Nelson Mail

Pointless paganism

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Nelson has certainly come a long way. Given the continual celebratio­ns of paganism that now permeate its culture I guess the city has forgotten that that iconic Cathedral, which even still dominates the city-scape, is the reason Nelson was given city status in the first place.

Christian doctrine and ethics were then paramount in our society. Now we have mindless slogans like ‘‘Live the Day’’ with its hard-to-miss suggestion that ‘‘anything goes’’.

How painting one’s face to look, at best ridiculous, and at worst downright evil, reveres lost loved ones, I fail to see.

And Halloween last night would have been a cause for celebratio­n, Nelson. It would have had everything – except perhaps any sort of conceptual­ised world-view! Hardly a day passes without a fresh allegation against the serial Hollywood sex predator Harvey Weinstein.

As I write this, the latest claims have come from Annabella Sciorra, who starred in The Sopranos – she played a mentally unstable woman who had a turbulent affair with Tony Soprano – and Daryl Hannah, best remembered as the mermaid in the 1984 Disney movie Splash.

Sciorra told the New Yorker magazine this week that Weinstein violently raped her in the early 1990s, while Hannah alleged that he tried to force his way into her hotel room.

Weinstein was carrying on a Hollywood tradition that dates at least as far back as Jack Warner, one of the founders of Warner Brothers, who was notorious for auditionin­g ambitious starlets on the ‘‘casting couch’’ in his office.

Then, as now, the Hollywood establishm­ent seems to have been complicit in the practice. Everyone must have known it was going on, but chose to ignore it because the men involved had the power to make or break careers.

That’s why I can’t help feeling cynical about the sudden stream of accusation­s against Weinstein.

It’s not that I doubt his accusers. The weight of evidence against him is overwhelmi­ng. But it seems obvious that Hollywood protected him for decades.

As far back as 1998, Gwyneth Paltrow alluded to Weinstein’s reputation in a television interview. There were even jocular references to it in the comedy series 30 Rock in 2012 and at the Oscars ceremony the following year.

So people knew what he was doing, but turned a blind eye. Presumably they were scared of his power to destroy careers.

All that changed when, several weeks ago, the New Yorker and the New York Times reported dozens of claims against Weinstein, ranging from sexual harassment to outright rape.

That opened the floodgates, and since then there has been a stream of complainan­ts emerging into the light with accusation­s dating back to the 1980s.

Suddenly, everyone in Hollywood is trying to distance themselves from this man whose patronage was once craved. Weinstein has been fired by his own company and expelled from the pompously named Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. His wife Georgina Chapman has left him, his brother called him sick and depraved and his lawyer, a woman, announced she could no longer work for him.

High-profile actors and politician­s lined up to condemn him – including, ironically, Hillary said he was sickened and angry by what had been revealed, but was then accused by the actress Rose McGowan – one of Weinstein’s victims – of having known about Weinstein because McGowan herself told him.

Other actors – George Clooney, for example – say they had no idea what sort of man he was. So where were all these people when Weinstein was at it? Looking the other way, that’s where.

Wikipedia lists 70 women who have made claims against Weinstein. Not even the most powerful man in the movie industry can rape, molest or harass 70 women without other people knowing.

If it was widely known that Weinstein was a rapist and a molester, why did no one blow the whistle to protect other women who were likely to be targeted? And why did so many women continue to work with him?

Some even appeared on his arm, smiling for the cameras at glamorous Hollywood events. They put their careers first. It’s an ugly insight into the decadence of Hollywood, where debasement is something women seem to accept as the price to be paid for fame.

None of this exculpates Weinstein, who apparently regarded women as sexual playthings – due reward for his position at the pinnacle of the film industry.

But the mass outbreak of virtuous disgust is almost as repugnant as the ghastly and contemptib­le Weinstein himself. The entire rotten Hollywood establishm­ent stands condemned for the conspiracy of silence that protected Weinstein for so long.

 ??  ?? Harvey Weinstein and his wife.
Harvey Weinstein and his wife.

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