alfredmizen
Banned
- Mar 11, 2015
- 6,342
mosques are segregated along gender lines , get over it
I think they would be sensible enough not to work at such an occasion.
im celebrating the SUICIDE of a former MP you treacherous weasel , whats your next.move now your laughable attempt at.intimidating me via proxy with some big bad antifa clown didnt work?
Could you translate?
Ruling classes have no respect for working people. What a shocker!!!
It is not really surprising that they are out of step with the changing values of respect. They only need a flimsy veneer of 'its for charity' to convince themselves that their behaviour is okay.
I don't know if it makes me a 'snowflake' to those apologists who want to bathe in the reflected light of these pillars of our society but personally i don't think it is okay to treat fellow human beings (i don't care if they are men or women) in the manner that has been reported here (and yes that doesn include DingoDan's Whatabout!). Maybe the women didn't really mind and knew what was expected of them on the night. This, for me, doesn't excuse the disrespectful behaviour of those that are supposed to be leaders in our community.
"Money for hospitals? Sure I need a tax right off..... But I am also going to need a night out with my pals where I can grope some pretty poor people."
Wow, what a fantastic pice of journalism! I've never read such contrived drivel in my life. Whats the FT doing covering this story, who actualy really cares. Go to many a Rugby Club dinner up and down the country and see how life really is. Has anyone been arrested, has anyone made a complaint? Its really none of our business what went on there between consenting adults and as for the Tory MP who was marched infront of the PM, I would have had more respect for him if he had said he had a great time and was planning to go to the event next year and by the way PM it raised £1.2m more than your putting into the NHS. never mind that'll another few more dead children because of lack of funding because some nobody journalist was offended. What have we all become, blokes are being nutured, people scared of saying anything, people offended on behalf of others. Perhaps that journalist Ms i've forgotten your name already would liked to have come to war with me and complained about the violence.
These journalists live in some parallel, hedonistic universe. Get real and take a look at yourself, I bet you're a bundle of laughs on a night out!!
It makes one wonder how some of the posters on here have treated women during their lives to deem this behaviour defensible.
There seems to be a real fear by some on here that people are becoming empowered against this behaviour.
As an aside, spoof or not it's an odd account to set up just so you can get away with making jokes about a man who , among other things, visited hospitals for the sole purpose of raping disabled children and cancer victims. Maybe I'm a snowflake but the mods need to shut that account down. They won't though.
I was never defending the behavior, I said that quite a few times I don't condone it. But that doesn't make the outrage being expressed about it proportionate, balanced or justified.
I'm not pro sleaziness or womanizing, but this has been presented and responded to as though it were a mass sexual assault, it was nothing of the sort. You are not empowering women by being outraged about this event, in fact you are doing the cause against sexual misbehavior no favors at all if you are going to refuse to distinguish between hand holding or bum grabbing and actual sexual assault.
I don't agree with Bill Maher on everything but he sums up the problem here pretty well I think.
Firstly, I'm not outraged so please stop making that assumption abouot everyone that has a negative view of men molesting women. Second, the argument that it diminishes "real" sexual assault is lazy and frankly, what constitutes "real" sexual assault on an individual is not your call to make.
Thirdly, where has this been "made out to be a mass sexual assault"? The journalist did a fantastic job of describing the event. Where are the claims of mass assault form her or anyone else?
Really, I know you are well meaning, or at least I'll assume you are but attitudes like yours are part of the problem. You need to think a little wider.
If a woman went to this event as a hostess or whatever capacity and she did not like the way men groped her or asked her to bed or showed her their penis or pulled her onto their lap or grabbed her waist or put their hand up their skirt then she has the right to speak out and she has my support.
If your wife/partner were out in the pub and a bloke shoved his hand up her skirt and pulled her onto his lap how would you feel? I can't see the shruggers of this world, like yourself being much use in being able to put the bloke straight. What would you do, shake you rhead and tell your Mrs that that is life and get over it because there are "women out there being sexually assaulted, you're not one of them so stop making the cause for women's rights into a mockery with your claim that him putting his hand up your skirt is sexual assault"?
As an aside, am I alone in thinking the hand holding is really ****ing creepy? If some fat old **** was doing that to my daughter I'd seriously have to be held back. Holding hands is a very intimate thing, some crsuty old ****er assuming they could do that actually makes me feel a bit nauseated.
Firstly, I'm not outraged so please stop making that assumption abouot everyone that has a negative view of men molesting women. Second, the argument that it diminishes "real" sexual assault is lazy and frankly, what constitutes "real" sexual assault on an individual is not your call to make.
Thirdly, where has this been "made out to be a mass sexual assault"? The journalist did a fantastic job of describing the event. Where are the claims of mass assault form her or anyone else?
Really, I know you are well meaning, or at least I'll assume you are but attitudes like yours are part of the problem. You need to think a little wider.
If a woman went to this event as a hostess or whatever capacity and she did not like the way men groped her or asked her to bed or showed her their penis or pulled her onto their lap or grabbed her waist or put their hand up their skirt then she has the right to speak out and she has my support.
If your wife/partner were out in the pub and a bloke shoved his hand up her skirt and pulled her onto his lap how would you feel? I can't see the shruggers of this world, like yourself being much use in being able to put the bloke straight. What would you do, shake you rhead and tell your Mrs that that is life and get over it because there are "women out there being sexually assaulted, you're not one of them so stop making the cause for women's rights into a mockery with your claim that him putting his hand up your skirt is sexual assault"?
As an aside, am I alone in thinking the hand holding is really ****ing creepy? If some fat old **** was doing that to my daughter I'd seriously have to be held back. Holding hands is a very intimate thing, some crsuty old ****er assuming they could do that actually makes me feel a bit nauseated.
No doubt your daughter would not be in the line of work that these hostesses were. I really can't get too worked up about some crusty old bu---r, holding the hand of a hostess at a do like this and quite frankly, I dare say neither can the girls!
Do you think that all women that work as hostesses at events are happy to hold hands with men that attend? Is that your view of them? Of them all? Of every woman who has ever sought employment as a hostess at a corporate event?
I thought it was a good piece of journalism, and the fact that it was the newspaper of the City establishment rather than the Guardian that did it, does indeed show that the world is changing (a bit) for the better, and this has been confirmed to some extent by the response to the article. Of course there has been a backlash in favour of the corporate sleazebags and their "right to grope" (exemplified by some of the inevitable comments on this NSC thread). Like it or not, however, it's increasingly the case that it's the rugby club (and Presidents club) dinners that exist in some parallel universe that's withering away. The real world has moved (or at least is moving) on. Hence the massive scramble among the corporate and political world to distance themselves from this particular hot potato.
The charitable donations are neither here nor there - if these business people want to give to charity, they can easily do it directly. No earthly reason why it has to come through a vehicle like the Presidents club.
What would you say to a man who took a job as a "host" at an all women's event and was told to he needed to be muscly and attractive, and had to wear particular underwear, and he told you that one of those women held his hand? Or even grabbed his bum?
You would have enough respect for him to know that a) he's not likely to be so naive as to be surprised, and b) he can probably handle it.
How about extending the same respect to women.