• htz [she/her]
      ·
      edit-2
      4 years ago

      My office has made numerous changes in the wake of the movement to help women feel more comfortable. I know of other people in my field (which is male dominated) who have had similar experiences in their offices as well.

      Once again, I'm not saying it was some magical fix-all, and that more shouldn't be done and we've solved sexism with a hashtag, I'm saying that there were tangible benefits to women. Not all women, but some women.

      And furthermore, even if the literal only positive outcome of this was Harvey Weinstein being thrown in jail, it's objectively good. Fuck people who prey on women, I don't care if they're "actresses who make millions" (as someone above said), they're human beings and don't deserved to be sexually harassed and abused.

      Sinema being a ghoulish piece of garbage doesn't invalidate anything.

      • thrown_away_dev [comrade/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        4 years ago

        My office has made numerous changes in the wake of the movement to help women feel more comfortable.

        Like what? An open office plan so that everyone can watch the sexual harassment as it goes down? An incrementing counter labeled "x days without an office rape"? Ooh! Maybe a pizza party for every month where no sexual harassment complaint is made to HR?

        Does it make women just feel better about their exploitation or does it actually improve material conditions?

        • zeal0telite [he/him,they/them]
          ·
          4 years ago

          Bad take imo

          Any steps taken to recognise sexual harassment in the workplace are good steps. Anything is better than "sure it happens but that's just how it is".

          Sure there's still a long way to go and we need to convince people that it's bad when Dems do it but it's way less accepted now and we've shown people that it is possible for harassers to suffer consequences.

          • thrown_away_dev [comrade/them]
            ·
            4 years ago

            Adding hamfisted training videos that only depict the most egregious behaviors and perpetuate harmful stereotypes don't help when they become a point of derision and the butt of jokes around the office. Doing just anything isn't helping so we really should be specific about what changes are made and what outcomes are measured. Pizza parties aren't going to fix pay parity.