A SpaceX employee says that she spent seven years working at the company’s headquarters in Hawthorne, California enduring sexual abuse, unequal pay, discrimination, sexual harassment, and retaliation, in a new lawsuit against the company. But her story paints a much graver picture than those individual words can convey, describing widespread harassment and coordinated action to not only enable but also later give cover for sexual coercion, by a man she says was her direct supervisor.
It’s pretty telling that you assume which person in a story is malicious based solely on their gender.
Everything he said is true, though.
Not exactly, but I think that if it were a man arguing the same thing, the social reaction would be completely different. Instead of being a victim of a heartless corporation, he’d be just some guy looking for attention.
It’s just the double standard of contemporary society. Female victimization.
Not saying there’s no bias toward seeing women as victims compared to men (https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/jun/07/feminism-domestic-violence-men), but the way you phrase it sounds super misogynist.
So maybe you should reflect on that a bit, if you’re serious about getting an actual point across.
The way society views a man reporting sexual abuse should have no bearing on this case. It’s irrelevant.