Los Angeles Times

Boohoo .... huh? Kavanaugh isn’t the victim here

- ROBIN ABCARIAN

A woman says she was sexually assaulted in high school by a harddrinki­ng kid who has grown up to become a Supreme Court nominee. Her story gets out. A second accuser comes forward. Then a third.

His nomination is imperiled. What happens next? Time for another round of Let’s Blame the Women!

But this time, there’s a twist. With the #MeToo movement making mincemeat out of so many misbehavin­g men’s careers, you can’t directly slam a credible accuser such as Christine Blasey Ford anymore.

You can’t just come out and say she’s a liar.

You can’t say, the way a Clarence Thomas supporter said about Anita Hill, that she is “a little bit nutty and a little bit slutty.” Or wonder aloud whether she is a “scorned woman.”

Instead, you must discredit her in every other possible way:

She must be mistaken about who attacked her.

Her story cannot be corroborat­ed.

She is an unwitting pawn of power-hungry Democrats.

It’s all Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s fault and she is the one who must be investigat­ed.

And — wait for it! — the nominee is the real victim here.

For many of us, the Brett Kavanaugh confirmati­on spectacle has confirmed that the experience­s of women, even now, even after

the falls of so many highprofil­e men of seemingly impeccable credential­s, are to be trivialize­d or politicize­d.

That is, when they are not being ignored.

In the New York Times last week, author Kate Manne, an assistant professor of philosophy at Cornell University, described this believe-men-at-all-costs phenomenon as “himpathy.” She defined it as “the inappropri­ate and disproport­ionate sympathy powerful men often enjoy in cases of sexual assault, intimate partner violence, homicide and other misogynist­ic behavior.”

At its most extreme, she wrote, it is “a pathologic­al moral tendency to feel sorry exclusivel­y for the alleged male perpetrato­r — it was too long ago; he was just a boy; it was a case of mistaken identity — while relentless­ly casting suspicion upon the female accusers.”

When I have to explain over and over again why victims of sexual abuse or harassment don’t come forward, I feel like hitting my head against a wall. Why do we even have to have this conversati­on anymore?

Let’s just stipulate, please, that women are often afraid to come forward because they won’t be believed or the powerful man who assaulted them might damage their career, or they are ashamed or embarrasse­d or consumed by guilt.

And can we also stipulate that just because a man has gone through six background checks does not mean he didn’t drunkenly assault one or two or three women in his youth?

Sometimes these transgress­ions come to light only when the stakes are as high as they ever get — like, say, when a man is nominated to a lifetime position on the Supreme Court and will have dominion over the fates of millions of Americans.

Don’t you think that might be the very moment a victim weighs her privacy against her civic duty and concludes her civic duty tips the scale toward disclosure? ::

In 1997, University of Oregon psychologi­st Jennifer Freyd coined the acronym DARVO to describe how some perpetrato­rs of sexual violence respond to being called out for their transgress­ions. DARVO stands for “Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim and Offender.”

As Freyd explains in an online primer, “The perpetrato­r or offender may Deny the behavior, Attack the individual doing the confrontin­g, and Reverse the roles of Victim and Offender such that the perpetrato­r assumes the victim role and turns the true victim — or the whistleblo­wer — into an alleged offender.”

I wouldn’t say President Trump, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham and Kavanaugh have gone full DARVO yet, but there’s a concerted effort to make the accused into a victim.

Kavanaugh is no victim. If the confirmati­on process has been hard on him, too bad. And if it’s been hard on his family — as Trump says repeatedly — it’s because he dragged them into it. He brought his wife to an interview on Fox News, then interrupte­d her when she tried to answer a question. In Senate testimony, he divulged the private prayers of his daughter for all the world to hear.

If the confirmati­on process has been hard on him, imagine what the process has been like for the women who have come forward to say he drunkenly assaulted them. They have nothing to gain. Absolutely nothing.

With an infinitesi­mal number of exceptions, men who are accused of sexual harassment and assault are not victims. And yet we have seen an outpouring of anxiety from men that they will be unfairly accused.

Donald Trump Jr. told the Daily Mail over the weekend that he’s far more worried about his sons than his daughters after the “he said/she said” accusation­s against Kavanaugh.

Graham — he of the Academy Award-worthy tantrum last week — darkly warned that Democrats would be sorry if they manage to kill Kavanaugh’s nomination with these last-minute revelation­s.

“Let me tell my Democratic friends,” Graham said, “if this becomes the new norm, you better watch out for your nominees.”

Likewise, Trump said. “It’ll be a horrible, horrible thing for future political people, judges, anything you want, it’ll be a horrible thing. It cannot be allowed to happen.”

This assumes that every potential judge or appointee can credibly be accused of sexual misconduct.

If that’s the case, there’s a simple fix: Nominate women.

 ?? Win McNamee Getty Images ?? JUDGE Brett Kavanaugh testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee. His defenders have tried to cast doubt on his accuser, Christine Blasey Ford.
Win McNamee Getty Images JUDGE Brett Kavanaugh testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee. His defenders have tried to cast doubt on his accuser, Christine Blasey Ford.
 ??  ??
 ?? Andrew Harnik AFP/Getty Images ?? GOP SEN. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina darkly warned last week that Democrats would be sorry if they manage to kill Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination.
Andrew Harnik AFP/Getty Images GOP SEN. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina darkly warned last week that Democrats would be sorry if they manage to kill Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination.
 ?? Jim Lo Scalzo EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP’S son, Donald Jr., told a newspaper he’s more worried about his sons than his daughters after the accusation­s against Kavanaugh.
Jim Lo Scalzo EPA/Shuttersto­ck PRESIDENT TRUMP’S son, Donald Jr., told a newspaper he’s more worried about his sons than his daughters after the accusation­s against Kavanaugh.

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