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question everything

(47,460 posts)
Sun Sep 8, 2019, 12:05 AM Sep 2019

A teachable MeToo moment in Al Franken's fall? - Clarence Page

In the grand narrative of the 2020 presidential race, U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and former Sen. Al Franken have found themselves on a political seesaw. As her political fortunes have crashed in recent months, Franken's — if he has any — appear to have inched up. No, the former Democratic senator from Minnesota is not ready for full resurrection yet. But his memory haunts his party like a resentful ghost with his claim that he was pressured to resign without due process.

(snip)

To be sure, she was not the only Democratic senator to call for Franken's resignation as, over the course of a few weeks, eight women accused him of inappropriate behavior. But Gillibrand was the first and remains staunchly anti-Franken, in accordance with her promotion of appropriate sexual conduct and women's rights, for which a "60 Minutes" profile memorably labeled her "the #MeToo senator." Most of that behavior involved groping, touching and what delicately has been described as coercive kissing. In general, it was the sort of jovial aw-shucks behavior of which the top-tier candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden has been accused.

Much of Biden's hands-on behavior occurred over his decades-long political career, often in front of cameras, and drew mostly amusement or bemusement at the time. The emergence of groper-gate as an issue in this campaign says a lot about how standards of tolerance have changed in regard to what qualifies as sexual misconduct in these #MeToo times.

Franken resigned under pressure from his Senate colleagues. Minority Leader Chuck Schumer gave him a deadline to quit after three dozen Democratic senators called for him to step down. At the time, Democrats were waging a major campaign against Roy Moore, the Republican nominee in a special Alabama U.S. Senate race who was accused of improper behavior with teenage girls as young as 14. A full ethics investigation into Franken's behavior could take years. Pressure on the senator to remove himself immediately was intense. But now some of those Democrats who called for Franken's departure have second thoughts, according to a major investigation by Jane Mayer in the July 29 issue of the New Yorker, which she described in a tweet as "How @alfranken got railroaded."

(snip)

I have a theory that the current back and forth over #MeToo standards is a corrective phase. The major scandals surrounding Bill Cosby, Harvey Weinstein and other wealthy and powerful men can lead to overreaction and rushes to judgment, especially in ambiguous situations. To maintain the respect that serious charges deserve, we need standards that calibrate punishment in relation to the seriousness of the offense. Not every situation is a 10 on a scale of 10. Sometimes zero tolerance makes less than zero sense.

http://www.startribune.com/a-teachable-metoo-moment-in-al-franken-s-fall/559614552/

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A teachable MeToo moment in Al Franken's fall? - Clarence Page (Original Post) question everything Sep 2019 OP
As they say in GOT, "the North remembers" (and the West, East, and South & all in between).... hlthe2b Sep 2019 #1
The best thing she ever did.... rkesler04 Sep 2019 #2
I'd rather have Al Franken than the lesson. marble falls Sep 2019 #3

hlthe2b

(102,188 posts)
1. As they say in GOT, "the North remembers" (and the West, East, and South & all in between)....
Sun Sep 8, 2019, 07:13 AM
Sep 2019

Yet, I don't think Gillibrand and a few others learned anything. There are "shades of gray" in all things. To fail to recognize such is always going to brand you an "extremist."

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