The Gold Coast Bulletin

SMEARING MEN

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Why are women allowed to simply accuse men of bad behaviour without listing specifics?

BARNABY Joyce is just the latest victim of a devastatin­g new form of denunciati­on – particular­ly of men. On Tuesday, the former Nationals leader was accused on the ABC of sexually harassing a woman in a way so “traumatic” that she later “burst into tears” and “couldn’t sleep for a week”.

When this “terrified” woman later told her friends, they were “absolutely shocked”.

Wow. From that descriptio­n of the effects, you’d assume the cause was a form of assault so brutal that I don’t dare describe it for legal reasons.

You’d probably also assume the victim rushed to the police to report a crime.

But I said this is a new form of denunciati­on – one that now dominates political debate and leaves men unable to defend themselves.

You see, this accusation, made by West Australian businesswo­man Catherine Marriott, was aired publicly without a single detail of what allegedly occurred.

Neither Marriott nor the ABC would describe what kind of harassment they were talking about so you could know where it fitted on the vast scale from an innocuous wink to a rape. No detail was given that Joyce could then rebut or put in context.

The ABC audience was asked, instead, to judge by Marriott’s subjective feelings, not any objective facts: “(After the incident) I walked up to my hotel room and I burst into tears. I then couldn’t sleep that whole night. I didn’t actually sleep for a week.”

But how could anyone judge if Marriott was indeed the victim of something serious, or was wildly overreacti­ng?

Joyce, himself, “absolutely denies” any misbehavio­ur and denounces the allegation­s as “spurious and defamatory”. Indeed, Marriott’s ABC interviewe­r, Leigh Sales, at one stage accused Joyce merely of “inappropri­ate behaviour”.

Moreover, a long investigat­ion by the National Party into Marriott’s claim (which she detailed to it) concluded it had “insufficie­nt evidence” for any finding.

And Marriott didn’t go to the police, despite Joyce challengin­g her to do so.

Asked why not, she gave the ABC a curious answer: “If I went to the police, it’s me versus him, which is a toxic space to be in.”

But isn’t that exactly the “toxic space” she’s in now – or has dropped Joyce in?

Except there’s this difference: by accusing Joyce, as she’s done on the ABC, means she’ll never have to prove her claims.

So why wouldn’t Marriott at least tell the ABC what happened? Again, another odd evasion: “I don’t want to be someone who’s defined by that incident. I want to be able to have a career where the first thing that people think about when they meet me is not, ‘Oh, that happened to her’.”

But isn’t Marriott already defined by her accusation, made so publicly?

Isn’t she already the woman who had ‘something terrible’ done to her – a ‘something terrible’ she invites you to imagine?

Of course, I cannot say Joyce is a good man who did nothing wrong.

But I don’t even know what he’s accused of, and so act by the golden rule: innocent until proven guilty.

Yet on the ABC, Marriott invited us to consider Joyce guilty without even putting a direct accusation.

Never mind the facts, just see the victim cry.

This is the new kind of accusation – of guilt, not of a specific crime – that’s also been hurled for three weeks at the men of the Liberal Party.

Take Chris Wallace, an Australian National University research fellow, who yesterday enthusiast­ically claimed on the ABC: “There is absolutely no doubt that there is horrendous levels of bullying going on in the Liberal Party …

“I really admire the Liberal women coming out now and putting it on the agenda and saying this is happening.”

Pardon? Not one of those women – Julie Bishop, Julia Banks, Kelly O’Dwyer, Lucy Gichuhi, Linda Reynolds – has actually said what in fact “is happening”.

True, they’ve all mischievou­sly claimed there’s been bad bullying in Canberra, but not one has given a single example of it.

I’ve asked why not and a mutual acquaintan­ce of one of those women assured me at the weekend that the bullying was real, but the women wouldn’t describe it because voters would conclude it was “trivial”.

Trivial. Just as I suspected. Indeed, Gichuhi last week belatedly admitted she hadn’t been bullied at all.

But how could male MPs defend themselves against such allegation­s-withoutevi­dence – a toxic product of a victim industry where the strong are always guilty and the weeping always right? Watch Andrew Bolt on The Bolt Report LIVE 7pm week nights

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 ??  ?? Accusation­s of sexual harassment have been made against Barnaby Joyce with not one skerrick of evidence.
Accusation­s of sexual harassment have been made against Barnaby Joyce with not one skerrick of evidence.
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