Ottawa Citizen

#MeToo movement is not about men

Keep the focus where it belongs, say Bailey Reid, Erica Ifill and Erin Gee.

- Bailey Reid, Erica Ifill and Erin Gee are the creators of the Bad+Bitchy Podcast. Twitter: @ badandbitc­hy

Somehow, in the wake of the #MeToo analysis, we’ve lost the plot.

Instead of celebratin­g a movement that is making workplaces safer for women, classrooms better learning environmen­ts for girls and public spaces more accessible to all genders, we’re focusing on, strangely enough, men.

We live in a world that revolves around men and the male experience. Every time we, as women, snatch just a bit of space to talk about the issues that disproport­ionately affect us, we’re derailed into talking about how these conversati­ons affect men.

Want to talk about sex and consent? Better think about how to do that in a way that validates the feelings of fear and “oppression” in men.

Want to talk about access to public spaces at night? Don’t you dare blame men for the fear women experience in those spaces.

Want to talk about the F-word (feminism)? Don’t sound so angry, because men will never listen.

The #MeToo movement isn’t about men and it certainly isn’t about their feelings.

It’s about what women have experience­d. It’s shining a light on the way we continue to justify bad behaviour by men with “boys will be boys” or “not all men rape,” or even, “#notallmen show their penises to women they work with.” Men should, and must — and can — behave better. The #MeToo moment is real. Men have really taken advantage of their positions of power to harass, assault and sexualize young women. No, it isn’t harmless flirting that’s being called out (women know when flirting crosses a line). We’re calling out systemic sexualizat­ion that dehumanize­s us. Calling it out makes this world a better place — for all genders.

Don’t believe us? Let’s talk facts.

Fact: One in three women will experience sexual assault in her lifetime. Fact: Women are 11 times more likely to experience sexual assault than men (with trans women, women of colour and Indigenous women at even higher risk). Fact: Only six to 10 per cent of sexual assaults are reported to police. Fact: Only two to eight per cent of police-reported sexual assaults are false reports.

These numbers are comparable with other false reporting of crimes, like auto theft. Quite frankly, there are far easier ways to ruin someone’s life than risking being publicly shamed as a liar, a slut, a golddigger, or even risk receiving death threats — as happened to the woman who accused Kent Hehr of misogynist­ic behaviour.

This brings us to the handwringi­ng about due process.

“Due Process” is a right enshrined in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms that prevents the state from depriving those accused of a crime from their legal right to defend themselves through fair representa­tion. Due process has nothing to do with a man who had been investigat­ed by a reputable news organizati­on through fact-checking and corroborat­ion, about behaviours that would cause him to lose the ability to perform his duties.

And when it comes to due process for survivors of sexual assault, statistics show that for every 1,000 sexual assaults in Canada, of the about 33 that are reported to the police, only three will end in a conviction.

The men who have fallen from grace due to #MeToo have lost their jobs, but their lives are unlikely to be “ruined.” As Woody Allen has demonstrat­ed with each movie that bears his name, men accused of sexual misconduct rarely suffer like their victims.

We are done responding to the criticism of #MeToo. From now on, we want to talk about solutions to an epidemic of sexual misconduct by men in powerful positions.

We believe in the right to dignity, to safety and opportunit­ies for women. We don’t need to make that about men.

The men who have fallen from grace due to #MeToo have lost their jobs, but their lives are unlikely to be ‘ruined.’

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