Bells
Staff member
By law, groping someone's breast without consent, even while fully clothed, is classified as battery and sexual contact.So the fact that Franken’s hand may have contacted Tweeden’s flack jacket constitutes an intent to sexually grope?
By law, penetrating someone's mouth (or any other orifice) with an object without their consent is classified as a sexual assault and rape, Capracus.Would you argue that the prankster in the YouTube video was guilty of rape because he used a foreign object to penetrate the mouth of the sleeper without her consent?
You are free to try to have the laws changed because you want to penetrate someone's mouth with an object while they sleep and cannot consent to it, but I suspect you would fail to garner much support for it. For obvious reasons. Well, obvious to most.
And against a co-worker who had let you know that your behaviour towards them was not wanted or welcome, you'd do what?If I were on a chartered airliner with a sleeping co-worker, I might be tempted to execute a prank involving a mock sexual act if I thought said co-worker would reasonably perceive the intent.
You are essentially arguing that you'd grope another sleeping person on a work trip if you thought you could get away with it.
Would you take that photo as they slept in front of everyone, not tell them about it and just send them the photo so that they knew what you did to them while they slept? Because that's essentially what happened to Tweeden.
Ya, you are.I'm not doing that.
Yes yes, it's all me.I make no such petty demands. You aren't coming close, is your problem. That's a consequence of your insistence on refusing to recognize degrees and spectrum and so forth, and your insistence on lumping and slipshod vocabulary, slander and misrepresentation - you confuse yourself, not the rest of the world.
I have provided you with several examples, and you are quite specific, as Franken was accused of in public.
As I said, it has to be just so.
If it was just that, then doesn't it tell you something that he's not suing? As you noted, perhaps there's much more to it than he reported. Either way, he was fired for unwanted touching. He isn't saying that it wasn't something that he did not deserve to be fired for.That's what he claimed. If that's all that happened, what he described, then he can sue whenever he wants to with good odds (I doubt that's the whole story, just guessing, but maybe you're right to believe him completely - in which case the fact that he would be unlikely to damage his life's work by suing it may have figured into the board's decision. Or maybe they were just screwing up in a panic, or there was some kind of personal infighting involving Keillor. Those kinds of boards are stereotypically famous for stuff like that).
The case with Swift's groper, on the other hand is very similar to Franken's accusations from the other women (leaving Tweeden out). He was fired when his employer was advised of what he did. He tried to sue, and he lost. Very publicly and spectacularly.
Now, if Franken felt he was being falsely accused, a man of his financial means and influence could very well sue the women. He chose not to. When Tweeden's accusations came to light, he was asked if there would be more. His response was essentially along the lines of probably yes.
Right. Man gropes woman's backside during photo-op... Yes, sooo different to what Franken stood accused of by multiple women..That famous incident with Taylor Swift differed significantly from any of Franken's. (The grounds on which the guy was fired would not apply, the lawsuit was not against the corporation, the groping involved was significantly different, the timeline and provenance of the allegation was much different, and so forth).
As I said, this neurotic nitpicking so that everything is just so..
He also sued his employer for firing him. He lost. He sued Swift for apparently getting him fired. He lost, and he lost her counter-suit.
You claimed that no employer would fire an employee for doing what Franken was accused of doing and if they did, they could be sued. I showed you an example, a literal precedent of an employee suing for being fired for groping a woman's backside in a photo-op and you respond that it differed significantly from any of Franken's accusations that he groped women's backsides during photo-op's..
I read her testimony. What's the matter? Was it the skin to skin contact that makes it so vastly different? Do you think the ruling would have been vastly different if he had groped her backside through her clothes like Franken did?You continue to insist that your descriptions create realities - they don't. Compare the court testimony of Swift - that's a good idea anyway, because it is well worth reading. I ran into it in Harper's Magazine, a partial transcript that almost saved her music for me.
What "other people"?You can't change the reality of that picture by assigning your presumptions to it. Other people only see what's in the picture, other people allow for the other (and more likely) possibilities of what's going on.
You and Capracus are the only two people (possibly aside from EF, since well, dude's way out there and maybe even paddoboy, who doesn't see anything wrong with his friend placing his penis in women's hands for a lark) who don't seem to see anything wrong with a grown arsed man groping a woman's boobs while she sleeps and without her consent for a photo. I mean shit, even Franken admitted that what he did was inexcusable. You are trying to find every meaning under the sun to downplay it.
Would you be arguing the same thing if it was Trump who did it? Somehow I doubt you'd be throwing these kinds of excuses if it was.
Why are you dodging the question? Do you think that's an appropriate thing to do to a sleeping co-worker, without her consent?You keep doing that - sliding the facts, posting what Mark Twain called "stretchers". Apparently, the actual allegations against Franken look insufficient even to you. Thing is, that does not create a new reality for the rest of the world.
The name acquires the attributes of the thing.
With the rhetoric of the letter. As answered already.
For the what - sixth, seventh time. Right in front of you, in plain English.
And you know that - you know I was talking about the letter:
You seem to accuse her of obscuring his intent in that photo with her letter.Oh, sure. He's "clearly" making fun of himself as the hopeless letch on the tour, clownishly groping flak jackets, humiliating himself for a laugh, mugging for the camera even. Right?
She could have released that photo without the letter, with just a message that 'he did this without her consent' and it would still be just as bad.
I mean come on! This isn't rocket science.
Mmm hmmm.. It's always hard to figure out intent when a man gropes a woman's boobs without her consent while she sleeps and then takes a photo of it to send to her.So as I noted the end result is not in the photo, and does not speak for itself, and matches my descriptions above. Read your post. Furthermore, Franken's intent is not visible or spoken for either one - and without it, you don't have a crime in any of the Franken allegations.
So no crime is on the table, and no civil liability manifest. That is now an established fact of the thread-wrecking discussion, which you have acknowledged - yes or no?
Normal reasonable people would agree with you.Maybe it's just me, but I think writing on someone's face with a permanent marker (while they sleep) should be a punishable offence of some sort. Come on, people, really? Bullying at least. Jeez.
You need to realise that when it comes to political aesthetics, reason goes out the window and excuses must be made.