic groups.
As it is now, we have the same old politicians protecting their jobs
with their same old lies and their same old cronies. Overlooking the
realities of what, maybe 3/4's of our population?
And I'll bet you that half the time they don't even *think about* how
completely underrepresented and underinvestigated other viewpoints are,
because these people in power are so homogeneous that it doesn't even
OCCUR to them that there are entire chunks of our society that don't think
and live by the values, background, privileges, and cultural norms that
they live by. The fact that the judicial committee didn't deem Anita
Hill's claims of sexual harrassment to be important enough for serious
inquiry is a blatent example of the bungling that is bound to happen when
the ruling and investigating and decision making is done by virtual clones.
"They just don't get it" is an understatement.
And then we're supposed to get excited when they toss us a Clarence Thomas:
one conservative black man is supposed to balance the scales. Shut up the
"special interest groups." If I hear Bush complain about the special interest
groups one more time, I think I'll puke.
Kathy
|
1004.404 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 19:42 | 13 |
1004.406 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 16 1991 19:45 | 10 |
| <<< Note 1004.403 by LJOHUB::MAXHAM "Kathy Maxham" >>>
>The fact that the judicial committee didn't deem Anita
>Hill's claims of sexual harrassment to be important enough for serious
>inquiry
Kathy, What should they have done? Remember Hill first spoke only on the
condition that her identity would not be revealed.
Jim
|
1004.408 | Yea and.... | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Wed Oct 16 1991 19:50 | 8 |
| re. .401
It's a matter of record. Deny it if you will but it's still true. She
is not and was not a credible witness ( A. Wright ).
Have a nice day
|
1004.409 | anonymous response | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | on the wings of maybe | Wed Oct 16 1991 21:25 | 34 |
|
I am posting this for a noter who wishes to remain anonymous
-Jody
_______________________________________________________________________
I would like to put a different slant to the debate that has literally
raged in this string.
A child is incested by his/her father. The child does not tell, but
represses the memory of what happened. The child reaches adulthood and
somewhere in his/her 30's the memories come back and the now adult
begins to tell the story. There is nothing written down, the bruises
from the molestation have long since faded. Where is the proof? How
does the adult prove that an adult sexually molested them as a child?
All we have to go on is the memories. The adult begins to tell and
hopefully, somewhere, someone will hear the adults childhood pain and
believe them.
Granted, the Thomas/Hill scenario is not as severe as the above. But
the principal is the same. Anita Hill did not document what happened.
She did tell others what happened. She has the memories. She has the
emotional scarring.
Sadly, for many people who are victims of ANY kind of sexual abuse, our
government has sent a very loud message. And that message is that the
good 'ole boy network is still going strong. Sexual abuse victims are
still doubted, disbelieved and called names. Their integrity and
dignity are still questioned. We will continue to be shrouded in
secrecy. This incest and rape victim has re-experienced all of the
pain, doubting and anger of my sexual abuse. After this do I dare talk
about it? For I have no documented proof.
|
1004.410 | what??? | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Wed Oct 16 1991 21:43 | 5 |
| Anita Hill was not sexually abused nor was she a child. She was a 25
year old lawyer at the Office of Education an the EEOC.
Have a noce day -)
|
1004.411 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | I am not my fault | Wed Oct 16 1991 22:07 | 28 |
|
re .410
Stop and look at the analogy that is being made between the abuses.
Anita Hill did not document the alleged sexual harassment. Based on
that fact alone, many, many people don't believe her.
What it sounds like the anonymous noter is trying to say is that in this
case he or she has no documented proof of his/her abuse. Does this
mean the he or she will be treated the same as Anita Hill in the
future? Will the story be discounted because there isn't any
documented proof of the harassment/abuse?
Just to rathole a little bit, after reading your note I looked up both
harassment and abuse in the dictionary.
Abuse - 1. To use wrongly or improperly 2. To trick or deceive 3. To
injure by maltreatment 4. To assail with abusive words 5. Improper
use or handling 6. A corrupt pracitice or handling 7. Physical
maltreatment 8. Course or insulting language.
Harass - 1. To annoy or torment repeatedly and persistently 2. To wear
out 3. To impede by repeated attacks or raids.
Hmmmm, not much of a difference is there?
|
1004.412 | Thomas is lucky he didn't harass a Senator's wife... | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 16 1991 22:24 | 16 |
| RE: .408 Wayne
Ok, show us the record (where someone verified your claim
while under oath.)
If it was Thomas, then forget it (whether he was under oath
or not.) He has told what I am convinced are lies under
oath, so he is not a credible witness in any situation now,
as far as I'm concerned.
As for Angela Wright, folks - if a Professor of Law can be
described by the Senate Judiciary Committee as not being
able to distinguish fantasy from reality, then women of
less stature than Prof. Hill's have little chance of being
regarded as credible (unless they are the wives or children
of a man with credibility.)
|
1004.413 | Ok | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Wed Oct 16 1991 22:49 | 9 |
| Suzzanne,
It is apparent you did not watch all of the hearings. The situation
concerning her dismissal was put in the record and Judge Thomas
confirmed it. It is becoming apparent some people in this notesfile do
not want to deal with facts only emotional hysteria.
have a nice day -)-)
|
1004.414 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 16 1991 23:03 | 14 |
| You must not have read my entire note, Wayne.
As I *mentioned*, if Thomas is the one who confirmed it, then
it doesn't count (since he has zero credibility as a witness,
even under oath, as far as I'm concerned.)
> It is becoming apparent some people in this notesfile do
> not want to deal with facts only emotional hysteria.
Show us some facts, Wayne. If all you have to offer is the
testimony of someone whom we believe has lied under oath,
then you have none to offer.
Meanwhile, spare us the emotional outbursts.
|
1004.415 | Maybe too painful to watch. | GUCCI::GNOVELLO | Did *you* call me PAL? | Wed Oct 16 1991 23:03 | 12 |
|
Would it be safe to assume that most people in this notesfile think
that false accusations are so rare, that accusors should always be
believed and that the accused must prove their innocence?
How can this be done when there is no evidence except one word against
another?
If Judge Thomas is innocent, I'll bet the reason that he didn't watch
the testimony from Professor Hill is that it would have been too painful.
Guy
|
1004.416 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 16 1991 23:26 | 23 |
| RE: .415 Guy
> Would it be safe to assume that most people in this notesfile think
> that false accusations are so rare, that accusors should always be
> believed and that the accused must prove their innocence?
No, it's not a valid assumption at all.
> How can this be done when there is no evidence except one word against
> another?
Would you rather we allow all cases of sexual harassment to be
dismissed unless the perp is dumb enough to do it to so many people,
and in front of so many witnesses each time, that it can't be denied?
> If Judge Thomas is innocent, I'll bet the reason that he didn't watch
> the testimony from Professor Hill is that it would have been too painful.
If you were being accused of something you didn't do, wouldn't you WANT
to know the extent of the accusations?
How about this for a guess instead: He didn't bother to listen because
he remembered what he'd said to Prof. Hill ONLY TOO WELL.
|
1004.417 | back to ya | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Wed Oct 16 1991 23:43 | 13 |
| Suzzanne,
You are blowing smoke and not good smoke at that. As far as A.
Wright is concerned her personnel record is at the EEOC. You are
obviously not informed as to some of the maneuvering that went on.
Your mind is made up but I would caution that in one of your notes
you state that Judge Thomas is a sex harasser, be careful, slander
can be serious.
Have a nice day
|
1004.418 | | CSOA1::GILBOY | We STILL play real nice together! | Thu Oct 17 1991 01:07 | 23 |
| 1004.267
> If Thomas were accused of stealing, or child molestation, or taking
> bribes as a judge - he wouldn't be confirmed if roughly half the
> Senate believed a witness against him.
The term sexual harassment can be anything from an unwanted
compliment offerred without innuendo, to groping and molestation.
When the term becomes so diluted as to encompass all these events,
how can anyone expect the words "sexual harassment" to be taken
seriously at face value?
In murky waters as these, if the victim is the one who draws the
line, then the victim must take some responsibility to communicate
when the line has been crossed.
Now in the case of Thomas, did Hill ever once tell him to stop,
that his advances were not welcome, if he did make advances? I
believe that had she told him to stop, and had he not, the outcome
of this charge would have been different.
-- Judy
|
1004.419 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 03:39 | 11 |
| RE: .417 Wayne
> Your mind is made up but I would caution that in one of your notes
> you state that Judge Thomas is a sex harasser, be careful, slander
> can be serious.
I already reposted one of my notes to include the words "I believe"
(in case anyone else had trouble reading my words without the proper
disclaimers) - I guess I missed one.
I'll go back to change it now. Thanks for the reminder.
|
1004.322 | Edited to add a missing disclaimer. | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 03:40 | 16 |
| Well, I'm not as cynical as you are, Atlandt, and I admit it.
One good thing about all this is that we won't be subjected to
the term of the person Bush would have chosen to punish us all
if Thomas had been denied his position on the Supreme Court.
There is no doubt at all in my mind that we'd up against someone
far worse than the liar and sexual harasser I believe we have as
of today.
The Liberal Left may not do much about this, but I know a rather
large group of quiet voters who may be more moved than any of us
yet realize over this.
Thurgood Marshall knew what he was doing to retire right before
a major year of election campaigns.
|
1004.420 | She knew the consequences of pre-harassment-charge-language... | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 03:53 | 34 |
| RE: .418 Judy
> Now in the case of Thomas, did Hill ever once tell him to stop,
> that his advances were not welcome, if he did make advances?
Do you really think that the head of EEOC was unaware that verbal
descriptions of pornography and the, er, dimensions of one's sexual
organ constitute harassment?
> I believe that had she told him to stop, and had he not, the outcome
> of this charge would have been different.
The thing is - when you tell someone "I regard this as sexual harassment,
so please stop now," it's tantamount to saying, "OR, I may have to bring
charges against you" (which would have amounted to ALMOST the degree of
career suicide for her that CHARGING him would have been at the time.)
Even if she'd just said "Please stop," Thomas was head of the EEOC and
*knew* that this was a preliminary step to (possibly) charging someone.
So Prof. Hill ignored it and hoped it would go away (and it DID go away
for a time.) It's precisely what most women do in this situation, for
reasons of self-preservation.
She should have documented what happened, but I've not personally seen
cases showing personal notes being any more believable than a woman's
word (since they are, in effect, a woman's word in written form about
what happened.) If someone has any info about a "word-against-word"
sexual harassment case being successful based on the woman's personal
documentation without witnesses, I'd love to see it.
Prof. Hill took the only course she felt was left to her - she came
forward and told the truth, even if most of the Senate was unprepared
to believe her. I admire her for that.
|
1004.421 | | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | on the wings of maybe | Thu Oct 17 1991 10:24 | 21 |
| re: .413
> confirmed it. It is becoming apparent some people in this notesfile do
> not want to deal with facts only emotional hysteria.
> have a nice day -)-)
It is apparent to me that many women here have probably been in Prof.
Hill's shoes, either having been harassed and kept silent, or perhaps
even having been harassed and tried to stop it and had that fail, or
perhaps even brought it to the attention of officials and suffered the
same miscarriage of justice.
Apparently you do not want to deal with facts, you want to deal with
your own one-sided view. Just because a thousand people say it did not
happen, does not mean it did not happen.
Why do you sign your notes "have a nice day" after you complete a full
rotation of the verbal knife twist in your notes? I find it offensive.
-Jody
|
1004.422 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | all I need is the air.... | Thu Oct 17 1991 11:24 | 7 |
| -Jody
in re the 'have a nice day' I agree that in the context of the note
content that response felt abrasive to me also. It hit me like
a printed 'raspberry'.
Bonnie
|
1004.423 | But she *did* say something to him... | CADSE::FOX | No crime. And lots of fat, happy women | Thu Oct 17 1991 11:31 | 44 |
| re: 1004.418
Judy,
Anita Hill testified that, on the *very*first* occasion that Clarence Thomas
asked her for a date, she said no, and she explained why (she felt it
was inappropriate for her to be dating her boss, etc.). Were I in her
shoes, continued requests for dates would be perceived by me to be,
at the least, a blatant disregard of my inability to make professional
decisions, and, at worst, especially when coupled with talk of pornography,
harassment.
Further, she said that on some occasions of the pornography talk, she
asked him (sometimes more than once) to stop. Failing that, she changed
the subject. If her statements are to be believed (and I personally
see no reason to doubt them), during at least one of these occasions,
Thomas said, "all right." Now, this is notes, so I can't convey the tone
of voice that Hill used when she recounted this, but the tone of "all right"
conveyed an acknowledgement that she was uncomfortable with the conversation.
Yet he continued to do this on other occasions.
Now Judy, you may not choose to believe her. But that's what she said, so
lets get past the "well, she didn't say anything at the time."
re: everything else.
I have been in the workforce for 20 years now, have personally been
sexually harassed only once (and got it to stop -- but at a price),
and have counseled numerous women of various colors about dealing with
their own cases of sexual harassment. Anita Hill's reactions, actions,
and demeanor, are *completely* consistent with the responses of those women
I worked with of similar backgrounds, at the time period we're talking about.
I will spare the detractors the guesswork: I was against Clarence Thomas
before these charges were made public. While I greatly respect his
accomplishments, I believe he is at best a mediocrity. Perhaps in
10 years he would have become a great judge, but we'll never know. I believe
he was lying wrt Roe v. Wade, so it is easy to see that I can believe he was
lying about this matter as well. I would have had *tons* more respect for him
if he had 'fessed up, and apologized.
Bobbi "thanks to Bush, Spector, Simpson, and Hatch, the deadline against
sexual harassment has been pushed back by 20 years" Fox
|
1004.424 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 11:51 | 16 |
| <<< Note 1004.409 by GNUVAX::BOBBITT "on the wings of maybe" >>>
> Granted, the Thomas/Hill scenario is not as severe as the above. But
> the principal is the same.
Anon, You want to compare a Yale Law School graduate AND an attorney
that was specializing in civil rights law with a child?
You REALLY do?
Sorry, the "principle" is not the same and the actions expected
of a child and an adult are certainly not the same.
Jim
|
1004.425 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Thu Oct 17 1991 11:53 | 36 |
| The Associated Press released an article (10/14/91)
about a former aide of Thomas. The aide, Sukari Hardnett, does not
specifically allege that Thomas harassed her but says there was an
unpleasant sexual atmosphere in Thomas' office because of his behavior
toward some black women.
Among other things, Hardnett said, "If you were young, black, female
and reasonably attractive, you knew full well you were being inspected
and auditioned as a female."
Hardnett, a graduate of Antioch Law School, said that she became
uncomfortable with the situation and requested a transfer out of
the chairman's office and was moved to the general counsel's office.
She also said, "women know when there are sexual dimensions to the
attention they are receiving, and there was never any doubt about
that dimension in Clarence Thomas' office."
Angela Wright's testimony has more specific charges, similar to
those made by Anita Hill. Among other things, Wright says Thomas,
while he was head of EEOC, asked her the size of her breasts,
and showed up uninvited at her apartment. Ms. Holt, Thomas's
secretary at the EEOC, said under oath that Wright was let go
from the EEOC because Wright, a law school grad, did not pass the
bar exam in the time alloted for EEOC aides. The only person
who said that Wright was fired for calling someone a faggot is
Clarence Thomas, who has good reason for seeking to discredit her.
By the way, I wouldn't be real worried about Thomas sueing anyone
for slander. I think women could climb the Washington Monument
with a megaphone and announce to the world that Thomas harassed
them and they would not be sued. He doesn't want the closer inquiry
into this matter that s suit for slander would create.
Sue
|
1004.426 | They were the "Thomas" hearings after all ... | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Thu Oct 17 1991 12:54 | 15 |
| re. Wayne
You are saying that Angela Wright is not creditable because she was
dismissed for making a slur on a co-worker? If I concede that she was
rightfully dismissed for doing so, I still do not see why that
discredits her.
If I make a habit of breaking into other peoples' homes that does not
make it any less a crime if someone breaks into mine.
Indeed, few people, were they to know of my habits, would have the
least bit of sympathy for me. But it wouldn't change the fact that I
was also a victim of a crime.
Annie
|
1004.427 | Talk about apples and oranges! | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Oct 17 1991 13:37 | 7 |
| Annie,
Wayne's mistake is even more egregious than your example, because he
is claiming that someone (well, a woman, anyhow) who is cabable of
insulting someone cannot be trusted to tell the truth.
Ann B.
|
1004.428 | Quote without comment | WMOIS::REINKE_B | all I need is the air.... | Thu Oct 17 1991 13:37 | 10 |
| This is a quote from the Boston Herald for 10/17
"In Oklahoma City, Monday, as Anita Hill arrived back home, Republican
state Rep. Leonard E. Sullivan said he was ready to lead a
fund-raising effort to remove Hill from her tenured job for the crime
of accusing Clarence Thomas.
" 'We must get this left-wing extremist influence off the campus',
Sullivan said. 'We can't afford to havea high-profile professor on
campus that millions of Americans...believe is a fantasizing liar.'"
|
1004.429 | oh great. | KAHALA::CAMPBELL_K | She's laughing inside | Thu Oct 17 1991 13:54 | 1 |
| ...and some are so amazed that a woman would fear coming forward.
|
1004.430 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Thu Oct 17 1991 13:55 | 13 |
| > You are saying that Angela Wright is not creditable because she was
> dismissed for making a slur on a co-worker? If I concede that she was
> rightfully dismissed for doing so, I still do not see why that
> discredits her.
My read was that the dismissal of Wright by Thomas would give
Wright a strong reason to discredit Thomas.
If you fired someone, do you believe that person would testify for
you, or against you, in a court? Would you have reason to believe
that the person you fired might even lie under oath?
Tom_K
|
1004.431 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Thu Oct 17 1991 13:59 | 6 |
|
re .408:
That's *your* opinion, buddy. Not *fact*.
Not everyone agrees.
|
1004.432 | Jeffrey Masson's 'Assault on Truth' tells the tale | GEMVAX::BROOKS | | Thu Oct 17 1991 14:10 | 14 |
|
Freud virtually founded psychoanalysis on his view that all those women
patients of his who told him they were the victims of various forms of
sexual abuse, were fantasizing - they only wished it to happen. Freud
just couldn't bring himself to believe that so many fine upstanding
male pillars of communities were doing such things. This view is something
it's taken feminists the past 10-12 years to undo. Now, as I understand it,
when you tell someone about this sort of abuse, you're generally taken
seriously.
That is, until the other day...
Dorian
|
1004.433 | they were both so belivable...it's unbelievable | VSSCAD::MARCOTTE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 14:20 | 16 |
| ================================================================================
Note 1004.421 Thomas nomination to Supreme Court 421 of 425
GNUVAX::BOBBITT "on the wings of maybe" 21 lines 17-OCT-1991 08:24
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> Apparently you do not want to deal with facts, you want to deal with
>> your own one-sided view. Just because a thousand people say it did not
>> happen, does not mean it did not happen.
>> -Jody
============================================================================
Well the reverse is also true...but I am sure you know that. In case you
don't here it is:
Just because a thousand people say it happened, does not mean it happened.
|
1004.434 | was she even "safe" 10 yrs later to speak out? | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | kindofanupstart-butigotawarmheart | Thu Oct 17 1991 15:41 | 24 |
|
re: 354
rumor has it that the zip code for this address is 73109.
re: .428
if anyone is interested in contacting some of prof hill's employers
to show suport against this type of backlash, david swank, the dean of
U.Ok law school can be reached at the same address as the one listed in
.354.
also, the president of U.Ok, richard van horn, can be reached at
660 parrington oval
rm 110
norman, ok 73109
[ph# 405-325-3910]
i think i will write and/or call. mostly because i believe that those
who support the diatribe that exists in .428 will be doing what ever
they can to displace this wmn.
~robin
|
1004.435 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Thu Oct 17 1991 15:52 | 14 |
| Re: <<< Note 1004.428 by WMOIS::REINKE_B "all I need is the air...." >>>
>> "In Oklahoma City, Monday, as Anita Hill arrived back home, Republican
>> state Rep. Leonard E. Sullivan said he was ready to lead a
>> fund-raising effort to remove Hill from her tenured job for the crime
>> of accusing Clarence Thomas.
>> " 'We must get this left-wing extremist influence off the campus',
>> Sullivan said. 'We can't afford to havea high-profile professor on
>> campus that millions of Americans...believe is a fantasizing liar.'"
Time to start a recall drive on Sillivan, methinks.
Roak
|
1004.436 | wash | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 17:20 | 17 |
| re .431
Let us start with the fact that my name is not BUDDY. Let us end
with "try showing some respect for me" after all isn't that what this
community is all about. Or is only about respect for women.
I see very little respect for Judge Thomas. The fact of the matter
is this is a she said he said. Neither one can prove their claim, it's
a wash people. If the principles were switched I'm sure the loud voices
in this community would be silent. By not being objective some people
here blow their credibility.
I my self just plain don't know who is telling the truth. I do know
a crime was not proven to have taken place. A WASH....
Have a nice day -)-)
|
1004.437 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | all I need is the air.... | Thu Oct 17 1991 17:42 | 19 |
| Wayne
You've already been told, twice, that people take your 'have a nice'
day' tag on the end of the note as being hostile. It is not surprising
that when you act, first, in a fashion that is percieved as hostile
that a person may respond in kind, cf calling you 'buddy'. This
community is 'about' topics of interest to women. Those who
earn/deserve respect here get it. Those who appear to be deliberately
being sarcastic and rude will find that some *individuals* will
respond in kind.
We moderators feel that the members of this file are adults and don't
go around telling women to 'make nice' and be 'good girls' when
they are arguing/discussing with other members. We do prefer that
people use 'I' messages, and we request that people do not call
names or insult other people. However, a certain amount of sarcasm,
irony, etc. is an acceptable response.
Bonnie
|
1004.438 | What??? | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 17:57 | 5 |
| Fortunately *I* cannot be hung for saying:
Have a nice day
|
1004.439 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | all I need is the air.... | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:10 | 9 |
| Wayne
NO ONE is hanging you for it.. however, when you add it to the end
of an otherwise sarcastic note, don't be surprised when people assume
(as Jody and I did) that you didn't really mean it. If you did,
then may I suggest that you leave such a reply off a note that is
other wise arguementative etc. or you are apt to be misunderstood.
Bonnie
|
1004.440 | how bout have a stinking lousy day? | CSC32::PITT | | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:11 | 23 |
|
ref .437
You're joking right? You find "have a nice day offensive and rude"?
I take it as the noter has presented his opinion and closes his note
with an underlying "nothing personal, these are my opinions, see ya
later".
Have a nice day???????? hum.
lets see. How 'bout
over and out.
or
adios
or
later dude
or
put a sock in it (one of my personal favorites from previous notes)
:-) <--- no offense intended.
|
1004.441 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | all I need is the air.... | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:17 | 17 |
| in re .440
Did you see both Jody and my earlier notes reacting to his 'have
a nice day'?
*OF COURSE* I don't find 'have a nice day' offensive and rude.
HOWEVER, if a person writes a note that is basically negative and
sarcastic, and ends it with 'have a nice day' it is not unreasonable
for someone else as I did, as Jody did, and apparently as Ellen did,
to assume that the person is being snide or sarcastic with the
reply as well. I was attempting to point out to Mr Linville that
he may well have contributed to Ellen's calling him 'buddy'.
Okay?
Bonnie
|
1004.442 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:26 | 14 |
| People ask sometimes - "Why didn't s/he just ASK the other
person to STOP the offending behavior???"
Well, we now have a real live demo on why some people are hesitant
to tell others that some words or behavior bothers them (and
that they find it offensive in some way.)
It's not always the case that the person committing the behavior
will say, "Oh, I'll stop then. I didn't mean to offend you."
Instead, the reaction could be hostile and/or sarcastic.
It's no wonder so many women respond to instances of actual sexual
harassment by being silent.
|
1004.443 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:29 | 3 |
| Hey, look, I'll have any kind of day I want, thank you.
|
1004.444 | innuendo | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:41 | 10 |
| Have we finally come to the point that "have a nice day" is harassment.
God help us from the thought police. I have given my opinions in this
string only to be attacked and berated. I have been accused and now
must defend myself. I have harassed no one, I have insulted no one, yet
I am being accused of said behavior. No one will control my mind or my
thoughts with innuendo.
Please do have a nice day because I will
|
1004.445 | I think, however, it is a lost cause | WMOIS::REINKE_B | all I need is the air.... | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:48 | 14 |
| Wayne
May I suggest reading comprehension? I have not said, or implied,
or intended to imply, that saying 'have a nice day' is harassment.
What I said was that *in the context* of your notes, it appeared to
be sarcastic. Do you understand the difference?
Suzanne,
Good point, perhaps, instead, we should be thanking Mr Linville
for an object lesson.
Bonnie
|
1004.446 | | FMNIST::olson | friend of the family | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:49 | 20 |
| Its pretty clear Wayne, that no one is trying to control your thoughts
nor behaviour, nor would they likely suceed. But the point you seem to
be missing is that people a) percieved your notes as insulting and b) took
your "Have a nice day" accordingly as sarcasm. Perhaps you didn't mean to
insult people, therefore you don't understand why people react negatively
to your sarcasm. But Suzanne's point is the more telling, I think: two
people told you about it, and you have reacted as though you did nothing
wrong and the people who saw your words as insulting are trying to control
your thoughts! Shades of Judge Thomas, indeed. Perhaps he didn't mean to
harass Anita Hill. So she told him not to...and he probably failed to
comprehend it...just as you have similarly failed to comprehend what was
requested of you. Thought police? No. Niceness patrol.
Or are you far too perfect a communicator to have ever given someone the
wrong impression? They couldn't possibly have been insulted because you
didn't *mean* to insult them, is that it? Ego patrol.
Sorry, dude, take your pick, but you're busted by one or the other.
DougO
|
1004.447 | ??????? | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:54 | 8 |
| <<< Note 1004.441 by WMOIS::REINKE_B "all I need is the air...." >>>
> he may well have contributed to Ellen's calling him 'buddy'.
Does anyone else find it ironic that the "He was asking for it"
defense is being used by members of this conference?
Jim
|
1004.448 | I think not | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:57 | 7 |
| re .446
I think not. I will continue to present my opinions and be polite
when signing off. Please adjust your sensitivities to reality.
have a nice day -)
|
1004.449 | is it the full moon or something? | WMOIS::REINKE_B | all I need is the air.... | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:58 | 8 |
| Jim
Oh for screaming heavens sake! I was not saying that 'he was asking for
it'. I was saying that when a person is perceived as being sarcastic
people may be sarcastic in return. If people don't want to generate
sarcastic replies they should be careful of their communications style.
Bonnie
|
1004.450 | | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:00 | 7 |
| I dunno, I find "have a nice day" obnoxious even when there's no hint of
sarcasm, simply because it brings to mind those mindless smiley faces
(which is one reason I never use the "smiley" text icons - the whole thing
is just aggravating).
I wouldn't try to accuse everybody who uses a (can I bring myself to type one
in? ... aargh) ":-)" symbol with textual harrassment, though. I just suffer...
|
1004.451 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | all I need is the air.... | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:03 | 15 |
| fine, Wayne fine, but understand that you own the problem as much
as other people. we are not mind readers, and reacting to apparent
sarcasm with sarcasm or by objecting to how it sounds is not a case
of being 'overly sensitive'.
that is btw a fairly typical male tactic... do something that a female
person gets up set with, continually refuse to listen to her reasons
why she is upset, eventually accuse her of being unreasonable and
tell her she's too sensitive and refuse to change in any fashion..
it is interesting to see it played out so very neatly here in the file.
I'm kind of ashamed of my self that I let myself get sucked into it..
Bonnie
|
1004.452 | | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | on the wings of maybe | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:05 | 20 |
| re: .448
> I think not. I will continue to present my opinions and be polite
> when signing off. Please adjust your sensitivities to reality.
My sensitivities are perfectly adjusted to my reality.
You refuse to acknowledge my reality.
I acknowledge you can have yours, but have indicated mine exists.
I will continue to present my opinions and say whatever I feel like
saying when signing off.
Oh no, I'm not playing nice.
Does this mean I'm not a lady?
8-P
-Jody
|
1004.454 | rape and sarcasm aren't in the same league | FMNIST::olson | friend of the family | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:06 | 7 |
| Does anybody else find Jim's thinking an accusation of sarcasm and its defense
significantly heinous to be compared to (what is typically) the accusation of
a rape victim, that "she asked for it", to be more than ironic? Like, downright
insulting? Jim, you oughta know better. Sometimes, like with Wayne, people DO
ask for it.
DougO
|
1004.455 | I'm not a =wn= moderator (but I play one on TV..) :-) | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:14 | 4 |
| Let's drop this "Have a nice day" rathole, ok?
We've made Wayne's day nice enough already. :)
|
1004.456 | guilty until proven innocent?????? | CSC32::PITT | | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:19 | 39 |
|
re .403
>replace the prez and vice prez and all state senators with women.
It might work.
There would be no debate, because we would only allow ONE opinion.
There would be no hearings, because we could just as easily find all
men immediatly guilty and save the tax payers money.
There would be no special minorities, only an US and an 'everybody
else'.
If the roles had been reversed and Judge Thomas had been accusing
some potential supreme court justice (female) of sexual harrassment,
opinions would have been differant.
But then again, it has never been proven who said what or did what.
Still comes down to Her word against HIS word. I think that it would
be very prejudicle(?) to assume guilt on either side. Think back on
any number of notes in this or any other conference. People are very
quick to warn against making a judgement until guilt or innocence
is proven. Why are we so quick to assume Judge Thomas 's guilt?
Perhaps because this is a men vs women issue.
Perhaps because he does not follow the standard liberal path.
Perhaps because he represents what most people in this conference
despise, that is he is a ..(ghast...) CONSERVATIVE.
If one of YOU were called down to personnel and told that one of your
co workers had accused you of sexual harrassment, I would expect you
(male or female) to fight for the truth as you believed it. And when
your coworkers started calling you a pervert and demanding that you
be fired, even before your guilt had been proven, maybe then you'd
appreciate the "innocent until proven guilty" theory.
Give this man the same respect.
|
1004.457 | it's a great day | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:20 | 5 |
| Please don't be to impressed with yourselves because I will ( without
sarcasm ):
Have a nice day
|
1004.453 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:22 | 22 |
| RE: .444 Wayne
Your reading comprehension level is getting worse, Wayne, as Bonnie
indicated.
My note used the words "cases of actual sexual harassment" to help
differentiate between the "demo" I described and what happens during
harassment. I would apologize for not SCREAMING it to you in all caps
so that you couldn't possibly mistake my meaning, but I doubt it would
have helped.
Some folks did you the courtesy of telling you they found your parting
salutation sarcastic - and you responded by being more determined than
ever to use it, which is certainly your choice.
If you meant to show that the greeting is written to be deliberately
offensive, then your point has been made. I'm certainly willing to
adjust to a new meaning of the phrase (and I do agree it is easier
on the eyes than the usual four-letter expletives that convey similar
meanings.) :)
Have a nice day, yourself, Wayne.
|
1004.458 | | CADSE::KHER | Live simply, so others may simply live | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:27 | 12 |
| >It might work.
>There would be no debate, because we would only allow ONE opinion.
>There would be no hearings, because we could just as easily find all
>men immediatly guilty and save the tax payers money.
>There would be no special minorities, only an US and an 'everybody
>else'.
Huh? Cathy from where did you get all this? What you've just said
completely contradicts my experiences with women.
manisha
|
1004.459 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:27 | 25 |
| <<< Note 1004.449 by WMOIS::REINKE_B "all I need is the air...." >>>
> Oh for screaming heavens sake! I was not saying that 'he was asking for
> it'.
No, you were "simply pointing out"....."how he might have contributed"
to the offense. Can you explain how this differs from saying, "you asked
for it"?
I've gone back (not very far) and looked for notes by Mr. Linville.
It seems that "Have a Nice Day" is his NORMAL notes "signoff". Many
noters tend toward this affectation. It's the same as "Jim" or
"Bonnie" in our notes.
>I was saying that when a person is perceived as being sarcastic
> people may be sarcastic in return.
Most certainly, sarcasm can be a byproduct of spirited discussion
in a Notes forum.
But "Listen Buddy" is NOT sarcasm. It's a demeaning personal reference.
If I begin a note with "Listen Girlie" can I claim the defense of
"sarcasm" at some time in the future?
Jim
|
1004.460 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:33 | 15 |
| <<< Note 1004.454 by FMNIST::olson "friend of the family" >>>
DougO, We are not dealing with the issue of sarcasm or it's defense.
We are dealing with the use of a persoanlly derogatory term used
in reference to a fellow noter. As such, it violates the policies
of virtually every Notes conference that I'm aware of.
The defense of the use of the term was somehow Mr Linville
"contributed" to the use of the term.
I found that ironic, particularly because this defense has been
so severly derided (and justifiably so) in this particular file.
Jim
|
1004.461 | You've fought several other analogies in this topic...! | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:33 | 8 |
| RE: .459 Jim
Heavens, Jim - you're using an analogy - do you honestly mean to equate
the experience of receiving sarcasm with the experience of being raped
(and/or do you mean to equate the act of being sarcastic with the act
of raping someone???)
Care to retract? :)
|
1004.462 | since you asked ... | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:33 | 22 |
| re .440
actually, I _do_ find "have a nice day" offensive. not the sentiments
involved, just those four little syllables written, spoken, graphically
expressed [by the yellow smiley face].
they make my teeth itch. I'm not joking _at_all_.
this is a rathole dealing with my personal preferences and
proclivities. if I asked someone not to say these four little
syllables _to_me_, I would expect the favour of compliance. I would
never seek to broaden my dislike to a general case for being irritating
in the extreme -- because I sincerely doubt that people in general have
the same aversion.
hence, if Wayne said "have a nice day" to me and I asked him not to, it
would be very rude of him to continue -- which isn't to say that I'm
not weird. If he says "have a nice day" to someone _else_ and I ask
him not to do so, then I've stepped over some line -- no matter how
much it makes my teeth itch.
Annie
|
1004.464 | | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | on the wings of maybe | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:43 | 9 |
| re: .457
> Please don't be to impressed with yourselves because I will ( without
>sarcasm ):
> Have a nice day
I'm so glad. Have one for me too, will you sweetheart?
-Jody
|
1004.465 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:45 | 5 |
|
RE: .464 Jody
:-)
|
1004.466 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:46 | 19 |
| <<< Note 1004.463 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> Hold the phone - is "BUDDY" now an insulting, harassing term?????
Use it on me and it is. In the context as was used here it
was obviously meant as a personally derogatory term.
>Wayne, yet he's repeated his New_harassing_phrase "Have a nice day"
> several times ...)
As I pointed out, this seems to be his "signoff". Much like others
use D!, or The Doctah, etc.
If this phrase was so annoying why was it not pointed out before?
Actually, I don't like it much, but it IS his right to concoct
a "signoff" message of his choice.
Jim
|
1004.467 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:51 | 22 |
| RE: .466 Jim
>> Hold the phone - is "BUDDY" now an insulting, harassing term?????
> Use it on me and it is. In the context as was used here it
> was obviously meant as a personally derogatory term.
Oh, I see. You can label it as such, but no one else here can label
Wayne's "Have a nice day" as sarcastic. I see how it works now. :)
By the way, can I call you "precious"? :)
> As I pointed out, this seems to be his "signoff". Much like others
> use D!, or The Doctah, etc.
It isn't his name, Jim. It's his sarcastic epithet (quite obviously
meant as a derogatory parting shot.)
Now tell me why you can label "Buddy" as insulting and no one else
here can describe "Have a nice day" as sarcastic.
This, I've *got* to hear. :)
|
1004.468 | Today | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:54 | 9 |
| re. .463
Suzzanne,
You have made an accusation of harassment. Now either prove it
according to the Orange Book or apologize!
This could ruin both our days
|
1004.469 | important stuff here | CSC32::P_PAPACEK | | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:58 | 8 |
|
"BUDDY" harassing, insulting - give me a break.
Now is someone said BUTTY - yea that could be considered deragatory.
Pat
|
1004.463 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:59 | 10 |
|
RE: .460 Jim
Hold the phone - is "BUDDY" now an insulting, harassing term?????
If it is, notice please that no one else has used this in a greeting
to Wayne, yet he's repeated [what he *himself* has termed as a
New_harassing_phrase, or whatever] "Have a nice day" several times ...
Interesting, eh? :)
|
1004.471 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 20:06 | 31 |
| <<< Note 1004.467 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> > Use it on me and it is. In the context as was used here it
> > was obviously meant as a personally derogatory term.
> Oh, I see. You can label it as such, but no one else here can label
> Wayne's "Have a nice day" as sarcastic. I see how it works now. :)
No one objected to "Have a Nice Day" when it was used in .397,
how come? The term is a general, if annoying, method of saying
"Goodbye", "See you later", or much worse (in the retail environment)
"Come again".
"Listen Buddy" is not used in any of these polite contexts (unless
of course your accepted nickname happens to be "Buddy"). Not the
case here.
> By the way, can I call you "precious"? :)
Not unless you personally want to find out how the sexual harrassment
policy is applied by the Corporation.
> This, I've *got* to hear. :)
You've heard (at least read) it. Now are you telling me that it is
acceptable, in this conference, to start notes off with "Listen
Buddy"?
This I'VE got to hear (read) ;-)
Jim
|
1004.470 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 20:07 | 17 |
| RE: .468 Wayne
You are the only one who has accused YOU of harassment. Once
again, I forgot your problems with reading comprehension, so
I found it necessary to spell it out to you by editing my note
(and retaining a copy of the original, by the way, which I will
store in a bank vault after having it hermetically sealed.) :-)
I notice that you seem as aware as I am that the "magic words"
are far more dangerous to the person who says them than they
are to the one on the receiving end (so much so that you are
visibly ANXIOUS for someone to make the dreaded mistake of
accusing you of harassment.)
Precisely the point many of us here have been trying to make.
Thanks!
|
1004.472 | He *did* bring it on himself. | FMNIST::olson | friend of the family | Thu Oct 17 1991 20:10 | 11 |
| > We are not dealing with the issue of sarcasm or it's defense.
Depends on which side gets to do the labeling, no? But even if we're talking
about "the use of a persoanlly [sic] derogatory term" I'm still incredulous
that you compare a defense against a charge of, essentially, name-calling, to
the defense against the charge of a violent crime. Get real! I'm sure that
if Wayne considers himself personally degraded by the sarcastic greeting
"buddy" he'll be just as damaged by being told he brought it on himself as
a rape victim is damaged when told the same thing. Yeah. Right. Get real.
DougO
|
1004.473 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 20:14 | 6 |
| Just for the record, would one of the moderators please answer
my question as posed in the last paragraph of 1004.459?
Thanks,
Jim
|
1004.474 | info off the net | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | on the wings of maybe | Thu Oct 17 1991 20:17 | 29 |
| from off the net -
from the New York Times, 10/16/91 p.A21:
"Oklahoma State Representative Leonard E. Sullivan, Republican of
Oklahoma City is seeking to have Prof. Anita Hill ousted from her
tenured position. In a letter to University president, Richard Van
Horn, Sullivan said, "We must get left wing extremist influence off
the campus before it spreads further. We can't afford to have a high
profile professor on campus that millions of Americans, according to
polls and national talk shows, believe is a fantasizing liar."
If you wish, you can write to President Van Horn at:
University of Oklahoma
660 Parrington Oval, Rm 110
Norman, OK 73019
(phone 405-325-3910)
If you wish, you can write to David Swank, Dean of the Law School at:
University of Oklahoma
300 Timberdell Rd
Norman, OK 73019
If you wish, you can write to Anita Hill at:
University of Oklahoma
300 Timberdell Rd
Norman, OK 73019
|
1004.475 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 20:39 | 51 |
| RE: .471 Jim
> No one objected to "Have a Nice Day" when it was used in .397,
> how come?
Yes, someone did!! It was mentioned in a general way to include all
the various times Wayne used the phrase after a sarcastic reply.
What makes you assume that this particular reply was excluded from
the general remarks made in this topic? It wasn't!
> "Listen Buddy" is not used in any of these polite contexts (unless
> of course your accepted nickname happens to be "Buddy"). Not the
> case here.
It is ALSO "NOT THE CASE" that someone said "Listen Buddy" to Wayne
in this topic! YOU wrote it this way - this is NOT how it was written
in the original note. Your use of the word is inaccurate - do you care?
>> By the way, can I call you "precious"? :)
> Not unless you personally want to find out how the sexual harassment
> policy is applied by the Corporation.
It's interesting how I seem to be almost begged to USE the so-called
"magic words" by Wayne, yet you seem to be daring me to say something
that will allow YOU to use the "magic words" against me.
"Magic words," indeed. Well, don't worry, Jim. I'll be very careful
to heed your warning. I won't use the word repeatedly (as Wayne has done)
in fond HOPES that you'll accuse me of harassment. We all know the truth
about the "magic words" by now.
> You've heard (at least read) it. Now are you telling me that it is
> acceptable, in this conference, to start notes off with "Listen
> Buddy"?
Well, I've never seen someone do this - so if someone ever HAS done
this, no one else complained about it. If you intended to threaten
harassment charges against me (or anyone else here) - message
received, Jim! (It is Jim, isn't it?) Just checking. :)
Meanwhile, I'll just keep dodging Wayne's charges that I/we have
accused him of harassment (while dodging your threats to accuse
some or one of US of harassment.)
Every demonstration of the real truth behind the so-called "magic words"
is helpful to prove what some of us have been trying to point out all
along about the way women are treated in these cases.
Thanks again!
|
1004.476 | | CADSE::KHER | Live simply, so others may simply live | Thu Oct 17 1991 20:42 | 10 |
| I can see why Wayne found being called buddy offensive. Ellen called
him buddy [only] once. He told her not to do so. Now if Ellen insists
on calling him buddy, it will be extremely rude on her part. But she
hasn't and as far as I'm concerned the matter is over. So can we end
this rathole and get back to the topic?
Jim, to answer your question in .459 (?) - the term 'girlie' is in no
way equivalent to the term 'buddy'.
manisha
|
1004.477 | rathole | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 20:46 | 8 |
| This has become a rathole. I propose a truce. This string has shown
that the word harassment used improperly can be dangerous and damaging.
I truly do not want to hurt anyone but at the same time I will not be
the focal point of anyones prejudice. Reasonable people can disagree.
I am a reasonable person and wish no one harm.
Have a nice day -)
|
1004.478 | comod response | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Thu Oct 17 1991 20:49 | 20 |
| re.473
For the record:
I envision the same sort of 'fire-fight' as we've had over 'Buddy'.
Also, given that an overwhelming number of women here have voiced a
distaste for hearing women called "girls" or "girlie," I think a fair
case could be made that it was intentionally offensive -- especially if
the woman so-addressed was a one who had previously gone record as
having such an aversion -- and I would look askance at any claims of
sarcasm made after the fact.
If someone here has been called "Buddy" after asking that he not be
so-addressed, I missed it. If I missed it, I apologise and ask to be
re-directed to it.
Regards,
Ann Johnston
=wn= comod
|
1004.479 | | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | on the wings of maybe | Thu Oct 17 1991 21:00 | 29 |
| re: .477
> I truly do not want to hurt anyone but at the same time I will not be
> the focal point of anyones prejudice. Reasonable people can disagree.
> I am a reasonable person and wish no one harm.
Oh, well that makes it all better then, doesn't it?
set_tone=seriously
You have caused me discomfort, and your attitude causes me to feel
hopeless about how many men who have had no exposure to the experience
of harassment will treat the charge. You have caused me anger this
afternoon, as well as frustration. I'm developing enough of a thick
skin not to be hurt.
Do you really mean truce?
Do you concede anything?
Or do you tire of the discussion and you think this is the
easiest way out?
Have you heard *anything* we have said?
Does it hurt us if you haven't? probably not now, but later perhaps.
Are you listening? probably not now, but later....I pray you might.
Harassment is REAL. Harassment HAPPENS. It has happened to ME. It
could perceivably happen to YOU. What will you do when nobody listens
and tells you to have a nice day?
-Jody
|
1004.480 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 21:17 | 36 |
| RE: .477 Wayne
> This has become a rathole. I propose a truce.
Sounds good - we can all agree not to call you "Buddy" again if you
agree to stop the "Have a Nice Day" closings (since people have told
you how sarcastic they sound and you've already repeated the phrase
enough times to last a lifetime.) Deal?
> This string has shown the word harassment used improperly can be
> dangerous and damaging.
This string has shown that the word is *most* damaging to women (whether
we are accused of USING the word, or ARE ACCUSED OF harassment ourselves.)
This was the point many of us have been trying to make.
> I truly do not want to hurt anyone but at the same time I will not be
> the focal point of anyones prejudice.
We will not have our words "labeled" prejudice as a way to keep us from
expressing our opinions about a big political issue that affects ALL of
us in this country.
> Reasonable people can disagree.
Yes, we can! So we should be able to express our anger at the way
Prof. Hill has been treated without being insulted for it. Ok?
> I am a reasonable person and wish no one harm.
We are all reasonable people here and wish no one harm, either.
I wish you would realize that.
> Have a nice day -)
*sigh*
|
1004.481 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 21:38 | 7 |
| <<< Note 1004.478 by MEMIT::JOHNSTON "bean sidhe" >>>
Ann, Please note reply .436
Thanks,
Jim
|
1004.482 | have something | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 21:38 | 5 |
| re .481
Ok....
Toodle loo
|
1004.483 | oops | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 21:43 | 3 |
| I meant .480
see ya later
|
1004.484 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 21:47 | 22 |
| <<< Note 1004.476 by CADSE::KHER "Live simply, so others may simply live" >>>
> Jim, to answer your question in .459 (?) - the term 'girlie' is in no
> way equivalent to the term 'buddy'.
manisha,
I considered it to precisely the same. When I got home this evening
I related this discussion to my wife and asked her thoughts.
She accepted thge "girlie" term as an equivalent. She also suggested
Hon, Honey, Sweetie and Sweetthing as viable equivalents.
Folks, either this is fair for both genders or it's not. I do not care
how you feel about the Hill/Thomas issue, I do not care how you feel
about sexual harrasssment, but I DO care about fairness. And I will
fight for it. And I will not let it drop without an official statement
of policy from the moderators.
Jim
|
1004.485 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 21:54 | 18 |
| <<< Note 1004.472 by FMNIST::olson "friend of the family" >>>
> -< He *did* bring it on himself. >-
>if Wayne considers himself personally degraded by the sarcastic greeting
>"buddy" he'll be just as damaged by being told he brought it on himself as
>a rape victim is damaged when told the same thing. Yeah. Right. Get real.
DougO, So now we get BOTH arguments."He asked for it" AND "He wasn't harrassed
THAT much".
Better and Better.
Jim
P.S. Wayne, I'm sorry this goes beyond your wishes. But a fairly important
principle is at stake (IMHO) and I will continue this contest, on my
behalf, not yours.
|
1004.486 | The big reply | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 21:59 | 46 |
| > Do you really mean truce?
Yes I do.
> Do you concede anything?
What am I to concede. All I did was take a position that nothing
was proven by the circus that we watched on TV.
> Or do you tire of the discussion and you think this is the
> easiest way out?
I do tire of the attacks and counter attacks. Not very productive.
> Have you heard *anything* we have said?
Of course.
> Does it hurt us if you haven't? probably not now, but later perhaps.
I don't know.
> Are you listening? probably not now, but later....I pray you might.
Yes I am. But you must understand it is from my prospective ( I am
only being honest ).
> Harassment is REAL. Harassment HAPPENS. It has happened to ME. It
> could perceivably happen to YOU. What will you do when nobody listens
> and tells you to have a nice day?
It has also happened to me and someone very close to me. But I can
not stomach unsupported and unproven allegations against anyone. That
to me is just plain wrong. I am not going to insult anyone here but I
have been insulted. Some of the people her should not be casting
stones.
Hollis Wayne Linville
NSU/ULTRIX team
CX03/02-I13
DTN 592-5548
Toodle loo
|
1004.487 | half of the answer? | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:02 | 7 |
| yes, Jim,
I _know_ that Wayne asked not to be called "Buddy." Can you point me to
an instance where someone addressed him as "Buddy" after his request?
Ann Johnston
=wn=comod
|
1004.488 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:11 | 43 |
| <<< Note 1004.475 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> It is ALSO "NOT THE CASE" that someone said "Listen Buddy" to Wayne
> in this topic!
To the moderators:
I stand corrected.
I ammend my question to the parse, ",girlie".
Jim
Suzanne,
> It's interesting how I seem to be almost begged to USE the so-called
> "magic words" by Wayne, yet you seem to be daring me to say something
> that will allow YOU to use the "magic words" against me.
I do not "dare" anything. I stated a simple fact.
Test me. (Now THAT'S a "dare")
>If you intended to threaten
> harassment charges against me (or anyone else here) - message
> received, Jim! (It is Jim, isn't it?) Just checking. :)
Yes, It's Jim, or James Michael, or Mr. Percival. I will answer to
those.
> Every demonstration of the real truth behind the so-called "magic words"
> is helpful to prove what some of us have been trying to point out all
> along about the way women are treated in these cases.
As is the defense offered of the term ",buddy" (did I get it right
this time?) by the men in this Conference.
> Thanks again!
You are quite welcome, THANK YOU!
James (Jim) Michael Percival
|
1004.489 | | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:14 | 22 |
| Let me see if I have this straight.
You are asking if the term "buddy" and "girlie" are equivalent. I
would not have thought so previously, but it seems there is sufficient
evidence of dander and hurt herein to change my perceptions somewhat.
You say your interest is in fairness. This is wonderful, because
fairness is a big priority with me as well. I'm completely serious.
Wayne [and by extension] the noting community has been asked not to
sign off "have a nice day." Many people have expressed a distaste for
the specific belittling terms you've called out as examples. Now we've
all been put on notice that 'buddy' is distasteful and offensive.
Fair is fair. An impartial, if draconian, hand would summarily delete
all occurences of the offending phrases once the offense was made
known.
Is this the action you are urging upon us?
Ann Johnston
=wn=comod
|
1004.490 | cmr | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:18 | 12 |
| re.488
it's a nit.
after re-parsing, my answer still stands.
I've gone on record as saying I find "girlie" [and the others that your
wife equated to same] offensive.
Ann Johnston
=wn= comod
|
1004.491 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:30 | 37 |
| <<< Note 1004.487 by MEMIT::JOHNSTON "bean sidhe" >>>
> I _know_ that Wayne asked not to be called "Buddy." Can you point me to
> an instance where someone addressed him as "Buddy" after his request?
> Ann Johnston
> =wn=comod
Ann, No I cannot. But is an offensive term to be allowed for a single
reply? I did not join this argument concerning the term itself,
but as a reponse to the "defense" offered by one of your comods
(Wayne had already responded with his displeasure at the remark).
Is "men-bashing" to be allowed simply because this file in named
"Womennotes"?
I do not engage in this discussion to simply be contentious. I want
to know the "rules" under which it is to be played.
As I have said, fair is fair. What is allowed for some, must be allowed
for all. If the ",buddy" comment is allowed to stand then the FIRST
occurence of other offesive terms must be allowed until such time as
someone objects to MY using them in a PARTICULAR context in a SPECIFIC
reply.
Let be be honest, I'm not out for "blood" here. But I do see an
injustice that should, no MUST, be rectified. It is not "OK" for
women to "bash" men because of past injustices (IMHO). The phrase
"two wrongs don't make a right" has value here.
As you may have guessed, I feel strongly about this issue. Strongly
enough to pursue it to it's conclusion.
Not trying to make your mod duties more difficult,
Jim
|
1004.492 | | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | on the wings of maybe | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:36 | 10 |
| re: .486
Thank you.
Sincerely, thank you for responding from the gut, honestly.
I appreciate it.
-Jody
|
1004.493 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:39 | 19 |
| RE: .491 James Michael Percival
In the interest of fairness, it would seem that you are ALSO
suggesting that every single reply Wayne wrote in this topic
with the signoff "Have a Nice Day" should be deleted (including
the first instance.) Is this true?
Or do you still contend that you should be allowed to find
serious offense at the nickname 'buddy' (even though NO ONE
has used the term since it was called offensive,) but that
we should NOT be allowed to call Wayne's use of "Have a
Nice Day" offensive (even though he continued to use it over
and over and over and over after it was pointed out to him)?
If you hold that the 'buddy' note should be addressed by the
mods, then you must also hold that every single one of the
"Have a Nice Day" notes be addressed in the same way.
Do you believe in fairness or not?
|
1004.494 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:40 | 30 |
| <<< Note 1004.489 by MEMIT::JOHNSTON "bean sidhe" >>>
> Wayne [and by extension] the noting community has been asked not to
> sign off "have a nice day." Many people have expressed a distaste for
> the specific belittling terms you've called out as examples. Now we've
> all been put on notice that 'buddy' is distasteful and offensive.
> Fair is fair. An impartial, if draconian, hand would summarily delete
> all occurences of the offending phrases once the offense was made
> known.
> Is this the action you are urging upon us?
As an issue of "fairness", I would agree to that action. Of course
I could reply that I find the signoff
Ann Johnston
=wn=comod
offensive and ask that the same action be taken.
Ann, a sarcastic remark (even if it was intended as such) is surely
not the same as using the term "buddy" (or "girlie for that matter).
As I said, I'm not in this for the fight, but I AM in this for the
principle involved.
I just want to know how this will "play out".
Jim
|
1004.495 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:48 | 15 |
| By the way, James Michael Percival - does your threat of charging
me with sexual harassment if I call you "precious" extend to any
and all nicknames anyone chooses to call you here (such as "friend,"
or "pal"?) Just checking so we'll all know where you stand.
Doesn't it strike you as odd that Prof. Hill's charges (about
Thomas's descriptions of pornography, sexual prowess claims, etc.)
were not enough to keep him from being confirmed for the Supreme
Court - YET YOU SEEM TO FEEL THAT YOU COULD MAKE A SOLID CASE
OF SEXUAL HARASSMENT AGAINST A WOMAN AT DIGITAL IF SHE WERE TO
CALL YOU "PRECIOUS"?
Doesn't that tell you that even YOU are aware of how badly women
are treated in these cases (no matter which side we find ourselves
on?)
|
1004.496 | laugh | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:56 | 13 |
| Hey people,
Is this discussion about a simple phase "have a nice day"
worthy of adult professionals. I think not. Some may not like the
phrase but it does not insult anyone. I will not use it anymore in this
string but I will not promise not to use it again. I AM NOT INSULTING
ANYONE. Please don't lose your sense of humor, life is hard enough.
I'll send you all flowers, ( heck send me flowers ) if we can just
laugh a little. Let's argue about important things not "have a nice
day".
w!a!y!n!e! bang bang
|
1004.497 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:58 | 23 |
| <<< Note 1004.495 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> Doesn't it strike you as odd that Prof. Hill's charges (about
> Thomas's descriptions of pornography, sexual prowess claims, etc.)
> were not enough to keep him from being confirmed for the Supreme
> Court - YET YOU SEEM TO FEEL THAT YOU COULD MAKE A SOLID CASE
> OF SEXUAL HARASSMENT AGAINST A WOMAN AT DIGITAL IF SHE WERE TO
> CALL YOU "PRECIOUS"?
> Doesn't that tell you that even YOU are aware of how badly women
> are treated in these cases (no matter which side we find ourselves
> on?)
No, frankly it does not. I listened to the testimony. I made a judgement
on which person was more believeable (IMHO). I stated quite clearly
that if Thomas made the remarks attributed to him that he should NOT
be confirmed. There is no oddity here. I simply came to a different
conclusion that you did on whom to believe. Have differing opinions
now become "odd"?
Jim
|
1004.498 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 22:59 | 31 |
| RE: .494 James Michael Percival
> As an issue of "fairness", I would agree to that action. Of course
> I could reply that I find the signoff
> Ann Johnston
> =wn=comod
> offensive and ask that the same action be taken.
So, "fairness" is not your goal, then. I see.
> Ann, a sarcastic remark (even if it was intended as such) is surely
> not the same as using the term "buddy" (or "girlie for that matter).
So, you're still trying to suggest that you should be allowed to define
the word "buddy" as harassing and offensive, while you still fight
against our descriptions of "Have a Nice Day" as being sarcastic (and
offensive to us in this context.)
"Fairness" really *isn't* your goal in this, is it?
> As I said, I'm not in this for the fight, but I AM in this for the
> principle involved.
Well, "fairness" isn't your principle (as you've indicated,) so what
is it?
> I just want to know how this will "play out".
Oh. I think I just realized what your "principle" is.
|
1004.499 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 17 1991 23:03 | 16 |
| <<< Note 1004.498 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
Suzanne,
I'll make a suggestion.
I've extracted this string.
You send me E-mail using the appelation "Precious", I'll send you
mail with the closing "Have a nice Day".
We'll let Personnel decide.
Up for it?
Jim
|
1004.500 | At least I got an .x00 out of all this! Where's Dan?? :-) | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 23:04 | 11 |
|
RE: .496 Wayne
The discussion is now about how Jim Percival wants to "play
it out to the end" that someone called you "buddy" in this
conference (and whether or not it is against conference policy
and/or Digital's Corporate Policy.)
Talk to him about his sense of humor. I'm getting a wonderful
chuckle out of all this myself.
|
1004.501 | I don't know | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 23:10 | 11 |
| Suzzanne,
Why is it you do not seem to have a middle ground. I am very
serious about this question. I don't know how I or any man who differs
with you can discuss anything. You will not allow a middle ground for
understanding. I have known you for over five years yet I don't know
you. To argue and discuss and laugh is fun, to argue and argue and
argue is, well, for me sad.
One clown down
|
1004.503 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 23:31 | 19 |
| RE: .501 Wayne
> I don't know how I or any man who differs with you can discuss
> anything.
You *don't* know, Wayne. I do, though. It's easy.
> You will not allow a middle ground for understanding.
The middle ground has to be somewhere on the planet, that's all. :-)
> To argue and discuss and laugh is fun, to argue and argue and
> argue is, well, for me sad.
Lighten up, Wayne. It ain't all that tragic. (As I mentioned in my
last note to you, I've found a great deal to chuckle about during all
this. I just have to remember not to call that other fella "prec...")
Never mind. :)
|
1004.504 | help | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Thu Oct 17 1991 23:32 | 7 |
| This is escalating far beyond what is healthy. The ears are shut and
the mouths they are agape. Can some moderate voices out there help here
please.
What the h*ll have a whatever
|
1004.502 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 23:41 | 25 |
| RE: .499 James Michael Percival
> You send me E-mail using the appelation "Precious", I'll send you
> mail with the closing "Have a nice Day".
> We'll let Personnel decide.
> Up for it?
Are you serious? My whole POINT is that you and I both KNOW that
you're far likelier to be successful at a sexual harassment charge
against a woman for calling you "precious" than a woman would be if
she came forward about receiving sexual propositions, descriptions
of pornography and improper TOUCHING at the workplace!!
Your suggestion only verifies what *I've* been trying to tell you!
(By the way, NO ONE here claimed that "have a nice day" was any form
of sexual harassment. I need to mention this to keep dodging both
the accusations that I/we accused him of sexual harassment along with
your persistent overt and implied threats of charging me with it if
I ever dare to call you "precious.")
The whole "precious" thing was a joke anyway - I was trying to see if
you liked it better than being called "buddy"... (I guess not.)
|
1004.505 | Are we having fun yet? :-) :-) | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Thu Oct 17 1991 23:48 | 2 |
|
|
1004.506 | speaking from experience | TLE::TLE::D_CARROLL | A woman full of fire | Fri Oct 18 1991 01:33 | 10 |
| >It might work.
>There would be no debate, because we would only allow ONE opinion.
Say what? You have clearly never been involved with a group of women
making decisions. There is *always* debate. If you want to be
insulting to women, at least stick to the stereotype, which isn't that
there is no debate but that there is so *much* processing and debate
that nothing gets done.
D!
|
1004.507 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 18 1991 05:34 | 66 |
| All this stuff about whether or not the word "buddy" can be defined
as against Corporate Policy because Jim Percival says he is offended
by it - it's a useless rathole.
If someone decided that the word "book" were offensive, the Corporation
would NOT back the person up in his/her quest to get everyone at DEC to
stop using the word. It would NOT be enough for the individual to tell
everyone that using the word "book" is offensive and that they would all
be guilty of harassment if they insist on using it.
This is NOT what sexual harassment is about!!! It is NOT a power given
to women to define anything and everything we so choose as harassment
by simply waving a wand and saying some "magic words."
I do realize that this mistaken impression is one reason some people
are so hostile and vicious to women when sexual harassment topics come up.
Sexual harassment isn't power for women. It's a trap. It leaves
a harassed person with a bunch of really LOUSY choices:
1. Put up with the harassment (even though it makes the work
environment hostile and miserable)
2. Tell the perp to "stop" (which involves the risk of being
branded as humorless or "not one of the guys")
3. Quit the job (which means an unplanned career move that
could destroy years of work, and/or appearing "unstable"
to a new employer by the sudden resignation)
4. Charge sexual harassment (which is almost totally unprovable
unless the perp has harassed so many people in front of
so many witnesses that it's gone beyond being deniable.
If the charges are presented but not proven, the harassed
person can kiss a career goodbye at this company, and
may have trouble getting work anywhere else. If harassed
again, forget EVER complaining about it - there's now a
"history" of complaining, which makes it even harder than
it was before to ever make such a charge stick.)
In other words, there are NO pleasant choices when this happens.
All the choices stink!!
Sexual harassment laws and policies are supposed to be something that
gives women POWER???? It is to laugh.
The only thing these laws really do for any of us is to provide us all
with the awareness of how wrong and unnecessary (and pathetic) it is
to treat someone this way at work. Companies like Digital know doggone
well it's bad for business to allow employees to create hostile work
environments for other employees based on their sex, creed, etc.
I won't participate in any more of these "Can we define the word 'buddy'
as offensive and harassing." If a woman went to an employer and tried to
charge sexual harassment for being called 'buddy' or even 'precious,'
she wouldn't have a *ghost* of a chance of being taken seriously.
It's trivializing and downright insulting to treat these words as being
in any way comparable to sexual harassment (and especially, as suggested
earlier, that calling someone 'buddy' in a sarcastic way is comparable
to raping someone.)
If these people want to talk about fairness in this topic, equating the
word 'buddy' with rape isn't it!
Let's move past this nonsense.
|
1004.508 | | MR4DEC::EGRACE | Lesbigay Rights = Human Rights | Fri Oct 18 1991 10:43 | 8 |
| I don't get this. "Buddy" is a term meaning "friend". "Girlie" is a
term meaning, at best, little girl, and usually "cheap, sleazy,
sideshow stripper". How are these two term similar?
At best, the parallel term for "girlie" would be "boy", or "little
boy".
E Grace
|
1004.509 | (2cents worth) | DLO15::DAWSON | | Fri Oct 18 1991 10:47 | 12 |
| RE: last 40 or 50.....or so
*GOOD LORD!* :-)
BTW.... *I'm* going to have a "nice day"...ya'll can have whatever
you want. So....whatever you want for yourself today in the way of
wishes.....I send them!
Dave
|
1004.510 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | Thinking globally, acting locally! | Fri Oct 18 1991 11:03 | 9 |
| I think one way to look at the last (seems like thousands) of notes
is to take them as a wonderful demonstration of how a few loud mouths
can derail discussion from the substantive issues to the trivial is-
sues, assuring that the substantive issues never get addressed.
And when those voices stand for maintenance of the status quo,
and they succesfully employ these tactics, they win.
Atlant
|
1004.511 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | Thinking globally, acting locally! | Fri Oct 18 1991 11:10 | 9 |
| Way back in .390, Kathy Maxham suggested what may be *THE* solution,
but if it's not, it's certainly the next step along the *PEACEFUL*
path to the solution:
Vote for people who will represent you. Elect women and
minorities so we have a truly representative government
instead of an over-privileged boys club.
Atlant
|
1004.512 | | TORRID::lee | stark raving sane | Fri Oct 18 1991 11:19 | 9 |
|
> At best, the parallel term for "girlie" would be "boy", or "little
> boy".
Funny how there's no diminutive for "boy", eh?
*A*
|
1004.513 | buddy vs girlie | CADSE::KHER | Live simply, so others may simply live | Fri Oct 18 1991 11:54 | 16 |
| Jim,
buddy vs girlie.
Buddy means a friend. Check your dictionary if you don't believe me.
There is nothing derogatory about the word itself. It is the context
that makes it derogatory.
Girlie on the other hand, is derogatory even when used for a small
girl. I wouldn't have liked it when I was eight and certainly wouldn't
like it when I'm no longer a girl.
I'm surprised that I have to spell out this difference
manisha
a noter
|
1004.514 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Fri Oct 18 1991 11:59 | 63 |
|
re .484:
> I considered it to precisely the same. When I got home this evening
> I related this discussion to my wife and asked her thoughts.
>
> She accepted thge "girlie" term as an equivalent. She also suggested
> Hon, Honey, Sweetie and Sweetthing as viable equivalents.
Oh, I get it. Your wife has the final say on what is and is not
harassment (a previous reply of yours) and on what's derogatory and
not, but all other women's feelings and opinions aren't worth shit.
> Folks, either this is fair for both genders or it's not. I do not care
> how you feel about the Hill/Thomas issue, I do not care how you feel
> about sexual harrasssment, but I DO care about fairness
Bullshit, Jim. If you didn't care how we felt about the Hill/Thomas
affair, then why did you enter over a dozen replies arguing with those
who registered an opposite opinion over the case. It doesn't wash, Jim.
You *do* (or at least did) care.
Fairness? Jim, if you *really* cared about fairness, and I say
this with dead seriousness, then you should damn well be able to
see that women have been treated FAR less fairly than men for
thousands of years!! Why not fight against that unfairness since
it is so much worse?! Methinks you only care about fairness when
*yours* is at stake, even though it's only 1/1000 of what women
have experienced. And, no, Jim, I'm not taking your *wife's* word
for it.
re .485:
>P.S. Wayne, I'm sorry this goes beyond your wishes. But a fairly important
> principle is at stake (IMHO) and I will continue this contest, on my
> behalf, not yours.
"Contest"? So you wish to keep on with this "macho" display of yours,
Jim? It might work in other files, but we see it for what it is in
this one, and call you on it. Isn't honesty refreshing?
re .491:
> Is "men-bashing" to be allowed simply because this file in named
> "Womennotes"?
HAHAHAHHAHA!! We go around in circles. Jim, I've been in this file
for 5 years and you won't be the first *man* to accuse the file of
this. It's been tried dozens of times before. Most of those guys
are long gone. *I'm* still here. In fact, one man even went as far
as personnel a year ago. You know what? Personnel didn't care! They
saw nothing wrong with what went down in this file. And I can tell
you, the file sure hasn't changed much since then.
> As I have said, fair is fair.
re your diatribe about fairness - it falls on deaf ears. Why?
I *guarantee* you that every woman in here has been treated less
fairly than *you*, Jim Percival, in her life. You experience a
1/1000th of what we've experienced and you start to cry and whine
about it. Come up with a real life unfairness that's been
perpetrated on you and we might listen.
|
1004.515 | | EVETPU::RUST | | Fri Oct 18 1991 11:59 | 6 |
| And now for something completely flippant: See HYDRA::DAVE_BARRY note
703 on "The Hearings". [Hint: He doesn't comment on either the
candidate or the star witness - which is a relief, considering how many
other people do - but has a lot of fun with the committee.]
-b
|
1004.516 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | all I need is the air.... | Fri Oct 18 1991 12:03 | 3 |
| Boy am I glad I no longer have a terminal at home ...
|
1004.517 | | CADSE::KHER | Live simply, so others may simply live | Fri Oct 18 1991 12:09 | 9 |
| Thank you -b. I need that.
BTW, I don't want to banish either the term 'buddy' or the phrase 'have
a nice day' from Notes. They are cheerful and nice in my world. But I
do find it offensive when someone says have a nice day in a nasty note.
I also find it offensive when people write nasty replies and put
smileys at the bottom. It appears very hypocritical to me.
manisha
|
1004.518 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Fri Oct 18 1991 12:38 | 18 |
| As with so many things, it sometimes isn't so much what you say, but
how it is you said. Without the cues derived from body language,
or from voice tone, the interpretation of the written word is
at the mercy of the reader, not the writer. The smiley faces
are a poor substitute for even the slightest of inflections
of the voice. It is the responsibility of the writer to
communicate with sufficient precision to ensure that the point
to be made is made in such a way that minimizes the possibility
of being misunderstood. This is difficult, and not always
accomplished. Remember that your reader may not only have a
different outlook, but may be in a different frame of mind than
what you may have in mind when you write. When you are misunderstood
in written communications, it is your fault for writing imprecisely!
I forget all of this as much, possibly more, than anyone,
but it does bear reminding (if only for myself) from time to time.
Tom_K
|
1004.519 | | CFSCTC::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, OO-R-US | Fri Oct 18 1991 12:39 | 10 |
| <<< Note 1004.504 by CSC32::W_LINVILLE >>>
>> This is escalating far beyond what is healthy. The ears are shut and
>> the mouths they are agape. Can some moderate voices out there help here
>> please.
I like to think, on better days, that I can be a moderating voice. And
I have find your notes to be rude, sarcastic, and not really worth the
effort it takes to hit next-unseen.
Of course, this might not be one of my better days ;^)...
|
1004.520 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Fri Oct 18 1991 12:51 | 52 |
| <<< Note 1004.514 by BLUMON::GUGEL "koatamundi whiteout" >>>
> Oh, I get it. Your wife has the final say on what is and is not
> harassment (a previous reply of yours) and on what's derogatory and
> not, but all other women's feelings and opinions aren't worth shit.
Since I am a man I recognize that my upbringing and experiences
to date may have colored my reactions and feelings when it comes
to women's issues. I often asked my wife's opinion in matters of
this type because she is a woman for whom I have a great deal of
respect and admiration. She has been sexually harrassed and in
fact was fired from a position becasue she would not sleep with
the "boss".
> Bullshit, Jim. If you didn't care how we felt about the Hill/Thomas
> affair, then why did you enter over a dozen replies arguing with those
> who registered an opposite opinion over the case. It doesn't wash, Jim.
> You *do* (or at least did) care.
If the discussion was still about the Hill/Thomas issue, you would
have a point. Since it is not, you do not.
> this with dead seriousness, then you should damn well be able to
> see that women have been treated FAR less fairly than men for
> thousands of years!!
So then it is your opinion that a little "get even" is called
for? And more importantly, justified?
>Why not fight against that unfairness since
> it is so much worse?! Methinks you only care about fairness when
> *yours* is at stake, even though it's only 1/1000 of what women
> have experienced. And, no, Jim, I'm not taking your *wife's* word
> for it.
I have fought for "women's issues" in the past and I expect that
I will do so in the future. But those issues were only coincidently
"women's issues". In other words I didn't fight for them becasue
they were about "women", I fought for them because they were about
unequal treatment. Exactly the same issue that we have here.
> HAHAHAHHAHA!! We go around in circles. Jim, I've been in this file
> for 5 years and you won't be the first *man* to accuse the file of
> this. It's been tried dozens of times before. Most of those guys
> are long gone. *I'm* still here.
If I were the first to make such an accusation, then maybe it could
be dismissed. But when "dozens" make the accusation maybe it's time
to re-examine as to whether they are true.
Jim
|
1004.521 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 18 1991 13:33 | 9 |
| If Jim wants to think he has been treated unfairly here because
the file didn't drop to its knees and beg forgiveness after a
woman calling a man "buddy" once was defined by Jim as offensive
- then so what.
The kind of "fairness" he seeks here is for us to grant him the
distorted perception he has of sexual harassment laws and policies.
Oh well. Maybe he'll catch on in the 21st Century.
|
1004.522 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Fri Oct 18 1991 13:46 | 4 |
|
re .518: that's good advice for all of us to remember, Tom.
Thanks.
|
1004.523 | co-mod plea: let it go... | TLE::TLE::D_CARROLL | A woman full of fire | Fri Oct 18 1991 13:52 | 14 |
| Please, please, please, folks, this is getting out of hand. It seems
we are really arguing over nothing, and creating an issue where there
is none.
The Thomas/Hill issue is a volatile one, and a lot of people have a lot
of emotion vested in it. Tempers are on edge; let's please try to
remember that, and discuss issues rather than personalities. I think
this discussion can go *back* to being productive if we all just take a
little extra care not to step on people's toes and to not respond with
a knee-jerk to other people's pushing *our* buttons.
Thanks in advance for being well-mannered and relevent.
D!, =wn= co-moderator
|
1004.524 | Yours for straigher parallelism | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Oct 18 1991 13:59 | 22 |
| I consider the term "lady" to be equivalent to "buddy", (E.g.,
"Hey, lady!" and "Hey, buddy!".) and certainly far closer to it
than "girlie". We have, many times, let the term "ladies", generally
in the phrase "you ladies", stand in this conference.
So, I could argue that, to be fair, if a man objects to the term
"buddy", then women are entitled to object to the term "lady", and
to claim that notes containing it should be stricken from this
conference. However, I will not so argue, because I don't believe
it. Thus, if Jim wishes to be fair, he should (perhaps after
consulting his wife and getting her stamp of approval on his
opinion that "buddy" and "lady" are even more similar than "buddy"
and "girlie") cease arguing that uses of "buddy" should be stricken.
Naturally, since I try to be fair, I must point out that Jim is under
no such obligation.
Ann B.
P.S. I couldn't help but notice that Wayne's closing salutation is
*not* present in his initial entry in this string, and that this
undermines Jim's claim of customary-ness, made on Wayne's behalf.
|
1004.525 | An Appeal | TERZA::ZANE | for who you are | Fri Oct 18 1991 14:03 | 48 |
|
What a truly unbelievable and sad string of notes. I sat here and read
them all with my mouth hanging open.
A little tolerance and the commitment to explore and resolve
miscommunications and misunderstandings might go a long way here.
I can definitely see why Wayne's "Have a Nice Day" *could* be interpreted
as a sarcastic ending to a sarcastic reply. I can also definitely see
how he might not have meant *anything* by signing off that way,
especially when it has been shown that he generally signs off that way.
I can also see how "buddy" might be construed as insulting. Equally so
for "girlie." I can see how it was intended as insulting in the
particular case it was used in this string.
I do not see how this tit-for-tat can be compared with the serious of
sexual harrassment. It doesn't make any sense and I have to wonder about
expending so much energy on oneupmanship.
I cannot see requiring a person to remove a signoff phrase simply because
some people find it insulting. I can see telling that person how you
feel about it, how it affects you. If that person chooses to change the
signoff, or *compromise* on some middle territory, we could consider that
person understanding, and willing to work for "us," for "our
communications," but I certainly could not consider it "my victory, my
score." I would consider it "our victory" and a step forward in "our"
communications -- our commitment to each other. If that person made no
change whatsoever, I would consider it "our" loss, because we were not
able to reach an agreement.
We always scream for equal consideration. Let's give it its due.
{ I can understand why something I do or say may hurt you or you may }
{ find offensive. I can examine that behavior or saying and either }
{ modify it in general or specifically for you, or, I can }
( acknowledge that *you* don't like it and continue it and *realize* }
{ that we may not become or remain friends. But you cannot and may }
{ not *restrict* my behavior and statements. You can hope that I }
{ might some day see your point. I can hope that someday you might }
{ understand mine. }
Does this make sense?
Terza
|
1004.526 | me too. | CSC32::PITT | | Fri Oct 18 1991 14:08 | 10 |
|
repply .506 (D!)
speaking FROM experience, I disagree.
Have a day (or not) ;-)
|
1004.527 | Finished. | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Fri Oct 18 1991 14:09 | 15 |
|
The question that I posed has been answered by one of the comods.
I want to publicly thank her for the time invested over this
issue.
Thanks, Ann
I will accept the admonition from those with cooler heads that this
particular string has gone far (if not too far) enough.
On to other things.
Jim
|
1004.528 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Fri Oct 18 1991 14:33 | 14 |
| We have this "Thomas" string and we have a "when does it begin..." string that
started out with a scenerio.
I'd like to know in general if we can define harassment, and specifically,
what people would like changed in the current legal system (if anything) to
deal with harassment.
However, the immediate question is does that belong in this note, in the "when
does it begin" note or does it belong in its own string, perhaps two (defining
harassment and legal changes to deal with harassment).
What do you think we should do?
Roak
|
1004.529 | | MSBCS::HETRICK | you be me for awhile | Fri Oct 18 1991 15:37 | 7 |
| isn't it interesting how seriously Jim Percival's objections are being
taken in this file, relative to how women's objections to phrases
women find objectionable are taken in most forums?
just an observation.
cheryl
|
1004.530 | Hey | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | | Fri Oct 18 1991 18:35 | 49 |
| <<< IKE22::NOTE$:[NOTES$LIBRARY]WOMANNOTES-V3.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Topics of Interest to Women >-
================================================================================
Note 1004.519 Thomas nomination to Supreme Court 519 of 529
CFSCTC::MACKIN "Jim Mackin, OO-R-US" 10 lines 18-OCT-1991 10:39
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<<< Note 1004.504 by CSC32::W_LINVILLE >>>
>> This is escalating far beyond what is healthy. The ears are shut and
>> the mouths they are agape. Can some moderate voices out there help here
>> please.
* I like to think, on better days, that I can be a moderating voice. And
* I have find your notes to be rude, sarcastic, and not really worth the
* effort it takes to hit next-unseen.
* Of course, this might not be one of my better days ;^)...
Maybe you would prefer me to be touchy feely. That is to bad. I have
opinions and perceptions and I will express them whether you like it or
not. I have that right. What I do not have a right to do is insult and
or slander or harass an individual or group. If someone is
uncomfortable with my words we can talk. But, that does not mean I will
change them, I may or I may not. I WILL NOT BE ANYONES GOOD LITTLE BOY.
If some of the noters out there have trouble dealing with an
opinionated adult I suggest you take up gardening. I am a reasonable
person but don't try subtle harassment on me I am not stupid.
Terza,
* I cannot see requiring a person to remove a signoff phrase simply because
* some people find it insulting. I can see telling that person how you
* feel about it, how it affects you. If that person chooses to change the
* signoff, or *compromise* on some middle territory, we could consider that
* person understanding, and willing to work for "us," for "our
* communications," but I certainly could not consider it "my victory, my
* score." I would consider it "our victory" and a step forward in "our"
* communications -- our commitment to each other. If that person made no
* change whatsoever, I would consider it "our" loss, because we were not
* able to reach an agreement.
I said I would not sign off this way in this string but I don't
hear anyone recognizing or admitting that I was understanding. All I have
seen is posturing. It really seems that if a man has honey dripping all
over his tongue he is welcome here but if he takes a different view the
canons come out. I have no patience for the honey drippers or the
people who use Gestapo tactics. I wish only fairness for all of us.
Follow the yellow brick road
|
1004.531 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 18 1991 18:38 | 46 |
| RE: .528 Roak
> I'd like to know in general if we can define harassment, and
> specifically, what people would like changed in the current
> legal system (if anything) to deal with harassment.
The whole concept of how much a person can be damaged by the sworn
testimony of ONE sole accuser (with no physical evidence or witnesses
to the harassment) is a tough issue. As much as it bothers me to see
most harassment cases unprovable, I'm not sure what changes in the
legal system would improve this without infringing on someone's rights.
One thing I would definitely like to see changed, though, is the way
women are accused of "insanity" (or "not being able to distinguish
fantasy from reality" the way the Senate Judiciary Comm. characterized
Prof. Hill in the hearings) as an accepted part of the legal process
in harassment cases. It smacks of "Well, she's a woman, so we have
to take it into consideration that she's somewhat naturally NUTTY."
In Prof. Hill's case, accusing her of "fantasizing" was the only
effective way they could attempt to discredit her. It was a cheap
and shoddy ploy (and overtly sexist.) Imagine the furor if Democrats
had tried to discredit Thomas on some aspect of his race, OR had tried
to imply that he was insane for not remembering the incidents (or that
HE had fantasized his innocence.)
If I had only ONE WISH about all this - I would wish the harassment
of women at the work place would just stop! It isn't just sexual
harassment that is a problem for many women - SH is only the most
shocking example of how some/many work environments are mildly or
seriously hostile towards women (in one way or another.)
Not ALL work environments have these other hostility problems - my
own present group is a wonderful example of a great bunch of people
who treat women as equals, even though hardware engineers who happen
to be women are *vastly* outnumbered by the hardware engineers who
happen to be men in our group. I'm lucky to be part of this group.
I've seen other work environments that made work life HELL for the
women there (in ways that were so numerous and subtle that it would
take YEARS to explain it or to attempt to address it.)
It's all so doggone unnecessary (and such a waste of company resources
and time.) I hope that all the recent exposure of harassment will open
some eyes in the business community (enough to take some real steps
towards making work environments better for everyone.)
|
1004.532 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 18 1991 18:54 | 11 |
|
By the way, some of the hostility directed towards women in
this string is an example of the attitudes that contribute
to the hostile work environments that some/many women face
in the workplace.
It may not erupt into overt screaming at women at work the
way it's done to women here in the file, but some real life
situations convey many of these same attitudes without the
volume.
|
1004.533 | Behavior, not legal, change | IAMOK::WASKOM | | Fri Oct 18 1991 19:29 | 22 |
| IN response to the query "What needs to change in the legal system"?
I'm not sure that more/new/different *laws* are the real need. Taking
issues of this sort to court is usually (still) a counter-productive
way of dealing with discomforting behavior. For egregious cases, the
law we have seems adequate.
What does seem to be needed is improvement in willingness to treat all
people as competent, able individuals who deserve to have their work
life be as hassle-free as is consistent with the *work* content of what
needs to be accomplished. A corollary of this need is for those who
are the targets of harassing behavior to be taken seriously when they
report it. Some folks *are* more sensitive than others. Some folks
*do* have a lower threshold for teasing. Some folks are less assertive
in letting people know when they are hurt. But those folks deserve to
have the opportunity to do their best work just as much as those who
have the hide of a rhinocerous or the self-image/esteem that enables
them to be directly confrontive. :-) In a lot of ways, it is another
difference which deserves to be recognized, valued, and merged into the
work place.
Alison
|
1004.534 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Fri Oct 18 1991 19:29 | 20 |
| <<< Note 1004.531 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> In Prof. Hill's case, accusing her of "fantasizing" was the only
> effective way they could attempt to discredit her.
I don't agree that it was the only effective method that could
have been employed. There were others but they would have been
FAR worse in attacking Prof. Hill directly. The Senators took
an "easy" (compared to other methods) way out (look at MY suprise).
>It was a cheap
> and shoddy ploy (and overtly sexist.)
We actually agree on something.
>treat women as equals,
This IS the goal, after all.
Jim
|
1004.535 | two oaths? | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Fri Oct 18 1991 19:30 | 12 |
| Today Clarence Thomas was sworn in as an Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court of the United States. The news-bite I heard went on to
say that he couldn't join the other Justices in hearing cases until
he'd taken a 'second judicial oath' possibly as soon as next week.
Does anyone have information on this two-phase process? Is there a
reason that both oaths can't be administered at once?
Not that I'm in a hurry to have him sitting in and contributing ... I'm
just curious about this wrinkle.
Annie
|
1004.536 | Much work remains to reach this goal on a cultural level... | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Fri Oct 18 1991 21:03 | 12 |
| RE: .534 Jim
>> treat women as equals,
> This IS the goal, after all.
Of course! This is why I'm so lucky to be in my present group
(as I stated.)
It will be wonderful when the rest of our culture catches up to
this standard.
|
1004.537 | found the answer myself | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Sat Oct 19 1991 14:37 | 10 |
| updating .535 [two oaths]
OK, the Constitutional Oath is what Justice Thomas took yesterday.
The Judicial Oath is scheduled for 1-November.
The reason for the delay is that Chief Justice Rehnquist's wife died
and he won't be available for several days.
Annie
|
1004.538 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Mon Oct 21 1991 11:37 | 6 |
| <<< Note 1004.536 by CSC32::CONLON "Dreams happen!!" >>>
> -< Much work remains to reach this goal on a cultural level... >-
No doubt.
Jim
|
1004.539 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Mon Oct 21 1991 11:41 | 3 |
| Reuter's polled judges around the nation to get their opinions
on Thomas/Hill. The majority (almost 60%) believed Hill and thought
that Thomas was guilty (approx. 20% believed Thomas, 20% couldn't say.)
|
1004.540 | Just a perspective or two | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | Funky Sensation | Wed Oct 23 1991 03:30 | 62 |
| I have waited.
I still have 200+ replies in this string to go over before I get to
the end. Please forgive me if any of this is redundant. I will
retract/rewrite it if I find redundacies within the next 200 replies.
I have a few perspectives that I do not think have been mentioned here.
It was pointed out elswhere that some of these factors were PAINFULLY
missing from the majority discussion.
1- Within some cultures, it is in STRONGLY bad form to discuss
improprieties performed by members of that culture. It is even more
TABU than oridinary reports. To do so is oftimes considered a
betrayal, not just of the man, but of the RACE. Hill was not just
risking her professional standing, her entire social, and racial
standing was on the line. The stigma associated with it has been
enough to keep some women quiet for generations. Ten years is a drop
in the hat relative to that.
2- Now that the fate is decided, I have a question that I am hoping
will not be TABU for me within this form. There are individuals that
claim that Anita Hill's testimony is not sufficent illustration of
Lance's possibly disturbing views towards women and SH. I will grant,
that if you were to base your opinions on that alone, you could, out
of ignorance, still hold strong faith in him.
However, I am at a loss to understand how ANYONE could ignore segments
of testimony given by CT on friday night. CT allowed a man to remain
employed for 11months AFTER it had been proven that the man MASTURBATED
in front of up to 12 female employees at the work place. When
questioned why he allowed the man to stay for almost a year to retire
with benefits, Thomas only remarked that he thought the guy was a
veteran.
Apparently for him, veteran over-rides playing with oneself at the work
place.
When asked if he thought that might have made the environment difficult
for the female employees there, he just said that there were other
factors involved. The man was the head of the EEOC, but could only
point lamely to some mystery "other factors" that kept him, with all
of his power, from removing a proven offender.
Did no one else see this as a potentially lax attitude towards SH?
3.- One only writes down what has happened, or is happening, IMO,
once one has officially decided that they will go OUTSIDE of the
immediate individual to try to rectify the problem. If one has not
decided to do that, there is no real purpose for a log. You and
the concerned party KNOW what has transpired. Only a third party
would need a log to show the happenings. If Hill did not decide
to go over his head if she had to (and there was not much room there
I might add) she would have, subsequently, no reason to log it.
4.- Why call him after the fact? She had already paid the price
of silence. She traded her job prospects and racial harmony for having
to deal with the garbage he doled out. An occasional call can be
a residual for those job prospects. Also, the semblance of civility
can prevent one from appearing bitter or hatefully. Life can be
hell in the workplace for a woman considered to be bitter or
hatefull.
Cindi
|
1004.541 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A spider's kiss | Wed Oct 23 1991 11:26 | 21 |
| >CT allowed a man to remain
> employed for 11months AFTER it had been proven that the man MASTURBATED
> in front of up to 12 female employees at the work place. When
> questioned why he allowed the man to stay for almost a year to retire
> with benefits, Thomas only remarked that he thought the guy was a
> veteran.
That is not my recollection of that testimony at all. At least, that is
not what I would consider to be an unbiased representation of the testimony
(at this point a transcript would be very useful for sorting out differences
in recollection.)
As I recall, Thomas could not summarily fire the man because he was entitled
to additional safeguards against dismissal due to the fact that he was a
veteran. In all actuality, Clarence Thomas did not have the authority to
dismiss the man. I think it is unfair to berate him for somehting he could not
legally do. Now the question remains whether he could have initiated the
long string of proceedings necessary to dismiss the man- and I don't recall
why this did not happen. There is potentially some interesting stuff in there.
The Doctah
|
1004.542 | PLEASE, Get the transcript! | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | Funky Sensation | Wed Oct 23 1991 11:36 | 20 |
| As part of my recollection.
THOMAS INITIATED that string with a letter to the man's supervisor
REQUESTING THAT HE BE FIRED. He was the HEAD of the organization.
It was 11 months AFTER that letter that the man was finally let go.
Although he was the HEAD of the organization, he claims that there
were "complications" but did not bother to share those complications
with us. Any "complications" that could prevent the head of the
organization from removing an open house putz puller for almost a
year, I would think should at least have been shared IN DEPTH with
us. He did not, however, deign to.
It was Lance's JOB. If I left a customer down for 11 months after
I determined he was down, they would not make me head of Customer
Support. Thomas did, what to me, is at least the equivalent for
his job and they made him SCJ.
I am quite shocked at the number of people that ignored this.
Cindi
|
1004.543 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 11:59 | 4 |
| Cindi, my recollection matches yours (perhaps we're both fantasizing,
you know how women are).
Sue
|
1004.544 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 23 1991 12:16 | 22 |
| <<< Note 1004.542 by NECSC::BARBER_MINGO "Funky Sensation" >>>
> THOMAS INITIATED that string with a letter to the man's supervisor
> REQUESTING THAT HE BE FIRED. He was the HEAD of the organization.
> It was 11 months AFTER that letter that the man was finally let go.
> Although he was the HEAD of the organization, he claims that there
> were "complications" but did not bother to share those complications
> with us. Any "complications" that could prevent the head of the
> organization from removing an open house putz puller for almost a
> year, I would think should at least have been shared IN DEPTH with
> us. He did not, however, deign to.
You must remember that Thomas was not "sharing" with us (the general
public) he was answering questions for the Committee. Given the
terribly convoluted process of firing someone with a civil service
rating, I'm not suprised that it would take nearly a year to terminate
the jerk. I would guess that Thomas did not elaborate because the
Senators were quite familiar with the problem of civil service
protections AND terminations (even for cause). The fact that they
did not ask him to clarify also seems to point in this direction.
Jim
|
1004.545 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 12:19 | 27 |
| There were discrepancies in Thomas' testimony that I wish he had been
questioned on. He said that several times he drove Anita Hill home
and then went into her apartment to continue their discussion and
to have a coke (he certainly has a thing for coke); he said that it was
perfectly proper because her roommate was present. Her roommate says
that these visits never happened, that Thomas was only in their
apartment once, shortly after Hill was hired, that the visit was brief,
uncomfortable and never repeated. They had people who barely knew
Anita Hill, like the Amazing Doggett, testifying about their opinions
of her emotional stability but they didn't bother to bring in Hill's
roommate who could contradict Thomas.
Also, Thomas said he made a point of keeping his personal and
professional lives separate (this doesn't jive with his saying
he liked to drink coke in Hill's kitchen with her and her roommate,
but, hey! ). However, at least two of the women who worked for
Thomas and testified in support said that they had close personal
friendships with Thomas, that he discussed with them the pain of his
divorce, his son, the women he was dating.
Anita Hill's testimony was said to be inconsistent because she gave
more details to the Senate then she gave to the FBI, yet Thomas was
never questioned about inconsistencies. Why were there two standards
used?
Sue
|
1004.546 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 12:23 | 7 |
| re: .544
The fact that the Senate did not ask Thomas to clarify doesn't
point to the complexity of the matter as much as it points
to how soft they were questioning him.
Sue
|
1004.547 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 23 1991 12:28 | 14 |
|
The Senate Judiciary Committee was *very* soft on Thomas - and
who could blame them after Thomas reminded them he's black and
called the proceeding a "high-tech lynching."
I thought Thomas was conservative and very critical of the idea
of making race "an issue." Perhaps he only thinks it's proper
when HE does it.
Prof. Hill didn't tell the Senate Judiciary Committee they were
"raping" her, or anything. She didn't make her race OR sex an
issue.
It's a sad episode, all in all.
|
1004.548 | And the dismissal of the woman was much easier? | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | Funky Sensation | Wed Oct 23 1991 12:33 | 22 |
| Re .544-
On the other hand, a woman who called a fellow co-worker a faggot
was released with haste. It did not take 11 months to get rid of her.
He seems to have had no problems with those "well known civil service"
difficulties in her case.
So, is it the fact that she was a woman that made it easier to get
around those lengthy pieces of civil service red tape?
Had she been a veteran, would she have gotten to stay until
retirement?
... or, is calling a man a faggot, in the opinions and actions
of our fine man CT, a more motivating offense that wanking off
in the work place?
These questions all come up for me. You had a good defense there,
if it hadn't been for two things. They DID ask him why it took
him so long, a couple of times, but just like with many other things,
he just didn't ANSWER them. The second thing is there is a discrepency
in his treatment of the situations and actions between men and women,
that for me, made him HIGHLY suspect (to be kind).
|
1004.549 | Warning! Unctuous sarcasm follows. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Oct 23 1991 12:42 | 11 |
1004.550 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 12:58 | 23 |
| Yet another thing that I found bizarre about the hearings: Orrin
Hatch kept going on and on about how hideous Hill's charges were,
how the actions she alleged were beyond comprehension by any sane
person, how anyone who had said such things belonged in a "mental
hospital." Obviously, the life experience of a male senator
is very different from my own. Since I was twelve years
old, I've heard men yelling similar things from their cars, from
construction sites. Surely, they weren't all escapees from
institutions?
And then Thomas, who friends have reported sometimes relaxes
by watching porno movies, agreed with ol' Orrin that such
things were truly horrifying, that a man would have to be an insane
pervert to behave in such a way. BOING! BOGGLE!
The thing of it is, I don't think what Thomas is alleged to have
done and said is all that unusual or disgusting. If someone I
knew casually said such things I would think he was a crass boor
but I wouldn't think he was crazy. What was wrong about the behavior
Hill alleged was that it was done by someone with power to a
woman who depended on him for her job.
Sue
|
1004.551 | The 'He is not insane!' defense... | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:05 | 12 |
| Orrin Hatch's logic was amazing -
A man would have to be insane to say such things...
No one is accusing Clarence Thomas of being insane
(and we all know he isn't insane...)
Someone *is* accusing Prof. Hill of fantasizing...
Therefore, Thomas could *not possibly* have said
these things...
Prof. Hill must have just fantasized them...
His argument was pretty hideous in itself.
|
1004.552 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:20 | 6 |
| From what I've read, most of the public support for Thomas has
come from the blue collar class, not the professional class.
Consistent with this, I heard a report that Thomas has very little
support among college-educated blacks. Why would this be?
Sue
|
1004.553 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:24 | 14 |
| <<< Note 1004.546 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
> The fact that the Senate did not ask Thomas to clarify doesn't
> point to the complexity of the matter as much as it points
> to how soft they were questioning him.
I wasn't refering to the complexity of the process, just the
Senator's familiarity with civil service regulations.
Jim
Sue
|
1004.554 | RE: .552 | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:25 | 5 |
|
A recent survey of Judges indicates that 60% or so believed
Prof. Hill's testimony - so Thomas doesn't have widespread
support among people in his own "profession" either.
|
1004.555 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:27 | 11 |
| <<< Note 1004.548 by NECSC::BARBER_MINGO "Funky Sensation" >>>
> On the other hand, a woman who called a fellow co-worker a faggot
> was released with haste. It did not take 11 months to get rid of her.
How long did it take? Was she civil service? Please note that
Anita Hill's civil service rating would have made her very
difficult (if not impossible) to fire. So it might have more
to do with the job someone has rather than their gender.
Jim
|
1004.556 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:33 | 14 |
| re: .553
well, one would think the Senate was also familiar with the
status of level A employees within the civil service yet that
didn't stop them from going on and on about that. Could it
be that the level A thing helped Thomas and the not firing the
masturbator hurt him? could that possibly be why it wasn't gone
into? but no, shame on me for suggesting such a thing, we all
know how the Senate was only motivated be a desire for truth,
justice and the American way, and weren't into shoddy things like
making sure Bush's choice got on the Supreme Court no matter what.
Sue
|
1004.557 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A spider's kiss | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:43 | 29 |
| > THOMAS INITIATED that string with a letter to the man's supervisor
> REQUESTING THAT HE BE FIRED.
Yes, I remember now. How is it you find fault with Clarence Thomas for this
action? Requesting that someone be fired from their job for pulling out their
penis is coddling, right? How come he didn't take it upon himself to cut
it off?
> It was 11 months AFTER that letter that the man was finally let go.
This is clearly Thomas' fault, right? he should have been shown the door
before he even had a chance to put it away, and civil service protections be
damned, right?
> On the other hand, a woman who called a fellow co-worker a faggot
> was released with haste. It did not take 11 months to get rid of her.
> He seems to have had no problems with those "well known civil service"
> difficulties in her case.
She was not the same classification of employee and did not have the same
type of protections afforded her. He had the power to summarily fire her. But
as Ann said, he only fired her for not putting out. Or maybe it was that
she wasn't good enough. Or maybe she didn't share the appropriate perversions.
The sky's the limit, right?
You seem to be ignoring facts that are not helpful to your case.
Nothing like some good old fashioned dehumanizing demonization...
|
1004.558 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:47 | 7 |
| There is no record that Angela Wright was fired for calling
someone a faggot. According to Thomas' secretary, Wright was let
go because she did not pass her bar exam in the time given her.
The only one who said Wright called someone a faggot was Clarence
Thomas, who had good reason for discrediting her.
Sue
|
1004.559 | you've gotta be kidding | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A spider's kiss | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:51 | 7 |
| >but no, shame on me for suggesting such a thing, we all
> know how the Senate was only motivated be a desire for truth,
> justice and the American way, and weren't into shoddy things like
> making sure Bush's choice got on the Supreme Court no matter what.
Biden's, Kennedy's, Metzenbaum's, and Heflin's vested interest in getting
Thomas confirmed was painfully obvious, wasn't it?
|
1004.560 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:53 | 3 |
| re: .559
not to me. Biden's et al vested interest in keeping their jobs was.
|
1004.561 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 13:59 | 7 |
| As chairman of the committee, Biden was the one responsible for
not bringing the Hill charges to light earlier. I think the rest
of the hearings were a mad scrambling by Biden to make himself
look good. Kennedy was obviously hampered by his and his family's
reputation as womanizers. Howell has a large black constituency
he didn't want to alienate. And Metzenbaum's almost as old as
Strom Thurmond. I thought the Hill defense was virtually non-existent.
|
1004.562 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 14:06 | 4 |
| Some columnist said that the Democrats acted like judges, the
Republicans like prosecuters.
Which left Hill with no defense.
|
1004.563 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A spider's kiss | Wed Oct 23 1991 14:18 | 12 |
| > not to me. Biden's et al vested interest in keeping their jobs was.
How so? How would bringing Thomas down cost the democrats their jobs?
> As chairman of the committee, Biden was the one responsible for
> not bringing the Hill charges to light earlier.
I have asked this question at least a half-dozen times and have yet to receive
an answer. [No implication that I asked Sue this question a half dozen times]
In light of the fact that Hill's testimony was predicated on her anonymity,
what should Biden have done to "bring the charges to light"?
|
1004.564 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 23 1991 14:35 | 22 |
| <<< Note 1004.556 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
> well, one would think the Senate was also familiar with the
> status of level A employees within the civil service yet that
> didn't stop them from going on and on about that. Could it
> be that the level A thing helped Thomas and the not firing the
> masturbator hurt him?
Sue, The level A "thing" most certainly helped Thomas, but only because
Hill claimed that she feared she would be fired if she charged
Thomas openly with harrassment. Her status as a Level A civil
service employee made this virtually impossible, so she was
either an incompetent lawyer or she lied about her motivations
and I noticed that none of the witnesses (on either side) ever
questioned her ability as an attorney.
I merely submitted that the masturbator may have also been in
a civil service protected job and that this, not some dark plot
to protect those that practiced SH, was the reason for the length
of the process.
Jim
|
1004.565 | Fact? From where?I will read it, if you have it | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | Funky Sensation | Wed Oct 23 1991 14:39 | 32 |
| I find fault with Thomas for stopping at the letter.
If there exist codes that allow veteran status to take precedence
over personal exposure, I believe, as EEOC honcho that he was, he
should have taken it to task. He could have, at the hearing, also
expounded on how INTENSELY he took it to task. I wanted him to explain
how he STRUGGLED for 11 whole months to get a true pervert out of
the office. However, when initially brought up, he claimed he didn't
even really remember the guy, or the situation. It didn't sound
like he was working very hard to take care of it, or modify the policy
while he was the man in charge of doing so. That is what I find fault
with. He wrote the letter, and let the same old mill keep the
guy in place for a year. Then he didn't remember that it happened.
I guess it just wasn't very important to him.
So far, I haven't seen any comparison of the sicko's status. There
was no indication from Thomas whatsoever as to what that status was.
There was also no mention of how his status differed from that of
Wright. You have stated that I have ignored these facts. As far
as I saw. THOMAS DID NOT PRESENT THESE FACTS! If he had, it may
have served as some mitigating factor in my considerations. I would
be very interested in seeing where YOU got these "facts" from also.
It is obvious that you appear to believe it, however, I personally
did not see it in the testimony. Is there some news paper article
that you might point me too?... or are you quoting a known personelle
policy that protects sexual offenders if they are veterans?
Cindi
P.S.- Re: Why didn't he cut it off himself? I don't know. He could
have at least slammed it in a desk drawer or file cabinet. However,
it is probable that the guy didn't play with it where Thomas could
reach it. Thomas probably wasn't alluring enough.
|
1004.566 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A spider's kiss | Wed Oct 23 1991 14:58 | 16 |
| >You have stated that I have ignored these facts. As far
> as I saw. THOMAS DID NOT PRESENT THESE FACTS!
Do you have the transcripts from the friday night testimony? Me neither, but
I remember clearly that Thomas testified that the reason for the length of
the process was due to the perpetrator's civil service classification (which
afforded him a significant level of protection) coupled with his veteran's
status (which gave him additional protections against dismissal.)
Now you can take this with a grain of salt since I forgot that Thomas had
indeed initiated proceedings to get the guy dismissed, or you can accept it,
but perhaps the most compelling thing to do would be to obtain a copy of
the transcripts or find someone who had the foresight to tape the testimony.
Frankly, the continual bellyaching at what is a done deal is really getting
on my nerves.
|
1004.567 | As indicated in his statement after the confirmation... | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 23 1991 15:02 | 10 |
| RE: .566 The Doctah
> Frankly, the continual bellyaching at what is a done deal is really
> getting on my nerves.
Clarence Thomas would love it, too, if we'd all just forget the whole
thing.
No way.
|
1004.568 | | CSC32::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Wed Oct 23 1991 15:15 | 17 |
|
By the way, I can't remember if anyone has mentioned this before...
(or if I did, even.)
One real clue into how Thomas views women was when he was asked
to describe Prof. Hill's behavior when he worked with her, and
he said she often had "temper tantrums" that had to be smoothed
over.
I was shocked that he would use that phrase in a serious way about
an adult and that the Senate Judiciary Committee didn't call him
on it.
Then again, he was talking about a woman (and they knew it) rather
than a "real" adult.
Sickening!
|
1004.570 | It won't be done now for a long time. | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | Funky Sensation | Wed Oct 23 1991 15:26 | 13 |
| Also,
it is not a done deal, as you have put it.
The remnants of this fiasco will be around to plague our offspring.
For any sons, it may not be so bad.
However, we can start moaning now for the plight of our daughters.
They will have to bear the brunt of the rulings and opinions
handed down by this man.
Cindi
|
1004.571 | Ok. I will search for transcripts. | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | Funky Sensation | Wed Oct 23 1991 15:29 | 12 |
| Re .566-
As is my nature, I shall return to the libraries of BU, and Harvard
to see if transcripts are possible.
My husband was telling me that one of the people that was sitting
behind Hill is a professor at the law school. I guess we could
ask him.
Should I retrieve anything, I will inform you ASAP.
Cindi
|
1004.572 | Mashing puds. | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | Funky Sensation | Wed Oct 23 1991 15:47 | 17 |
| Re - File cabinet for offending member.
Can you see how that complaint might go?
"Well I was sitting at my desk pulling my pud when this black
guy just walked over and closed the drawer on it! I wanted to
complain. That is such an awful thing to do. .. Especially with
me being a veteran and all! So I went to complain. But they
sent me to the head of the EEOC. .. and HE WAS THE GUY. Imagine
him assaulting a veteran that way!"
Who would he give this complaint to?
The president I guess.
Can you see it?
Cindi
|
1004.573 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 16:16 | 3 |
| re: .572
loved it! :-) :-)
|
1004.574 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 16:20 | 3 |
| I'm still cracking up picturing this guy making his complaint
to Reagan the Senile. "Um, now what was it that he mashed
in the drawer?"
|
1004.575 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Wed Oct 23 1991 17:12 | 18 |
| No doubt the senate lost their, ahem, e*******s, once Clarence used
the l-word (lynch). This showed us what kind of man he is; he who
doesn't want anyone else to benefit from AA, doesn't mind bringing
out the dirty words to benefit himself. The senate really failed Hill;
they could have quickly put the matter back on track; that is, this
is sexual harrassment folks, not racism. But they didn't. So in
essence, we women are lynched. Or at least, sent back to our kitchens,
back alleys, and typewriters.
I also wonder just how ethical it was of Bush to be standing there on
the golf course and breaking in every few hours, to assure the world,
that he is on Clarence's side. Perhaps he could have at least
listened to both sides before he made his decision? But then again,
since when does ethics or honesty or fairness come into consideration
when we're dealing with this administration.
Maia
|
1004.576 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Wed Oct 23 1991 17:24 | 35 |
| re: .564
Jim,
I think the level A employee status was discussed at the point some
senators were trying to prove that Hill could have stayed at the
dept. of Education if she chose, not as a reason why Hill could have
filed harassment charges against Thomas and not feel threatened.
The level A status for civil service people, as I understand it,
means that ultimately you work for the civil service,
not for the person who hired you. This distinguishes them from
political appointments. However, level A civil service people can
still be fired for various reasons, including not performing their
jobs well. Hill said she feared that if she were more vocal about
Thomas that she might be fired for not doing her job well; that was
why she kept a record of her work.
As for Hill filing charges of harassment against Thomas, there are
several reasons why this would have been difficult. One reason is
that in the early '80's the rules about what constituted harassment
were narrow, it had to involve physical contact not solely verbal
abuse. Another reason is that as head of the EEOC the only people
above Thomas who could be complained to were the president and a
senate committee responsible for the EEOC.
re: .563
Mark,
I think that Biden could have investigated the allegation
thoroughly even if Hill asked for anonymity. If his investigations
warranted, he could have asked Hill to appear in a private session
before the committee.
Sue
|
1004.577 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 23 1991 18:01 | 33 |
| <<< Note 1004.576 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
> The level A status for civil service people, as I understand it,
> means that ultimately you work for the civil service,
> not for the person who hired you.
Yes, and civil service personnel can be fired, but it is
not a quick nor easy process.
>One reason is
> that in the early '80's the rules about what constituted harassment
> were narrow, it had to involve physical contact not solely verbal
> abuse.
Does this mean, that under the law, what Thomas was accused of
was NOT SH?
>Another reason is that as head of the EEOC the only people
> above Thomas who could be complained to were the president and a
> senate committee responsible for the EEOC.
The EEOC did not have an office to investigate SH charges?
> I think that Biden could have investigated the allegation
> thoroughly even if Hill asked for anonymity.
You mean like maybe getting the FBI to conduct field interviews
with the parties involved?
Jim
|
1004.578 | complete = rejected nomination | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A spider's kiss | Wed Oct 23 1991 18:08 | 19 |
| > I think that Biden could have investigated the allegation
> thoroughly even if Hill asked for anonymity.
What happened? The FBI investigated the allegations at the committee's
behest. The senators on the committee examined the report. How much more
thoroughly should they have "investigated" the allegation? What other
agency or group of people should have gotten involved? In what manner?
>If his investigations
> warranted, he could have asked Hill to appear in a private session
> before the committee.
And what if the investigations didn't warrant? I cannot escape the
conclusion that what constitutes a complete investigation is what amounts
to a conviction of Thomas of the allegations, that anything short of
everyone nodding their heads in agreement that Thomas "harassed" Prof. Hill
is ipso facto an incomplete investigation.
The Doctah
|
1004.579 | Now they are only a few votes out of step. | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | Funky Sensation | Wed Oct 23 1991 18:30 | 31 |
| .578=
As for the Hill part.
Anything that, if the public is aware of it, warrants a full formal
hearing and delay of vote, is probably important enough to have
warranted a hearing in the first place.
If the press had not heard, the men would have nodded in agreement
that it wasn't that bad, probably wasn't really founded, and shouldn't
be dug into during the hearings. It was only after WOMEN heard about
it and expressed their dismay, that the men considered their votes
over their previous dismissal. All things being even, anything would
have been handled the same in private as it was in public. However,
that was obviously not the case.
As long as no one but a crew of men, and their staff knew about
it, it did not warrant investigation on the stand.
It kind of makes some feel like there was a set of hidden rules
that were only upset by the leak. I would have liked it all to
come out (Hill, the pud puller, etc.) in the original hearings.
However, men that we elected, decided in private, that it wasn't
worth it. They would have continued along those lines, hopelessly
out of step with more than half of the populace, had one of
them not let their constituents know what was going on.
What more investigation was needed? Not much more than eventually was
done. However, it should have been put out THE FIRST TIME THROUGH.
JMO,
Cindi
|
1004.580 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A spider's kiss | Wed Oct 23 1991 18:36 | 13 |
| > What more investigation was needed? Not much more than eventually was
> done. However, it should have been put out THE FIRST TIME THROUGH.
It seems to me that we have a chicken and egg problem here. How do get all
of this information out without compromising Prof. Hill's identity? Does she
wear a hood during her testimony? Or do we simply tell Clarence Thomas that
he has no right to confront his accuser? Nobody has convinced me that there
was a way to get all the testimony out while protecting Prof. Hill's
anonymity. On the other hand, many people have all but said that Prof. Hill
did not have a right to anonymity (or that Thomas had no right to even know
who was making the accusations.)
Whose rights take precedence?
|
1004.581 | what's wrong with this picture? | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Wed Oct 23 1991 18:39 | 15 |
|
Well, gee, fellas. The Judiciary Committe sure seemed to think these
charges warranted a hearing _once_ _the_ _charges_ _were_ _made_
_public_. In fact they fall all over one another in the rush to
announce just how seriously they did take such charges and how
reprehensible they felt such behavior to be.
So before the publicity it was a case of "we sent the FBI to ask some
questions but it we're satisfied that everything is hunky-dory, so we
don't need to deal with the charges, even in executive session." And
after the publicity it was "let's spend a week delving into these
charges because not doing so could affect my re-election, I mean
because the charges are so serious."
JP
|
1004.582 | Re .580- Not focal for me, you may use it, however if it makes you feel better | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | Funky Sensation | Wed Oct 23 1991 18:54 | 20 |
| Re .580-
The guy that enjoyed himself intensely at work could have been
mentioned without ever questioning Hill. It was not.
Do you have a real good reason on that one? Or, are you going
to skip it.
Since Thomas fell for me on a few race issues
and this guy, the Hill privacy issue is barely apt for me.
In fact, I think it is needlessly limited to restrict the
nomination to her word or his. He messed up in so many ways
that do not depend on Hill's privacy or credibility. It
just depended on lil' ole' Lance. They could have spent
a week just on the other stuff. However, until one part fell
to the press, they didn't even try.
Just so you know.
Cindi
|
1004.583 | An apology and additional information | MAST::HOFFMAN | Joan, 223-5168 | Wed Oct 23 1991 19:00 | 35 |
| In my previous note, I said that I thought Hatch was the only Senator
who showed any senstivity, etc. I must apologize for that erroneous
comment! My only defense is that I only watched Anita Hill's testimony
and the beginning of Clarence Thomas' (Saturday morning). At that
point, Hatch hadn't started his histronics! Mea culpa!!
I see that the Senate is starting an investigation into who leaked the
sexual harrassment charge. We all know that some legislative aide will
be the fall-person for this. It's just another case of the Senators
wanting all of us to be reassured that it wasn't him/her who was the
bad person who leaked the news and no, of course not, sexual
harrassment doesn't exist in their office!
On a side note: One of my best friends lives in Pennsylvania, is a
past mayor of her township, is a conservative Republican fiscally but a
liberal socially. She told me that Spector is a liberal Republican.
When I expressed my disbelief, she said that the man who is running
against him is on record saying that a woman can't get pregnant if
she's raped because her body releases different hormones at times of
stress! Thought you'd all get a good laugh at that one!!
Some folks have reminded me that no one thought Warren would make a
good supreme court justice. I guess we'll have to see about Thomas,
but I don't have a lot of hope for an unbalanced Supreme Court. I
think the back-lash from conservatism will be much greater than that
from liberalism. A conservative court will appeal to all the
prejudiced, bigoted, etc. folks in this country. Look at what's
happening in Louisiana with David Dukes!
Let's not forget the power we have given these folks, and it's up to us
to take it away. They must not be exempt from sexual harrassment,
parking tickets, bounced checks. They are not different than you or I.
Still, cynically yours.....
|
1004.584 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 23 1991 19:02 | 26 |
| <<< Note 1004.581 by MYCRFT::PARODI "John H. Parodi" >>>
> Well, gee, fellas. The Judiciary Committe sure seemed to think these
> charges warranted a hearing _once_ _the_ _charges_ _were_ _made_
> _public_.
Once Prof. Hill agreed to make the charges in public. A subtle
difference, don't you think?
As long as we are coming up with interesting scenarios, I wonder
what would have happened in Anita Hill had simply said "No Comment"?
Only the "leaker" forced her to come forward, she continued to tell
us that this was not what she wanted.
But then to me, lover of conspiracy theory than I am, thought
she camed forward rather quickly, as opposed to "reluctantly".
Don't get me wrong, I HATE Joe Biden and what he stands for. But
in fairness, given the restrictions placed on him BY Hill I can't
imagine how he could have done it better. My distate for Biden
notwithstanding, I think he did a credible job, both in the intitial
investigation and in the subsequent hearings.
Jim
|
1004.585 | Do you mean that? You down with PPP? | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | Funky Sensation | Wed Oct 23 1991 19:07 | 8 |
| Re .584-
Gosh! Berate her for not comming forward if it was so terrible,
and then berate her once she does after her confidentiality was
already blown.
You are serious aren't you?
Cindi
|
1004.586 | or should it have been 'incredible'? | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Wed Oct 23 1991 19:21 | 10 |
|
re .584:
> imagine how he could have done it better. My distate for Biden
> notwithstanding, I think he did a credible job, both in the intitial
> investigation and in the subsequent hearings.
Don't you mean a "creditable" job, Jim?
|
1004.587 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 23 1991 19:30 | 14 |
| <<< Note 1004.585 by NECSC::BARBER_MINGO "Funky Sensation" >>>
> Gosh! Berate her for not comming forward if it was so terrible,
> and then berate her once she does after her confidentiality was
> already blown.
I'm not "berating" anyone. My opinions of Prof. Hill are not
exactly a secret to anyone here.
My point was that given the fact that she at first wanted to
make a secret allegation Biden could do little beyond what was
done.
Jim
|
1004.588 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 23 1991 19:33 | 13 |
| <<< Note 1004.586 by BLUMON::GUGEL "koatamundi whiteout" >>>
> Don't you mean a "creditable" job, Jim?
Nope. According to my handy-dandy DEC supplied dictionary
credible is the word I want (Believable, Plausible, Reliable).
Creditable would imply a commendation, nothing about this afair
deserves that.
Jim
|
1004.589 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Oct 24 1991 10:45 | 27 |
|
>> Well, gee, fellas. The Judiciary Committe sure seemed to think these
>> charges warranted a hearing _once_ _the_ _charges_ _were_ _made_
>> _public_.
> Once Prof. Hill agreed to make the charges in public. A subtle
> difference, don't you think?
Jim,
Yes, that would be a subtle (though inconsequential) difference if it
happened that way. But I don't think it did. I think those Senators
saw their whole "ignore it and it will go away" strategy unraveling
when juicy tidbits started showing up in the papers. And I think that
happened before Anita Hill agreed to go public.
But that's just opinion -- I'd feel more sure of it if I had a solid
chronology of events in my possession.
Sigh. This situation has given me a greater understanding of the
phenomenon that people believe what they want to believe even in the
face of convincing evidence. For example, I just cannot believe (I've
tried and tried) that the majority of Americans believed Thomas and not
Hill.
JP
|
1004.590 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Thu Oct 24 1991 11:49 | 18 |
| Regarding what was done about Anita Hill's charges prior to them
being made public: Hill had one brief visit by an FBI team, they
told her that the FBI would be talking to her further, and that she
could supply more details subsequently, but they never returned.
Biden never spoke to her, never gave her the opportunity to say if
she would be willing to appear before a private session. Hill said
that she expected, after the FBI visit, that she would be asked to
come to Washington for further investigations but no one contacted
her.
Regarding the laws on sexual harassment: Hill specifically said on
more than one occasion that she was not making charges of sexual
harassment. I find it revolting that because of loopholes
in the law ("hey, technically it wasn't illegal when she
says he did it") that anyone could think it would be alright
for someone who did she alleged to be on the Supreme Court.
Sue
|
1004.591 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 24 1991 12:02 | 18 |
| <<< Note 1004.590 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
>I find it revolting that because of loopholes
> in the law ("hey, technically it wasn't illegal when she
> says he did it") that anyone could think it would be alright
> for someone who did she alleged to be on the Supreme Court.
Sue, I have never said it would be "alright" for someone who did
what she alleged to sit on the Supreme Court. In fact I've
said just the opposite.
What I have said is that I don't believe her and that I don't
believe Thomas said the things that were alleged. Therefore,
in my mind, the allegations do not affect his qualifications
to be an Associate Justice.
Jim
|
1004.592 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Thu Oct 24 1991 12:20 | 10 |
| Jim,
I think you're probably a nice person but I get the feeling
it would take a whole lot to convince you of something you
don't want to believe. Since we don't have any videotapes
of the event, and the other women who said Thomas spoke to them
in a similar way never were allowed the opportunity to
testify, then I guess your opinion will not change.
Sue
|
1004.593 | Right, Sue. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Oct 24 1991 12:56 | 6 |
| Yes, and just because Thomas enjoyed pornographic movies in college,
and enjoyed describing their plots to his friends in college, that
doesn't mean that he *continued* to enjoy pornographic movies, and
*continued* to enjoy describing their plots to the people around him.
Ann B.
|
1004.594 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Thu Oct 24 1991 13:07 | 5 |
| Ann, that's certainly true. You'd have to be an insane pervert
to think that he might have continued watching porno and regaling
people with his descriptions of it.
Sue
|
1004.595 | I know - let's rename this file 'Jim Percival' notes | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Thu Oct 24 1991 13:58 | 5 |
|
Jim, I take it you don't feel you're beating a dead horse
to death. Argue and bore us all you want, but we have
our convictions too.
|
1004.596 | Nothing Changes... | BOOTKY::MARCUS | Good Planets Are Hard To Find | Thu Oct 24 1991 14:39 | 33 |
| For those of you who think something good came of this, think again!
Professor Hill is having her job threatened and will
probably put up with another immeasureable heap of
harassment.
The Senate - who some thought would be more likely to get
some kind of civil rights action - will likely not
recommend financial compensation for victims of sexual
harassment/discrimination. If they do, they are most
unlikely to be able to override the President's promised
veto.
Three of the scheduled witnesses to talk about sexual
harassment/discrimination as government employees - the
nation's single largest employer - before the Senate
(House?) did not show up because of what happened to
Professor Hill. Those who did testify spoke of what *I
consider* to be absolute horror stories - like the boss
trying to put his hand up one women's skirt everytime she
passed his work area. Those who complained received bad
performance reviews.
And for predictions:
People will not show up in sufficient numbers at the polls
to dump this bunch who abjectly refuse to take women's
issues seriously.
Onto the next century....
Barb
|
1004.597 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Thu Oct 24 1991 15:02 | 17 |
| re .596
> The Senate - who some thought would be more likely to get
> some kind of civil rights action - will likely not
> recommend financial compensation for victims of sexual
> harassment/discrimination. If they do, they are most
> unlikely to be able to override the President's promised
> veto.
Do you mean Federal funds? If so, I think they are right. Why
should the US taxpayer have to pay for the reprehensible
behavior of J. Random Scum? I would think that mechanisms
to recover damages from the responsible party already exist,
through the civil court system. If this is not the case,
certainly *that* needs to be rectified.
Tom_K
|
1004.598 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 24 1991 15:02 | 28 |
| <<< Note 1004.592 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
> I think you're probably a nice person but I get the feeling
> it would take a whole lot to convince you of something you
> don't want to believe.
Well I started out in this string because I perceived that
many in this file seemed to be "convicting" Thomas before
any evidence had been heard. My point at the time, several
hundred replies ago, was "why not wait for the facts?".
Well now we have seen some evidence. We have chosen, based
on our life experiences, to view this evidence differently.
Reasonable people (even nice people ;-) ) can do this.
>Since we don't have any videotapes
> of the event, and the other women who said Thomas spoke to them
> in a similar way never were allowed the opportunity to
> testify, then I guess your opinion will not change.
Video tapes would be good, open testimony by Ms. Wright would
have been good too. I think that the Committee made a grave error
in not requiring her to testify. But as the investigation is
over, the evidence being what it is, and not likely to be
enhanced to any degree, you ARE correct about me not changing
my opinion.
Jim
|
1004.599 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 24 1991 15:04 | 12 |
| <<< Note 1004.595 by BLUMON::GUGEL "koatamundi whiteout" >>>
> Jim, I take it you don't feel you're beating a dead horse
> to death. Argue and bore us all you want, but we have
> our convictions too.
It's always nice to know that dissenting opinions are welcomed
in a Notes Conference.
Jim
|
1004.600 | *I* say: Don't even make the fine deductable | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Oct 24 1991 15:05 | 6 |
| No, it does not mean federal funds. It means a penalty levied
against the convicted perpetrator, and/or the perp's employer. The
President would veto it on the grounds that it would be bad for
business.
Ann B.
|
1004.601 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Thu Oct 24 1991 15:10 | 17 |
| <<< Note 1004.597 by TOMK::KRUPINSKI "Repeal the 16th Amendment!" >>>
>I would think that mechanisms
> to recover damages from the responsible party already exist,
> through the civil court system.
Tom, The current law limits the amount a victim of SH can collect
in a civil suit (to, I believe $150,000). No other category
of discrimination has such limits.
For the record (I hope some members of this community are sitting
down), I think this is VERY wrong. A victim should be able to
sue for whatever amount they can convince a jury to award. A few
really large settlements (multi-million dollar level) would do more
to prevent SH in the workplace than anything else.
Jim
|
1004.602 | Amazing | NECSC::BARBER_MINGO | Funky Sensation | Thu Oct 24 1991 15:19 | 31 |
| Ummmm. I'm still waiting for an answer to a couple of things.
A biggie.
1- Why didn't the masturbator get mentioned in the original hearings?
---------------------------------------------------------------
I have recently come to realize that there are women who don't
believe EVEN the issue of civil standing outstripping sexual
harrassment concerns. They didn't watch the testimony. They
find it hard to believe. To make the whole thing easier on themselves,
they just REFUSE to believe. If you offered to make them
a tape, and let them watch that, they wouldn't wish to watch it.
It goes contrary to what they wish to know.
I haven't seen intelligent women take such huge steps to avoid
or ignore something like this. The concensus appears to be that they
wish to chalk the whole thing up to Thomas and Hill. Then they
say they didn't believe Hill.
It is rough to know that there was so much more to it, but
even WOMEN are seeing no evil, hearing no evil, and speaking
no evil about it.
Amazing.
Truly amazing.
I wonder if they were bedazzled by the thought of his "prowess"
and truly don't care to know anything more that might affect that.
Cindi
|
1004.603 | It's NOT just that there's a limit... | BOOTKY::MARCUS | Good Planets Are Hard To Find | Thu Oct 24 1991 16:22 | 14 |
| The previously mentioned limit on damages for SH cases are also
restricted to back wages (the other remedy being reinstatement).
So, unless you make big bucks or this took a loooooog time, as an
SH victim you get squat for $$. Oh, and I'll bet you do end up
needing to pay an attorney - wanna take a bet on which is more:
your award or your attorney's fees?
I whole heartedly agree that business listens much more seriously
when there is a threat to the wallet. Just like managers take
goals much more seriously when they become a part of the salary
review process.
Barb
|
1004.604 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Fri Oct 25 1991 11:23 | 13 |
| re: .598
Did it bother you that Bush announced that Thomas was clearly
innocent before any testimony was heard?
As for further evidence, I wish it would come to light even if
Thomas is a "done deal." I heard a radio talk show host say
that a Washington video store had a list of porn films that
Thomas rented just this past summer. He also said that a Washington
newspaper had this info from the video store but sat on the
information.
Sue
|
1004.605 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Fri Oct 25 1991 11:50 | 18 |
| <<< Note 1004.604 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
> Did it bother you that Bush announced that Thomas was clearly
> innocent before any testimony was heard?
Yep. Believe it or not, my opinion was that the charges
were serious enough to warrant further investigation.
Declaring an outcome (either positive or negative) before
that investigations was complete was, in my mind,
inappropriate.
> that a Washington video store had a list of porn films that
> Thomas rented just this past summer.
So what's your point? Thomas was not accused of watching
pornographic movies.
Jim
|
1004.606 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Fri Oct 25 1991 12:29 | 10 |
| Jim,
I think a person who watches porn films is more likely to talk
about porn films than a person who doesn't watch porn films.
Talking about porn films inappropriately is what Thomas was
charged with, among other things. If this video store has
a record of porn films that Thomas rented, this would make
me more sure that my opinion of Thomas is correct.
Sue
|
1004.607 | back to the garden | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Fri Oct 25 1991 13:09 | 30 |
|
But, Sue, Thomas has great respect for His right to privacy.
Actually, I'm still reeling from this whole thing. I can't believe
that what movies somebody rented would be relevant or that that info
should even be available, but... given the way those hearings were set
up, I believe that info would have been relevant. Certainly as
relevant as the testimony from Doggett_the_wonderful.
Also, I don't understand all this stuff about the "leak." I mean, it
looks like this whole thing was going to be just swept under the rug,
so if it took a "leak" to make something happen, then I'm glad that
somebody opened her/his mouth, and I think they picked the right
journalist to tell (Nina for President!) However, I still don't
understand why the senate didn't handle this in a closed session or at
least establish some clearer guidelines for what was admissable. I
mean, there were "prosecutors" (I believe it was Anita Hill on trial,
not Thomas or at least as much as Thomas) asking co-workers to give
psychological evaluations! And yet, no expert testimony was allowed on
what an expected response might be to harrassment in the work place.
It seems to me that once they allowed speculation about her state of
mind and tried to infer what happened from her behavior, it would have
been appropriate to have trained professionals talk about how women
generally respond. It feels like the ony thing worse than having this
swept under the rug is what actually happened - a pretend trial, an
improper and incomplete investigation of the facts.
Disgusted,
Justine
|
1004.608 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Fri Oct 25 1991 13:47 | 19 |
| <<< Note 1004.606 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
> I think a person who watches porn films is more likely to talk
> about porn films than a person who doesn't watch porn films.
I understand the correlation that you are trying to make,
I just think it's grasping for straws at this point.
Thomas' viewing tastes in pornagraphic movies was no secret
to his fellow students at Yale, and conceivably this knowledge
was used to fabricate the charges against him.
Quite frankly I think this particular part of his personality
makes him better qualified to sit on the Court in light of
1st Amendment decisions that the Court may be asked to rule
on.
Jim
|
1004.609 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Fri Oct 25 1991 16:08 | 23 |
| Justine,
I totally agree about the leak. It was more whistle-blowing than
leaking in my opinion. From Bush's speech yesterday, it looks
like this is going to be a theme in the upcoming election. "Those
wicked senators leaking information to the public that was better
swept under the rug... National Security! National Security!" Ah, yes,
I can hear it now.
Jim,
You think I'm grasping at straws, I think you're avoiding reality.
Also, I don't like the suggestion that Thomas might be a better
judge because he is a porn fan. This is sort of a tricky area
for me: on one hand, I dislike censorship and think each to their
own taste. But I also dislike porn, the hard-core stuff anyway,
which is what Thomas appears to fancy. I wouldn't deny anyone the
right to watch it but I think hard-core porn objectifies people,
women especially. It bothers me to think that a man who will
be making decisions that will affect many lives, women
especially, should be a person who enjoys watching movies where
people are objectified.
Sue
|
1004.610 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Fri Oct 25 1991 16:39 | 22 |
|
Fabricate? Are you so sure that the accusations against Clarence are
fabricated? But of course, he was declared innocent by George even
before the proceeding began...
It's a commonly-known fact that there is a correlation between
pornography and rape, child abuse, and misogyny. But I'm not getting
it to it here; I think there's already a string on this somewhere in
the file.
I have to admit, I thought Ronnie was simply a buffoon, but George
really scares me. There's something about his trying so hard not to
be a wimp that he's crossed over the line. I think he's dangerous,
a bully, and totally out of touch with reality, but of course, that's
only my opinion.
To quote Nadezdah Mandelstam during Stalin's purges:
"In what burrow can we hide?"
Maia
|
1004.611 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Fri Oct 25 1991 17:06 | 32 |
| <<< Note 1004.610 by BOOKS::BUEHLER >>>
> Fabricate? Are you so sure that the accusations against Clarence are
> fabricated?
Maia, Well, since I'm already on record as not believing that Anita Hill's
testimony was truthful, there would be a strong implication that
the accusation was fabricated. One does sort of follow the other.
I understand that you have come to a different conclusion about
her testimony, so you would also have come to a different conclusion
of the accusation and it's origins.
>But of course, he was declared innocent by George even
> before the proceeding began...
And I have expressed an opinion on that action. It was negative
in case you hadn't noticed.
> It's a commonly-known fact that there is a correlation between
> pornography and rape, child abuse, and misogyny.
This "commonly known fact" is based primarily on anecdotal evidence
not scientific study. Please note that if (totally fabricated
numbers to illustrate the point) 90% of rapists view pornographic
movies, it does not logically follow that 90% of pornographic
movie viewers are rapists.
BTW, You may have already guessed, I'm an absolutist when it comes
to the 1st Amendment.
Jim
|
1004.612 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Fri Oct 25 1991 17:28 | 15 |
| Jim,
Just out of curiousity, if you think Hill lied then WHY did
she lie? You could go for the "she lied cause she's
crazy" reason, but the problem with that is she's been
behaving pretty sanely all her life (except for supporting
Bork :-) ho-ho, just my little joke). You could go for "the
Democrats made her do it" but what could the Democrats give
anyone that would make what she went through worth it? I mean,
she's a registered Republican, why lie for Democrats? Or,
finally, you could take the Clarence Thomas Stonewall approach
and say "she lied but I won't discuss it." Or maybe you
can come up with a new theory.
Sue
|
1004.613 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Fri Oct 25 1991 17:38 | 10 |
| <<< Note 1004.612 by VERGA::KALLAS >>>
>you could take the Clarence Thomas Stonewall approach
> and say "she lied but I won't discuss it." Or maybe you
> can come up with a new theory.
Sue, I really have no idea. I hope that this is sufficiently
"different" than "I won't discuss it" to satisfy you.
Jim
|
1004.614 | And people wonder why women stay quiet..... | FDCV06::KING | Fight AIDS, not people with AIDS!!! | Mon Oct 28 1991 11:22 | 13 |
| Forwarded from another list...
Oklahoma State Representative Leonard E. Sullivan, Republican of Oklahoma
City is seeking to have Prof. Anita Hill ousted from her tenured position.
In a letter to University president, Richard Van Horn, Sullivan said, "We
must get left wing extremist influence off the campus before it spreads
further. We can't afford to have a high profile professor on campus that
millions of Americans, according to polls and national talk shows, believe
is a fantasizing liar." [NYT 10/16/91 p.A21]
Write to President Van Horn at: University of Oklahoma
300 Timberdell Road
Norman, OK 73019
|
1004.615 | | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Mon Oct 28 1991 11:30 | 7 |
| I saw a mailing on this subject which indicated that anyone
calling the University on the subject got read a statement which
basically said the University was viewing Rep. Sullivan as a nut
case (not a hard conclusion to reach) and ignoring him.
Not to dissuade anybody from writing - just noting there doesn't
seem to be any imminent risk.
|
1004.616 | Some small comments | MERISE::BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Mon Oct 28 1991 21:14 | 127 |
| Folks:
This entire Topic has been very interesting. In some places, the
circular logic I've seen has been incredibly amusing. Some of the concerns
expressed about sexual harrassment in general bear a great deal of
examination. So, too, do some of the concerns about finding people guilty
by accusation.
Unfortunately, what has happened in this discussion has mirrored what
happened around Clarence Thomas. A lot of heat. A lot of toasted bread and
burned circuses. But very little real communication and no substantial
examination of the real issues that are involved here.
I consider the truth or falsehood of Anita Hill's accusations
irrelevant. What happened with the "examination" of the charges fell well
within the bounds of what I had predicted would happen. Clarence Thomas'
confirmation was inevitable; the fact that the sexual harrassment charges
had to be "leaked" in order for us to be aware of them in the first place
-- and that the vote for Thomas' confirmation was delayed only at his request,
made it obvious to me that no serious attempt would be made to examine the
truth or falsehood of the charges, and that, in the end, the truth or
falsehood of the charges would be irrelevant.
I do have definite strong opinions on whether or not Clarence Thomas
should have been nominated in the first place. These opinions are irrelevant.
I also have definite strong opinions about the truth or falsehood of
Anita Hill's accusations. I did not share them here because whatever they
are they would have only offended one or the other side on this issue, and I
saw no value in slicing and dicing the side that would have attacked me.
And since the entire farce in Washington is now over, putting in my opinion
now would be a waste of time.
So, one would ask: why is he chattering here now? My answer: because I
wanted to see some calmness before making my point. And my point is a
simple one: the real issues and problems that the Clarence Thomas/Anita
Hill matter have brought forth have not been adequately addressed.
Point 1: Sexual Harrassment is prevalent in this society. It is so
prevalent that it would be difficult for me to believe that
anyone out there, male or female, would not at least know
someone (usually female) who has been harrassed.
Point 2: There is a decided lack of communication concerning the issue
of Sexual Harrassment. This lack of communication is caused by
men and women; men because too many of them do not understand
the effects of such harrassment, and women because too many of
them assume that men cannot understand.
Point 3: There is so little understanding about an issue that is so loaded
and charged, that in the minds of a great many people a man can be
automatically condemned just by being accused of Sexual
Harrassment. I have found much of the prejudging of Thomas that has
gone on in this Notesfile, my ofice, in the Senate, and in this
entire country incredibly disgusting. Even more disgusting is the fact
that the prejudice shown towards Thomas has created a backlash that
will cause the majority of Americans (female as well as male) to
become a lot less sensitive to the issue of Sexual Harrassment.
I reiterate: I consider the truth or falsehood of the charges against Thomas
irrelevant. Frankly, at this point I don't care whether the charges were
true or not. What I do care about is that based on what I've seen (a) Sexual
Harrassment will continue to be trivialized, (b) the political
establishment which sought to use Sexual Harrassment to derail the "non-
PC" Thomas has only succeeded in setting back the possibility that Sexual
Harrassment will be properly understood enough so that we can begin to
eradicate it, and (c) this means that slightly more than half of our
population will continue to have one more reason not to feel safe in this
society. For all the smoke, whining, and tears I've watched, these three
things seem to have been missed.
Consider this clown that people have been talking about lately, the one
who has been trying to get Anita Hill's tenure revoked. Sure, it is true
that he is generally considered a buffoon and his efforts MAY not amount to
much, but if you all think that his will be the only attack on her, think
again.
Consider also the fact that, so soon after the Thomas/Hill affair, the
"compromise" civil rights bill puts a ceiling on the damages that can be
awarded in Sexual Discrimination cases, while placing no such ceiling on
Racial Discrimination cases (talk about illogical!). And yes, I know that
there is going to be a real battle over that, but if you think that this
battle will come to anything, think again.
It is my firm belief that the scummy practice of Sexual Harrassment can
be curbed and even eliminated. To succeed, however, we need to treat it
like an enemy in a war. We need to understand how it works. We need to
understand its strategies. We need to become aware of its weaknesses (and
believe me: it does have plenty!) and discover ways to exploit those
weaknesses.
But most of all, we need to COMMUNICATE. We need to communicate with each
other and with our inner Selves. We need to decide, as women AND men, that we
are tired of this problem and that we are going to work together in order to
deal with it once and for all. And since we are in a forum where a lot of us
have been talking about this issue, WOMANNOTES is a good place to start.
What, you say? We have decided, you say? I say we've decided nothing. All
that has happened around this issue is a lot of arguing and whining, and very
little communicating. And frankly, based on what I've seen in this Topic so
far, there is very little real understanding of what Sexual Harrassment really
is or how it can be combatted. No one here -- and I include the more fanatical
Hill supporters -- has demonstrated any real understanding of the problem that
that they have been talking about.
If you don't like Sexual Harrassment and Discrimination, then fight it.
Fight it by becoming aware of it and its effects, and make a real effort to make
others aware. Be ready to fight it whenever you encounter it. Be prepared to
enlighten whenever you encounter ignorance about it. If you are so inclined,
march and make speeches against it, but if you are not, fight it quietly when
you see it happening in your sphere of influence. This is what I do; while I do
not have the power to combat Sexual harrassment on a national level (and I am
not always effective in my own sphere of influence) you'd be amazed at what you
can accomplish with little, well- placed attacks on a big problem! I can tell
you of some accomplishments -- but this entry is already too long.
To defeat any enemy, you must know two things: the enemy and yourself. To
eradicate Sexual Harrassment we must know it -- and ourselves. We have some
little knowledge of Sexual Harrassment (not enough, but a start), but we
certainly do not know ourselves. We must come together! Communicate! Network,
encourage, and teach each other!
Only together can we fight Sexual Harrassment.
Only as one society can we eradicate it!
-Robert Brown III
|
1004.617 | | LAVETA::CONLON | Dreams happen!! | Tue Oct 29 1991 00:12 | 85 |
| As discouraging as it was to watch the way Prof. Hill was treated by
the Senate Judiciary Committee, the end results of all this will be
positive for women.
Already, Senator Simpson has apologized for his conduct towards
Prof. Hill during the hearings - in pretty strong terms, no less.
Meanwhile, the truth about the prevalence of sexual harassment is
coming out all over (little by little.) As the issue comes more
and more to the forefront, people will be more and more willing to
realize that Prof. Hill described events that are NOT that unusual
in our culture (and surely NOT requiring a perp who is insane, as
one Senator suggested.)
I'm not convinced (nor do I know *anyone* who is convinced) that
men are incapable of understanding the dynamics of sexual harassment.
It's more a matter of ignorance (which can be corrected, in time.)
A man told me the other day that the one thing that convinced him
(and other men that he knew) to believe Thomas was the fact that
they could not CONCEIVE of the possibility that a Yale-educated
attorney like Prof. Hill would "put up with that sh*t from anyone!"
The ignorance of these individuals is not appalling to me - they
simply had no way of knowing that "not putting up with sh*t" is
a luxury that an attorney who happens to be black and female DOES
NOT HAVE in many/most cases.
I watched a movie the other night about the first integration of a
high school in Little Rock (in 1957-58.) One of the 9 black students
who went to the high school that year was expelled for fighting back
when other students blocked her entrance into class and harassed her
in a thousand other ways.
After she was expelled, notes went around school saying "One down,
eight to go!" When they picked their next target, though, they
failed. He "put up with their sh*t" (the way he'd been putting up
with it all year) - and he graduated that Spring.
If Prof. Hill had resisted (eg, had "refused to put up with the
sh*t from Clarence Thomas,") she wouldn't be a law professor today.
She'd be similar to Angela Wright (whom Thomas could say was "bitter"
against him for her failed career due to some awful thing he would
claim SHE had done.)
Prof. Hill didn't have the luxury of fighting back against Thomas -
hell, she didn't even have the luxury of writing him off as a valuable
contact.
Perhaps some of the individuals who couldn't even conceive of the
situation Prof. Hill was in (where the best/only thing she could do
to guarantee her career was to put up with Thomas's actions until a
time when she was relatively safe and HE was nominated for SCOTUS) -
perhaps one day they will see how naive they were to believe that
she had a luxury (fighting back) that so many men seem to take for
granted.
In spite of the confirmation of Thomas (and the conditions of the
new version of the Civil Rights bill) - women's rights issues have
seldom been more center stage than they are RIGHT NOW.
In the UK today, John Major gave a speech saying that we are all in
the midst of a social revolution - and that we will move forward (to
equality) and as he put it, "...frankly, whether men like it or not!"
It may not seem like much of a victory (the Thomas/Hill hearings) -
but we gained much more ground in the fight for equality than I think
any of us realize yet.
Yes, it was a travesty (the way they treated her in the hearings) -
but in a way, it helped the women's movement. If he'd lost the
confirmation, we would have had to bear the brunt of ANGER AT WOMEN
about it. Instead, we're watching the gradual dawning of awareness
of how prevalent the problem is.
As for eradicating it - we'll never eradicate all the evils in the
world (such as crime, rape, child abuse) - but we can help ourselves
(and each other) prepare for it, and we can keep increasing awareness
about it.
All in all, I'm less discouraged now than I was two weeks ago - and
I've enjoyed the intelligent discussion that has transpired in this
topic about the whole situation.
Thanks to everyone.
|
1004.618 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | persistence of vision | Tue Oct 29 1991 10:00 | 8 |
|
re: 1004.616
*thank you*
-Jody
|
1004.619 | | JURAN::TEASDALE | | Wed Oct 30 1991 17:28 | 12 |
| I'm still wondering why Thomas' nomination wasn't rejected based his
not being exemplary in his field. I guess it's because the first bunch
of white men turned weenie in the face of a black man and couldn't
make the damned decision.
I have no opinion on the Hill-Thomas hearings, due to the overwhelming
lack of hard evidence on both sides. I am glad for all the discussion
being generated everywhere which actually seems to be
conscious-raising. Besides, if Thomas *did* say those disgusting
things to Hill, it will haunt him and catch up with him at some point.
Nancy
|
1004.620 | | ZFC::deramo | All the leaves are brown and the sky is gray. | Wed Oct 30 1991 17:47 | 8 |
| > I'm still wondering why Thomas' nomination wasn't rejected based his
> not being exemplary in his field.
Being exemplary in the field didn't seem to help during the
confirmation hearings for Judge Bork. Perhaps the Senate
thought it consistent to not consider it in this case as well.
Dan
|
1004.621 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 30 1991 17:58 | 14 |
| <<< Note 1004.619 by JURAN::TEASDALE >>>
> I'm still wondering why Thomas' nomination wasn't rejected based his
> not being exemplary in his field.
Because the job of the Senate was to determine if he was "qualified"
not if he was the "most qualified".
BTW, the Constitution is EXTREMELY vague on Federal Judges, there
are no strict requirements listed for the job. For example, they do
not have to be US citizens, or have previous judicial experience, or
for that matter even be lawyers.
Jim
|
1004.622 | a + b | NODEMO::DITOMMASO | I cant get use to this lifestyle | Wed Oct 30 1991 18:03 | 20 |
|
As I recall, nobody said Bork wasn't exemplary in his field, they objected
to other aspects of his career and personal makup.
How about a judge who's not only exemplary in his field but one who isn't
1) A yes man to the president
2) A fanatical conservative, or a fanatical liberal
3) Bigoted, chauvanistic ...
4) influenced by a church or his own religious personal beliefs
(yes, I'm very strong for keeping church and state seperate)
So tell me, do you really think that there are NO candidates that can
honestly answer no to those conditions, AND be exemplary in his field!
I guess Bush doesn't think so.
paul
|
1004.623 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Wed Oct 30 1991 18:54 | 9 |
| <<< Note 1004.622 by NODEMO::DITOMMASO "I cant get use to this lifestyle" >>>
> I guess Bush doesn't think so.
Neither did Reagan, Carter, Nixon, Johnson, Kennedy, Eisenhower,
Truman, Roosevelt, Hoover, ...........
Jim
|
1004.624 | | HOCUS::FERGUSON | I'm working on it | Wed Oct 30 1991 22:06 | 4 |
| re .622
Now how do you expect someone who's NOT a "Yes man to the President" to
get nominated???
|
1004.625 | | NODEMO::DITOMMASO | I cant get use to this lifestyle | Thu Oct 31 1991 12:51 | 11 |
|
How does one who's not a yes-man to the president get nominated ...
good question ....
Actually Sandra Day O'Conner turned out to be a bit of a surprise,
she turned out to be fairly moderate, and certainly not a yes-woman.
I guess sometimes we get lucky! 8^)
paul
|