hatrickpatrick wrote: » She told him she wasn't interested, he continued to bother her. From reading that article, over a long period of time. He then became bitter and hostile towards her when she continued to reject him. How is this not harassment? This is exactly the kind of sh!te that could ruin somebody's day, particularly if they were already stressed out about other stuff, which most of us are these days.
seamus wrote: » A woman standing at a bus stop, or in line at Tesco, or in work, or going through airport security, or any other of a million other places that are mundane daily things, does probably not have "maybe meet a nice guy" top of their agenda for that day. So a guy coming up and talking to her is going to get a more guarded response by default. "Hi, how are you?" will never be sexual harassment, but she will think - just like you would - "Ugh, what do you want? I'm in no mood for making smalltalk, just go away. Please".
professore wrote: » So it's fine because men don't "fight" for it. Hmmmm. So men are not the violent macho types and women are not the shrinking helpless violets you would have us believe?
0ph0rce0 wrote: » He got down to the crowd, he's a celebrity, Hands are everywhere. Not like anyone pulled his knob out and wanked him off. A load of oul bollocks
professore wrote: » Are people really being hit on all the time? Really? Is it that much of a thing? I'm friends with some truly beautiful women and outside of bars they are not being hit on 24/7.
server down wrote: » Actually not that many people meet their spouse in colllege and very few people I know are married to their high school sweet heart. That leaves work - which could be male or female dominated and “through friends” which can be a lottery. I met a gf in an airport. We were both delayed.
hatrickpatrick wrote: » This, to me, is exactly where this conversation jumps the shark. You are assuming that all women are introverted, and by saying "just like you should" you are also implying that all men should also be introverted.
seamus wrote: » I said "would", not "should". And since the rest of your post is based on that mistake, you've wasted a lot of energy, I fear. If you re-read it you'll find that nothing in my post disagrees with yours.
A woman standing at a bus stop, or in line at Tesco, or in work, or going through airport security, or any other of a million other places that are mundane daily things, does probably not have "maybe meet a nice guy" top of their agenda for that day. So a guy coming up and talking to her is going to get a more guarded response by default.
seamus wrote: » Fact is that random encounters are tiny minority. So much so that just going up and approaching people in public is very unlikely to yield anything unless you take the scattergun approach.
anna080 wrote: » I would agree that Joanna's experience constitutes harassment. For people who are struggling to see it as such- replace "constantly asking me out" with "constantly calling me", "constantly calling me a name"- the deciphering word is "constant". Just because he was "only asking her out" doesn't detract from the level of discomfort and intimidation he was making her feel. Once you have told someone to stop doing something, and they continue to do it- that is harassment. Once off experiences of uncomfortable encounters are not. Persistent, heedless and unrelenting patterns of unwarranted behaviour of any kind is harassment. I thought her overall argument of complain and report was very constructive.
hatrickpatrick wrote: » But we shouldn't all start treading on eggshells just because some people aren't interested in what is, for others, a way of life.
professore wrote: » Let's see your peer reviewed statistics. Match.com probably.
0ph0rce0 wrote: » I see Harry Styles was sexually assaultedhttps://www.joe.ie/music/footage-emerged-fan-groping-harry-styles-performed-stage-604546 What a ****ing joke of a world we live in now. Look at the comments on twitter. Madness
seamus wrote: » Is this something you talk to them about a lot? Or are you just assuming that because it doesn't happen when you're there, that it's not happening at all? You're arguing with statistics there. Just because your experience doesn't match up, doesn't make your experience reality. Fact is that random encounters are tiny minority. So much so that just going up and approaching people in public is very unlikely to yield anything unless you take the scattergun approach. I said "would", not "should". And since the rest of your post is based on that mistake, you've wasted a lot of energy, I fear. If you re-read it you'll find that nothing in my post disagrees with yours.
server down wrote: » I was responding to your claim that people should meet at a bar only.
Floppybits wrote: » In all seriousness though it seems Men can do nothing right, On the one hand we have women saying that they can't get man and on the other you have women, probably the same ones, saying men are not to look at me or talk to me or approach me anyway. Yes there are men out there who believe they are god's gift and cannot understand why a woman can reject them, Why they are like that who knows? What can be done about, well I suppose there mates tell them to cop onto themselves and stop being an ars*ho*e? That might work, it may not. Ostracize them from society.
LLMMLL wrote: » Unfortunately some people can't tell the difference between approaching a random woman on the street who is on her way home from a **** day at work and approaching a friend of a friend at a party who you've been having a flirtatious conversation with. There are lots of ways to approach women that I would view as creepy. A woman you have career power over. A woman working in the coffee shop you frequent. A woman you see on the street etc. Now sure SOME women might react well to these situations of a guy is charming and attractive. That doesn't mean it's not a creepy thing to do and it's something we should all aspire to.
Candie wrote: » If you don't see that as completely inappropriate, there's a problem with your perception. Just because the guy is a performer doesn't mean he should accept mauling as an occupational hazard.
0ph0rce0 wrote: » I'm not saying he should I just don't see what happened here as sexual harassment. An excited teenager looked to touch her idol or some ****e while he jumps down in front of the crowd. I really doubt anyone there before the gig was saying hmmmmm think I'll grab oul harry by the balls. A bunch of girls touch him like what happens at pretty much any concert where a performer goes to the crowd. Someone put their hand up in the wrong place here and most likley by accident touched his balls if even as you see nothing in that video. You think this, most likely an excited teenager should be arrested, charged, jailed and put on a sex offender list?
suicide_circus wrote: » ^^^^of course you didn't see it as creepy, you were in a position of power.
Hooks Golf Handicap wrote: » I still have FB "friends" that have the opaqueFrench Flag in their profile pic.