Los Angeles Times

#MeTooSTEM and Tyson

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Re “#MeToo hits science,” Opinion, Dec. 7

Jennifer Carson’s op-ed about alleged misconduct by astrophysi­cist Neil deGrasse Tyson rightly pinpointed how harassment by powerful men is driving women away from careers in science.

However, the headline was off the mark. A robust, grass-roots #MeTooSTEM effort has been highly effective, having resulted in the departure of evolutiona­ry geneticist Francisco J. Ayala from UC Irvine.

Two major forces in #MeTooSTEM, Beth-Ann McLaughlin and Sherry Marts, recently received the 2018 Disobedien­ce Award from Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology’s MIT Media Lab. They shared this award with the creator of #MeToo, Tarana Burke.

Ignoring the advances of #MeTooSTEM that led to revelation­s about Tyson does a disservice to the scientific community. Terry McGlynn

Pasadena The writer is a professor of biology at Cal State Dominguez Hills.

As a feminist and huge fan of Tyson, I was also dismayed by the recent allegation­s against him, but for reasons other than Carson’s

Two of the accusation­s are frankly ridiculous. Tyson has a rather large, wonderful personalit­y. Add alcohol, and he presents a lady with an unexpected expression of affection, according to one accuser. In a world full of sorrows, this does not rank.

Then, some person has a tattoo of the solar system plastered over her upper body, and Tyson goes looking for Pluto? That’s not creepy — it’s hilarious.

Instead of falling apart when a man says something dumb, a woman should knock him down with a simple assertion of discomfort, or better yet exercise her wit and get even — then move on.

The rape allegation is obviously far more serious, but it is disputed. With no collaborat­ing evidence, it is patently unfair to paint Tyson with the brush of sexual assault. JJ Flowers

Laguna Beach

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