A Little Pony wrote: » Another pointless social media nonsense which will be forgotten about in a few days time. Pretty much like #prayfor rubbish.
Dr. Kenneth Noisewater wrote: » Some fella looked at my arse in Dunnes on Wednesday. #MeToo
[Deleted User] wrote: » It's neither a good nor a bad thing, it's a fairly cheap and ambiguous expression of a very vague sentiment. Hashtags eh
George Colossal Tomato wrote: » It will get to a stage soon where people will feel there is something wrong with them if they haven't been raped or sexually assaulted.
AnneFrank wrote: » ah yes the bullying that now exists if you do not have the general, online opinion of the snowflake mass's. Never was this more apparent than the gay marriage referendum, god help you if you didn't agree, forget the fact there was a democratic vote, no, you were scum of the earth and labelled a homophobe if you disagreed. and now all men are rapists/bullys/racists ect #it'salesbianwomansworld
__..__ wrote: » George Colossal Tomato wrote: » It will get to a stage soon where people will feel there is something wrong with them if they haven't been raped or sexually assaulted. I think we are at that stage. One of the girls at work said today that she likes getting wolf whistles. Well I couldn't believe the attack on her by the other women . It was savage. Poor girl will never say that again I can tell you.
__..__ wrote: » I think we are at that stage. One of the girls at work said today that she likes getting wolf whistles. Well I couldn't believe the attack on her by the other women . It was savage. Poor girl will never say that again I can tell you.
[Deleted User] wrote: » If it gives people a way to talk about their sexual abuse - who might not have been able to before (for whatever reason), then surely it's a good thing?
flexcon wrote: » honestly made perfect sense to me. I echo this in many ways. It's why the world was shocked when Trump came in, why nertherlands nearly voted in a Naxi party, why UK is leaving thanks to brexit. The masses are strangely not as mass consensus as they seem to think sometimes. Anyway, way off thread! I'm not sure how I feel about the #metoo. I saw two friends who said it on Facebook, one being kinda close. I asked them about it, and either didn't want to say anything more, or was unsure if to say anything. So it became an awkward moment when she made public with the #metoo but actually wouldnt talk about it in person. If it did any good for her, and genuinely got the courage to say #metoo because of the sudden power and surge of attention behind this - then that's all fine. Undecided what to think since when asked further - no further details are given ...
DeanAustin wrote: » What’s the point though? If someone has a genuine complaint, then why not contact the Gardai? I guess the counter argument is that there may not be enough evidence or they don’t want to confront the person who assaulted them. In that case, maybe this helps your friend (or people like her) to talk about it which could be a good thing in terms of dealing with it. But your friend doesn’t want to do that either. However, beyond that it’s just exacerbating the feeling of being a victim (which I don’t think is a good thing in itself) or jumping on a bandwagon which lots of people will do to get some attention. Someone said it earlier, this is social media at its worst. Sexual assault is a heinous, disgusting crime. So is exploiting it to jump on a bandwagon in my view and this campaign encourages that sort of behaviour.