Los Angeles Times

Silent enablers

Re “Harassment issue vexes Congress,” Nov. 30

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Right now we are outraged about sexual harassment, so we must get this right as we’ve been here far too many times. We must seize the moment and move to action.

Sexual harassment is a form of sexual violence, and it fits in the larger framework of rape culture, which describes a setting where rape is pervasive and normalized due to societal attitudes about gender and sexuality. This setting is reinforced by norms that allow exploitati­on and the imbalance of power to persist so the powerful can continue to prey on the vulnerable.

We must make perpetrato­rs accountabl­e for their actions, and bystanders are crucial to making this happen. Bystanders have key roles in the persistenc­e of sexual violence; they aid and abet the norms of rape culture when they look the other way. Instead of staying quiet, they can speak up and change attitudes around gender and sexuality.

The question isn’t how can survivors prevent sexual violence; rather, it is how can people change the imbalance of power and prevent sexual violence by being an ally and change-maker in their community, industry or society? We need to treat victims and survivors with respect and create spaces of safety so they feel comfortabl­e to come forward. We must have a balanced workforce hierarchy that represents the population. We must seek to remedy this situation for good.

Faye Washington, Los Angeles

The writer is president and chief executive of the YWCA of Greater Los Angeles.

We are conflating criminal acts with behavior that may be in poor taste or offensive to some.

A zero-tolerance approach presumes a universall­y held standard for what constitute­s sexual misconduct. It is clear that using a position of power to gain sexual favors, forcing sex on an unwilling partner, and engaging in sex with a minor are, and have been, egregious acts. Yet, many of the stories that we are hearing do not cross any of those lines.

When judging more ambiguous behavior, context should not be ignored. We must acknowledg­e that humans are sexual beings and that our behavior is complex. The cultural roles for men and women have gone through a revolution over the last century and most of the norms that governed sexual behavior have shifted.

We cannot judge all behavior retroactiv­ely by today’s standards.

Renée Dernburg

Los Angeles

Re “Time to answer, Mr. Trump,” column, Nov. 28

This was the day I’ve been waiting for: when someone with a platform of some kind would re-introduce the matter of President Trump having so far gotten away scot-free with something he admitted to on tape.

Why has this issue not been pursued further? My fondest hope is that now that sexual harassment is being treated as if it actually meant something (and the accusers aren’t being threatened with humiliatio­n), things will circle back to Trump and he’ll be put back on the hot seat where he belongs.

It is truly beyond me how people can defend his vengeful, rude, immature and dangerous personalit­y. To top it off, he has his female press secretary reiterate that all the women who accused him are lying. I hope she one day realizes what she has done.

Wendy Westgate

Burbank

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