Manawatu Standard

Where there’s doubt, men get the benefit

- Leonard Pitts Jr Columnist for The Miami Herald

Let’s get something straight: Men are not the victims here. It is a foolish and offensive line of reasoning, so naturally it has caught traction on the political Right. Indeed, for some, it is an article of faith as the confirmati­on of would-be Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh becomes ever more deeply mired in accusation­s that, as a high school boy, he committed attempted rape. For them, Kavanaugh is every man – and every man is in danger.

Donald Trump Jr told Britain’s Dailymailt­v that he fears for his sons more than his daughters.

Laura Ingraham told her radio audience: ‘‘If you are a young man . . . you’d better be very careful, because even if you didn’t do anything, you could be accused later on.’’

An unnamed White House lawyer told Politico: ‘‘If somebody can be brought down by accusation­s like this, then you, me, every man certainly should be worried. We can all be accused of something.’’

Then, there’s Kellyanne Conway who told CNN’S Jake Tapper she feels empathy for victims of sexual assault because she is one. Tapper, clearly moved as anyone would be, sought to explore what kind of psychologi­cal gymnastics allow her to defend Donald Trump, who infamously bragged on video about committing sexual assault.

Conway shut him down, making clear that she brought up her experience simply as a means of defending men. ‘‘This is Judge Kavanaugh now,’’ she said. ‘‘It could be anybody by next week. It could be any man in any position.’’

So every man should worry? Sorry, but I don’t.

And all this solicitude for my wellbeing is as misguided as it is misplaced. In the past 40-plus years, all of my assistants, most of my bosses, and many of my colleagues, students and closest friends have been women.

Yet I live in no fear that one of them will accuse me of sexual harassment or rape. See, I have a little trick: It’s called not committing sexual harassment or rape. I’ve found that it works pretty much every time.

Yes, ‘‘We can all be accused of something’’. I could be accused of the Kennedy assassinat­ion. But I was 6 years old at the time, so the charge would be less than credible.

And credibilit­y is the fulcrum of all this, the wedge upon which conservati­ves seek to turn perception upside down and cast victimiser­s as victims. Because most women neglect to ask a stenograph­er or notary public to be present at their sexual assaults, we are told that they are unreliable. Where there’s doubt, men get the benefit thereof. We don’t want to ruin a guy’s life over a false accusation, after all.

Many on the Right don’t seem overly concerned about ruining women’s lives though. Nor do they seem to get that false claims of sexual misconduct is not a thing. To the contrary, a report from the National Sexual Violence Resource Centre, sponsored by the Justice Department, puts the rate of false reporting at between 2 per cent and 10 per cent. Meaning up to 98 per cent of those who report sexual misconduct are telling the truth.

In the case of Kavanaugh’s accuser, Dr Christine Blasey Ford, factor in that she first accused him by name six years ago in therapy, so there can be no political motivation. Factor in, too, that she came forward reluctantl­y, opening an agonising moment of her life to public scrutiny, even though she knew many would disbelieve her.

But he’s the credible one? He gets the benefit of the doubt? And men are the true victims here? That’s called privilege. Too often, it forces survivors of sexual misconduct to live in guilt and shame.

And they’re not the ones who should.

‘‘If somebody can be brought down by accusation­s like this, then you, me, every man certainly should be worried.’’ Unnamed White House lawyer

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