Chap wrote:Why pick on sexual harassment dismissals as a topic on which to issue this extraordinary demand? Why not stealing office stationery, turning up to work drunk, persistent lateness, or any of the other variety of work-related misbehaviours that can result in dismissal?
Because there is zero tolerance for sexual harassment
Chap wrote: This thread is about the fact that large numbers of women have come out and said clearly that they are sick of men in the working environment groping them, propositioning them in demeaning ways, threatening their careers unless they provide sexual favors, and generally making them feel like walking sex toys rather than people.
Now let me ask you "Why pick on sexual harassment" only? People abuse their power all the time for many different reasons. And why pick on men only? According to NYT, "Andrea Ramsey, 56, is a retired business executive who worked in the nonprofit sector before deciding to run for office as a Democrat in next year’s congressional midterm elections. She was one of a growing number of women inspired to seek office in the wake of President Trump’s election. But this month, The Kansas City Star newspaper asked her about a 2005 lawsuit that accused her of sexually harassing a man at LabOne, where she was the executive vice president of human resources, and then firing him after he rejected her advances, a claim Ms. Ramsey denies. The suit was against the company, not Ms. Ramsey specifically, and it was settled in 2006. “Twelve years ago, I eliminated an employee’s position,” Ms. Ramsey said in a letter posted to Facebook on Friday. “That man decided to bring a lawsuit against the company (not against me). He named me in the allegations, claiming I fired him because he refused to have sex with me. That is a lie.”"
and I am not convinced Sexual Harassment is only a men's problem. According to the telegraph, 96% of sexual attacks on men go unreported. According to the National Alliance to End Sexual Violence, "It may be challenging for some to think of men being the victims of sexual crimes because it is challenging to recognize men as 'victims' and still think of them as men.”"