Los Angeles Times

No more Roy Moore?

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Since allegation­s of Harvey Weinstein’s predatory conduct toward women were reported in early October — touching off an ongoing series of public accusation­s against numerous actors and entertainm­ent executives — some of our letter writers have wondered why politician­s long believed to have harassed and assaulted women have not similarly been held to account. Men in Hollywood are losing their careers after being exposed, they say, and yet Donald Trump went on to be elected president weeks after the “Access Hollywood” tape was made public in October 2016.

Comes now Roy Moore, the far-right GOP nominee for U.S. senator from Alabama, who is accused of having a sexual encounter with a 14-year-old girl in 1979, when he was 32, and of pursuing relationsh­ips with other teenage women. Moore’s fellow conservati­ves may be debating what to do with him, but many of our readers have made up their minds. Here is what they have to say. — Paul Thornton, letters editor

Lon DeYoung of Chatsworth detects some religiousl­y motivated hypocrisy:

Alabama State Auditor Jim Zeigler defended Moore this way: “Take Joseph and Mary. Mary was a teenager and Joseph was an adult carpenter. They became parents of Jesus.”

The hypocrisy of the religious right is appalling. To protect one of their own and to justify a possible sexual predator in their midst is typical of their cherry-picking of the Bible to justify their slanted views of society in the 21st century.

Let me point out that in all my 66 years on this Earth, I was taught that the birth of Christ did not involve sex. Did Zeigler miss that in his Bible studies, or did it just not fit this particular narrative?

Burbank resident Jen Tait notices a difference between Hollywood and politics:

As a former writer of television, I feel qualified to speak on this matter.

As a battle-scarred veteran of Hollywood’s war against women (which often, but not always, manifests in pronounced sexual harassment), it interests me to see that Hollywood seems to be responding to its own bad conscience regarding the long-term and systemic sexual abuse of women and is self-monitoring. This is happening as an accused serial sexual abuser sits in the White House, and Alabama’s current candidate for a seat in the U.S. Senate declares his intention to hold tight, despite calls for him to abandon his candidacy “if the allegation is true.”

I notice no such “if the allegation is true” condition has been applied to either Louis C.K. or Kevin Spacey in the wake of the allegation­s against them, yet executives immediatel­y delayed, abandoned or significan­tly changed the projects they were working on.

Sally Holloway of San Diego makes a similar point about different standards:

Spacey’s show business career has more than dimmed — it’s gone. If only he was straight he could move to Alabama, where he could have a real future in Republican politics.

 ?? Brynn Anderson Associated Press ?? AN ALABAMA woman said Senate candidate Roy Moore had sexual contact with her when she was 14.
Brynn Anderson Associated Press AN ALABAMA woman said Senate candidate Roy Moore had sexual contact with her when she was 14.

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