T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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844.1 | | CSC32::S_HALL | The cup is half NT | Mon Nov 30 1992 15:03 | 42 |
| re: .0
Well, it's a natural consequence of the state of law in
our time.
The way it *should* have been handled, is:
1) The lieutenant should have been reprimanded officially
for using inappropriate language. A repeat performance,
it should have been stressed, would result in discipline
( like demotion, suspension, etc. ).
and,
2) The junior employee should have been reprimanded for
insubordination. Her reply was not proper, and refusal
to perform the task was not acceptable.
That's as far as this should have gone.
But, in the post-Anita Hill world, this is what we can
look forward to. And not just for rude remarks between
employees.
A well-known ex-Deccie here was known for wearing provocative
clothing and running to personnel regularly with complaints
when she "caught" someone looking at her.
So, look for increasing tension as the oh-so-sensitive
types ( who find a slight in every glance, every gesture,
every intonation ) fill the courts and management offices
with hundreds of complaints, real and imagined.
And, look for men and women who don't know each other well
to keep an icy distance....
After all, who can afford to defend himself against *any*
charge in court ? Not most of us..and especially not
against charges of "harassment" based on glances or words
not intended to harass.
Steve H
|
844.2 | Let's not forget that there are two sides to this story. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 15:31 | 11 |
| On the other hand, if we ever get to hear the EMT's side of the story,
we could see an entirely different picture.
Perhaps the Lt. made a point of having female EMTs do sweeping chores
(in spite of the fact that 'anyone could be asked' to do this.) Perhaps
he had a history of making female EMTs do the sweeping over and over
and over (no matter how clean it got.) When she protested that the
bay really was clean, perhaps he started yelling at her about being
"on the r**" without the claimed insubordination. Who knows?
I'd like to hear both sides of this incident.
|
844.3 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | the power of surrender | Mon Nov 30 1992 15:34 | 22 |
|
I'm sorry, but this basenote feels really unpleasant to me.
As a woman, does this mean I can be expected in the world to shirk work
any time I don't like it and scream like the dickens?
And also, as a women, when something unfair *is* demanded of me
(something that might not be asked of a man), does it mean that no one
will listen because I'm obviously oversenitive, lying, or don't know
what I'm talking about?
I have never shirked what I felt was my responsibility, and sometimes
more. I did things in offices that the men didn't have to do, and did
them fairly cheerfuly when asked nicely, even though it wasn't in my
job description. I've swept, soldered, strung cables, made coffee,
answered phones, slung around boxes and inventory.
We now have two data points - does this mean I'm the exception or she
is? Am I the trend, or is she?
-Jody
|
844.4 | Wouldn't you want others to LISTEN to you rather than assume...? | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 15:36 | 12 |
| RE: .3 Jody
> As a woman, does this mean I can be expected in the world to shirk work
> any time I don't like it and scream like the dickens?
Are you sure (based on the 'hearsay' report in .0) that the woman
actually did this?
As a woman, wouldn't you prefer that you were able to present your
side of an incident (rather than be *presumed* to have 'screamed like
the dickens' based on a popular negative stereotype about women?)
|
844.5 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | the power of surrender | Mon Nov 30 1992 15:47 | 17 |
|
Suzanne, I'm assuming that as .0 stated, this is LOOKED AT AS, or SEEN
AS "a reflection of the problems that are beginning to surface
everywhere".
I'm basing my response on that.
I think since you know me, you know I'd rather people hear my side than
judge me based on somebody else's actions, but that's not always the
case. Ideally, each new situation is seen as different, and
unconnected from past situations.
I guess I'm just wondering how many of the people who read this
notesfile feel the same as .0, and how I fit into their vision if they
believe .0 is indeed indicative of further trends....
-Jody
|
844.6 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:01 | 29 |
| RE: .5 Jody
> Suzanne, I'm assuming that as .0 stated, this is LOOKED AT AS, or SEEN
> AS "a reflection of the problems that are beginning to surface
> everywhere".
> I'm basing my response on that.
You based your response on the presumption that the woman was guilty
of shirking work (without hearing her side of it.) If you meant this
as a generalization, it's just as bad (or worse.)
> I think since you know me, you know I'd rather people hear my side than
> judge me based on somebody else's actions, but that's not always the
> case. Ideally, each new situation is seen as different, and
> unconnected from past situations.
I hope you'd also rather people hear your side than simply believe
what others say about you (and your work,) too.
> I guess I'm just wondering how many of the people who read this
> notesfile feel the same as .0, and how I fit into their vision if they
> believe .0 is indeed indicative of further trends....
It's inevitable that some people will use this case (and others like
it) as excuses for the usual prejudice against women in the workplace.
If you buy into the idea that the woman in .0 is guilty of shirking
her work, what's to keep someone from assuming the same thing about
you (at some point in your life)?
|
844.7 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:11 | 13 |
| > It's inevitable that some people will use this case (and others like
> it) as excuses for the usual prejudice against women in the workplace.
And some to use this case to further the 'women are victims, no matter what'
for the usual prejudice against males anywhere.
> If you buy into the idea that the woman in .0 is guilty of shirking
> her work,
Perhaps she WAS shirking her work. It DOES happen, right?
-Joe
|
844.8 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | the power of surrender | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:16 | 41 |
|
one more try.
re: .6
> You based your response on the presumption that the woman was guilty
> of shirking work (without hearing her side of it.) If you meant this
> as a generalization, it's just as bad (or worse.)
No, I based my response on the posit "what if people see it this way?
what does this mean to me?" It has nothing to do with what I think.
What I think has nothing to do with what I'm expressing here, I'm
inviting people to share what THEY think.
> I hope you'd also rather people hear your side than simply believe
> what others say about you (and your work,) too.
Suzanne, you know how I feel. Of course I would. I'm not talking
about ME here, I'm asking how people in this notesfile feel about this,
and where I fit in, if they believe .0 to be representative of a trend.
> It's inevitable that some people will use this case (and others like
> it) as excuses for the usual prejudice against women in the workplace.
> If you buy into the idea that the woman in .0 is guilty of shirking
> her work, what's to keep someone from assuming the same thing about
> you (at some point in your life)?
I'm not buying into anything. I'm saying if people do feel .0 is true,
what does that say about me, and what I've done. Or if .0 is true
*and* my experience is true, which do they feel is the trend or the
norm?
People will always assume what they assume, that's how life works.
I'm bowing out for a while now....
-Jody
|
844.9 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:19 | 26 |
| RE: .7 Joe
>> It's inevitable that some people will use this case (and others like
>> it) as excuses for the usual prejudice against women in the workplace.
> And some to use this case to further the 'women are victims, no matter
> what' for the usual prejudice against males anywhere.
Nope. It's part of the very popular "men (especially white men) are the
REAL victims (of discrimination, etc., etc.)" that presumes all/most
charges of sexual harassment are necessarily instances of "the bitch
(no bitch in particular, just 'the bitch') is lying."
>> If you buy into the idea that the woman in .0 is guilty of shirking
>> her work,
> Perhaps she WAS shirking her work. It DOES happen, right?
Perhaps the Lt. was engaged in an incidence of systematic mistreatment
of women in the group he supervises. Perhaps the 'silent treatment'
of all the other men in the department (and now the POLICE department,
too) is a message to women to keep silent themselves about what has
been happening. It DOES happen, right?
(Until we hear both sides of the story, we don't know what happened.
Agreed?)
|
844.10 | A one-sided, second-hand account isn't worth wasting energy | VMSMKT::KENAH | I think it's about -- forgiveness | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:23 | 5 |
| >Comments....???
Not enough information to comment; only one side has
been presented, through another's filter.
|
844.11 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:24 | 9 |
| RE: .10
>>Comments....???
> Not enough information to comment; only one side has
> been presented, through another's filter.
Thank you.
|
844.12 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:42 | 13 |
| > Nope. It's part of the very popular "men (especially white men) are the
> REAL victims (of discrimination, etc., etc.)" that presumes all/most
> charges of sexual harassment are necessarily instances of "the bitch
> (no bitch in particular, just 'the bitch') is lying."
In your opinion. Any facts to back up the 'very popular' claim? No matter
how often you state this, it does not make it so. Your responses here have
given me the indication that you believe the man is at fault.
> (Until we hear both sides of the story, we don't know what happened.
Well, then... No one should comment on this case at all...
|
844.13 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:45 | 9 |
| > <<< Note 844.11 by CSC32::WSC641::CONLON >>>
> > Not enough information to comment; only one side has
> > been presented, through another's filter.
>
> Thank you.
Didn't stop you from commenting, though did it?
|
844.14 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:48 | 20 |
| RE: .12 Joe
> In your opinion. Any facts to back up the 'very popular' claim?
> No matter how often you state this, it does not make it so.
The same applies to your cliche ("...to further the 'women are victims,
no matter what' for the usual prejudice against males everywhere...")
> Your responses here have given me the indication that you believe
> the man is at fault.
As I've stated more than once in this topic, we don't know what really
happened (except that only one side is available to us here and that
we've been asked to comment on this one side only.)
>> (Until we hear both sides of the story, we don't know what happened.
> Well, then... No one should comment on this case at all...
Agreed. So let's stop until more info is available.
|
844.15 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:51 | 11 |
| >
> > Your responses here have given me the indication that you believe
> > the man is at fault.
>
> As I've stated more than once in this topic, we don't know what really
> happened (except that only one side is available to us here and that
> we've been asked to comment on this one side only.)
That did not stop you from speculating about the MAN's motives/actions
back around .3 or so. We do not have enough facts to comment, but we can
slur the man involved, right?
|
844.16 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:54 | 8 |
| RE: .13 Joe
> Didn't stop you from commenting, though did it?
It didn't stop me from pointing out (more than once) that we only
had one side of the story after others had already commented before
me.
|
844.17 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 16:57 | 6 |
|
> > In your opinion. Any facts to back up the 'very popular' claim?
> > No matter how often you state this, it does not make it so.
But of course.... Everything I write is my opinion... That my opinion
peridocially coincides with fact is a benefit :-).
|
844.18 | Serious Problem | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:12 | 9 |
| The response of the rest of the police and firefighting crew would
suggest there was an over-reaction by the woman. People say insensitive
things all the time. It's part of life. If I was being blasted by my
superior I'd take the problem off-line first and then maybe file a
grievance or something. This is about a situation being escalated into
a forum that a woman can only achieve. Sexual harassment seems to be
non-existent as a recourse for men. There is a perceptible bias in the
"system" against men and some woman will use any excuse to exploit it.
|
844.19 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:13 | 17 |
| RE: .15 Joe
> That did not stop you from speculating about the MAN's motives/actions
> back around .3 or so. We do not have enough facts to comment, but we can
> slur the man involved, right?
If the man is "slurred" by mere suggestions (using the word "Perhaps...,")
then the woman was already being slurred far worse. Thanks for making
this point so clear.
Even the one side we've seen (so far) has claimed that the guy said
something to his employee about being "on the r**...." If a manager
at Digital said this to an employee, I'm sure we'd all agree that it
would be highly inappropriate (right?) If this is true (that he
said it,) the Lt. is at least guilty of this (if nothing else.)
Until we hear more about the case, we don't really know, though.
|
844.20 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:17 | 11 |
| Having read .0, it seemed to me that, in essence, the Lieutenant said
"Hey, I'm stupid, kick me..." so that's exactly what she did!
In the wake of Hill/Thomas plus the ratio of male/female public servants
listed in .0, I have to believe Sexual Harrasment must have been covered
in those specific departments. For a situation to happen as posted in .0
at this point in time, the objective person has no pity for the Lieutenant
(which is one rank below Captain). As Men, we MUST police ourselves for
any Harrasment-type behavior and in this the Lieutenant failed his duty...
Don
|
844.21 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:18 | 10 |
| > Even the one side we've seen (so far) has claimed that the guy said
> something to his employee about being "on the r**...." If a manager
> at Digital said this to an employee, I'm sure we'd all agree that it
> would be highly inappropriate (right?) If this is true (that he
> said it,) the Lt. is at least guilty of this (if nothing else.)
"IF NOTHING ELSE"? Care to elaborate? Was the woman guilty of insubordination?
If a woman at Digital said 'No, I am not going to do that' to her boss, she
would be guilty of insubordination (if nothing else). right?
|
844.22 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:19 | 17 |
| RE: .18
> The response of the rest of the police and firefighting crew would
> suggest there was an over-reaction by the woman.
Are you referring to the claim that none of the male police or
firefighting crews are currently willing to speak with ANY female
co-workers??? (Talk about over-reacting!)
If a black employee in your building lodged a complaint against a
white manager and white employees across THE ENTIRE BUILDING (and
perhaps spreading to a number of other Digital buildings) suddenly
stopped speaking to ALL black employees, wouldn't you regard this
as a pretty severe problem of racism? (Who would you think is
over-reacting: the person who lodged a complaint, or the buildings
filled with people who no longer speak to ANY co-workers who happen
to belong to a different race?)
|
844.23 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:23 | 9 |
|
> If a black employee in your building lodged a complaint against a
And now, the topic that wasn't going to be discussed, gets dragged into
a racism rathole.
How about a literary club that contains only women, will not allow men, and
will only discuss literature by women? Is that sexist? Only taking in
literary ideas for one specific, chosen gender?
|
844.24 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:28 | 22 |
| RE: .21 Joe
>> *****If***** this is true (that he said it,) the Lt. is at least
>> guilty of this (if nothing else.)
> "IF NOTHING ELSE"? Care to elaborate?
The side of the story we've already seen (not her side) claims he
said "on the r**" to his employee. Did he really say it? We don't
know. *****If***** he did say it, then he's guilty of having said
it (right?) Does he admit it? We don't know, so far. The people
telling his side of the story seem to think he did.
> Was the woman guilty of insubordination? If a woman at Digital said
> 'No, I am not going to do that' to her boss, she would be guilty of
> insubordination (if nothing else). right?
We haven't heard her side of the story yet, though, so we don't know
if this really happened (any more than we know what he really said.)
Why didn't you use the word "IF" to describe the woman's actions?
Do you presume she is guilty until proven innocent?
|
844.25 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:31 | 11 |
| RE: .23 Joe
So, I take it that you think it's perfectly reasonable for a group
of firefighters and policemen to risk the lives/safety of the citizens
they are sworn to serve by refusing to speak to ALL co-workers of
another race or sex (if someone of that race or sex happens to get
into a 'harassment' dispute with a supervisor)?
I don't suppose it would occur to anyone that such behavior is an
over-reaction. Of COURSE male firefighters and police officers
risk everyone's lives to make a political point. (They're guys.)
|
844.26 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:35 | 9 |
| In my opinion, every male firefighter and/or police officer who is
staging a "refuse to speak to any co-worker who happens to be female"
should receive disciplinary action. If the behavior continues, the
guilty parties should be threatened with demotion and/or loss of pay.
If workers at Digital refused to speak to all members of a certain
sex or race, I'm fairly certain that Digital wouldn't put up with
such behavior (especially if lives were threatened.)
|
844.27 | CYA | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:45 | 9 |
| MZZZZ CONLON
I don't blame these people for protecting themselves from losing their
jobs. This woman had other avenues at her disposal but she chose to
escalate the problem to the legal arena. I have to emphasize that "she
chose to escalate" beyond the realm of her workplace and into the
courts. Once that happens the people around you have a tendencey to be
over-cautious because the sense of losing control of a situation
becomes that much greater.
|
844.28 | The tip of the firehose.. | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:50 | 27 |
|
> should receive disciplinary action
Yeah I could see the verbal warning now, " For having not talked to
someone you are now reprimanded and subsequently ordered to talk to
these people again". Hells bells Suzanne you may have stumbled onto
something here , wives can get court orders to force their hubbs to
talk to them :-) :-)
On a more serious note I believe the issue is deeper than this one
incident ( albeit unproveable).. I was a fireman for four glorious
years.. In this short period of time I saw the devistating effects
of Affirmative action and quota hiring.. The standards were dropped by
as much as 1/2 for lifting requirements when the applicant was a woman.
This erks the males sense of fair play, and subsequently we rode the
women alot harder than the others, this was wrong, but when you use a
politically correct Wedgie to open the doors of opportunity, it is
simply human nature. After awhile the women were accepted into the
clique, although they were viewed as special status types, not real
fireman....So I suspect this firewoman in the basenote got the blunt
of years of frustration caused by the ridiculous AA policies that
permeate(sp) are shallow society...
David ( Fire rescueman )
|
844.29 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:52 | 30 |
| RE: .27
> I don't blame these people for protecting themselves from losing their
> jobs.
If they are unwilling to do their jobs, they should be disciplined.
If this doesn't work, they should be fired.
> This woman had other avenues at her disposal but she chose to
> escalate the problem to the legal arena.
The male firefighters and police officers have other avenues at their
disposal, too (other than risking the lives of the people they are
sworn to serve.)
> I have to emphasize that "she
> chose to escalate" beyond the realm of her workplace and into the
> courts.
I have to emphasize that these male workers have CHOSEN to refuse to
do their jobs. If it continues, it should be regarded as insubordination
(if they have been ordered to go back to normal work behavior.)
> Once that happens the people around you have a tendencey to be
> over-cautious because the sense of losing control of a situation
> becomes that much greater.
If all it takes is one lawsuit to get these workers to stop doing their
jobs adequately, these men have a very serious problem that should be
addressed by their management.
|
844.30 | | EDSBOX::STIPPICK | Caution. Student noter... | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:56 | 24 |
| I am fascinated by the exchange taking place here. I have reread the
basenote and I still do not see that it touts one side or the other.
The story makes statements of fact but does not attribute them to
either "side". It seems to me that much of the discussion thus far has
been a considerable reach beyond the details outlined in .0 When I hear
that "this is just another instance of blah-blah-blah", I think of
feuds and longterm resentment. I don't believe that adds much to our
culture.
As for the specific case in question, it would seem that a review board
in the department thought the lieutenant's behavior was sufficiently
poor to warrant 10 days off without pay. In my own limited knowledge of
such things, this is a very stiff penalty and penalties within the
system are not handed out lightly or casually. What I am trying to say
is that I have heard the verdict and entrust the lietenant's superiors
enough to not have to hear all the evidence. While the Hill-Thomas
affair may indeed have some effect on this case and others like it, I
for one don't believe that it was an unjust effect or that it was
particularly extreme. I base my opinion solely on what I have read in
newspapers and other accounts on the conservative nature of internal
review boards. Further details of this particular case may tell a very
different story. Conjecture about those details seems fruitless.
Karl
|
844.31 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 18:02 | 24 |
| RE: .28 David
If part of your job is to communicate with your co-workers and you
refuse to do so (based on a person's race or sex,) then it's a problem
that should be handled by disciplinary action. Digital would take
such action against employees here for this, I'm willing to bet.
> ...and subsequently we rode the women alot harder than the others,
> this was wrong,...
If you cried and gave the women the 'silent treatment' after someone
complained about the 'harder than the others' treatment, it would have
been rather silly (especially since you *knew* you'd been giving the
women an especially hard time,) wouldn't it?
> So I suspect this firewoman in the basenote got the blunt
> of years of frustration caused by the ridiculous AA policies that
> permeate(sp) are shallow society...
The EMT in the basenote may have been treated unfairly by men who
took out their anger on her simply because she happened to be a woman,
as you suggest. I suppose these poor men can't be blamed for acting
out their own victimization on her (and it's all her fault for not
being willing to "take" all their sh*t.)
|
844.32 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Mon Nov 30 1992 18:14 | 13 |
|
Suzanne,
> digital would take such action
Digital would do whatever would make Digital look best. Companies are
amoral, whats your point.. By the way my favorite quote is from Dante's
inferno " The deepest part of hell is reserved for those that remain
neutral during a moral crisis"..
David
|
844.33 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Mon Nov 30 1992 18:20 | 20 |
|
Suzanne,
> sh*t
If your not ready to play with the big dogs don't get off the porch:-)
Seriously tho' men ( white males in particular) are sick of the Whining
that goes on. As a fireman I had my feelings hurt by crude and
insensitive remarks.... I survived without a law suit.. Women are
getting into jobs that they are NOT the best qualified for.. The men in
this single reporter basenote should not take there well justified
frustration out on the AA firewomen.... Those persons who cry foul
because this lack of communication does to the fire departments
abiblity to perform, should also ask themselves what happens to the
teams ability when you hire UNQUALIFIED politically correct
firewomen..
incoming,
David
|
844.34 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 18:22 | 17 |
| RE: .32 David
>> digital would take such action
> Digital would do whatever would make Digital look best. Companies are
> amoral, whats your point..
Well, as bad as police departments look these days (what with the
beating of Rodney King and the beating death of a man by police in
Detroit recently,) the Fire and Police departments would look even
worse if they condoned the behavior of the firefighters and police
officers who are refusing to speak to ALL co-workers who happen to
be female (if this, indeed, happening.)
Actually, considering the NON-source of the story, I'm beginning to
doubt that this is actually happening. It sounds more and more like
malicious gossip to me.
|
844.35 | Keep up the good work | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Nov 30 1992 18:25 | 5 |
| Suzanne,
Once again you're making a better example than you are an argument.
fred();
|
844.36 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 18:29 | 33 |
| RE: .33 David
> Seriously tho' men ( white males in particular) are sick of the Whining
> that goes on.
Treating women especially badly (and possibly even refusing to SPEAK
to all women co-workers) is whining, in and of itself.
> As a fireman I had my feelings hurt by crude and
> insensitive remarks.... I survived without a law suit..
Bully for you. Now you can join nearly ALL the women and minorities
who have had to put up with white male whining (of the sort you've
described as doing yourself) without law suits either.
> Women are getting into jobs that they are NOT the best qualified for..
So are men. Any man who would risk lives by refusing to speak to a
co-worker of a different sex or race is UNqualified for the job.
> The men in
> this single reporter basenote should not take there well justified
> frustration out on the AA firewomen.... Those persons who cry foul
> because this lack of communication does to the fire departments
> abiblity to perform, should also ask themselves what happens to the
> teams ability when you hire UNQUALIFIED politically correct
> firewomen..
The men are UNQUALIFIED right now. They've demonstrated this by
their behavior. So should we stop allowing males to get these jobs
or what? (If I were a taxpayer in the city described in the basenote,
I'd demand that we stop paying taxes for these jerks and go out and
hire some QUALIFIED individuals to take their places.)
|
844.37 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 18:34 | 7 |
| RE: .35 Fred
> Once again you're making a better example than you are an argument.
If you had an argument at all, you wouldn't need to rely on cheap
oneliners.
|
844.38 | But you're doing such a good job | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Nov 30 1992 18:47 | 10 |
| re .37
>If you had an argument at all, you wouldn't need to rely on cheap
>oneliners.
Why should I bother when you are doing such a magnificent job of
proving the point being made by .0 Any other reply is just going
to give you more fodder for continuing your tirade.
fred();
|
844.39 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Mon Nov 30 1992 18:50 | 15 |
|
> the men are unqualified right now
Lets pretend that the fight is over, all the men have had frontal
labotamies and no longer consider themselves the victims of the A
pick pocket squads.. These men are blissful now, THE WOMAN are still
the second best choice, we still have to lower are standards by as
much as half, your moral high groung arguement is shot down and the
true selfishness is exposed. Think about the mother with three children
trapped upstairs, then think about the qulaifiers for selecting
fireman. See my point??
David ( an unselfish fireman )
|
844.40 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 19:55 | 10 |
| RE: .38 Fred
> Why should I bother when you are doing such a magnificent job of
> proving the point being made by .0
Did you really think that the divisiveness around gender and race
issues needed proving?
Thanks for the vote of confidence anyway, though.
|
844.41 | The presumption of inferiority is bigotry. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Nov 30 1992 20:01 | 28 |
| RE: .39 David
> Lets pretend that the fight is over, all the men have had frontal
> labotamies and no longer consider themselves the victims of the A
> pick pocket squads..
Men would no longer see themselves as the penultimate victims??
It's hard to imagine, but ok. :>
> These men are blissful now, THE WOMAN are still the second best choice,
> we still have to lower are standards by as much as half, your moral high
> groung arguement is shot down and the true selfishness is exposed.
If people think women are automatically second best *because* they are
women, it amounts to the same old prejudice and bigotry against women.
If pure, brute strength is the biggest requirement, why have humans in
these jobs? Adult human males are weak as kittens compared to gorillas.
We had to lower the standards substantially for any humans to qualify
at all (when humans are such a relatively weak species.)
> Think about the mother with three children trapped upstairs, then think
> about the qulaifiers for selecting fireman. See my point??
I don't know. This mother might worry that male firemen might rape
her and the children before getting them out of the building (since
many men have so little control over the aggression brought on by
testosterone.)
|
844.42 | | POWDML::THAMER | Daniel Katz MSO2-3/G1, 223-6121 | Mon Nov 30 1992 20:05 | 23 |
| David,
regarding your "woman trapped upstairs" scenario:
HUH??
Are you insinuating a male firefighter would be better qualified
because he'd get some miraculous protective gene that kicks in at just
the right moment?
I know plenty of women who, upper body strength wise, could trounce the
average male in a fair contest. If someone's got "What it Takes" why
indulge in something like "the woman are still the second best choice"?
The law of averages says men are more likely to have more upper body
strength...that doesn't mean there aren't women who have plenty. No
need to lower the standards, but there's no need to act like an
oranguntang just because someone breaks up the club by actually
qualifying.
Daniel
|
844.44 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 22:37 | 13 |
| > In my opinion, every male firefighter and/or police officer who is
> staging a "refuse to speak to any co-worker who happens to be female"
> should receive disciplinary action.
Of course, it was only REPORTED that they would not speak.
> If workers at Digital refused to speak to all members of a certain
> sex or race, I'm fairly certain that Digital wouldn't put up with
> such behavior (especially if lives were threatened.)
But of course a LIST of people not to talk to is ok?
|
844.45 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 22:38 | 6 |
| > I don't suppose it would occur to anyone that such behavior is an
> over-reaction. Of COURSE male firefighters and police officers
> risk everyone's lives to make a political point. (They're guys.)
A sexist comment, to be sure.
|
844.46 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 22:43 | 29 |
| > If they are unwilling to do their jobs, they should be disciplined.
> If this doesn't work, they should be fired.
Is speaking to your coworkers a job requirement? What about someone physcially
incapable of speech? The report did not mention if they would not speak in a
professional capacity (or did it??) or just idle chat.
> The male firefighters and police officers have other avenues at their
> disposal, too (other than risking the lives of the people they are
> sworn to serve.)
Like defend themselves in court.
> I have to emphasize that these male workers have CHOSEN to refuse to
> do their jobs. If it continues, it should be regarded as insubordination
> (if they have been ordered to go back to normal work behavior.)
Yep, let's make those males the perpetrators yet again. Please show that the
males are NOT oing their job OR that the lack of speech is/has endangers
lives.
> If all it takes is one lawsuit to get these workers to stop doing their
> jobs adequately, these men have a very serious problem that should be
> addressed by their management.
From the description given, it does not seem like it is the men who have the
problem.
|
844.47 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 22:49 | 19 |
| > I am fascinated by the exchange taking place here. I have reread the
> basenote and I still do not see that it touts one side or the other.
> The story makes statements of fact but does not attribute them to
> either "side".
Ah, but this is NOTES and as such the smallest of tidbits is good enough
for volumes of "it's x... no, it's y" type 'discussions'. :-) Perhaps a way
to let off a little steam/stress in these troubled times.
> As for the specific case in question, it would seem that a review board
> in the department thought the lieutenant's behavior was sufficiently
> poor to warrant 10 days off without pay.
And what of the woman and the insubordination (apparent)? I bet that nothing
can be done now because any such action coul/would(in my opinion) be viewed
as retaliation for the harassement charge. All in my opinion of course and
certainly subject to any facts coming to light on this.
|
844.48 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 22:51 | 9 |
| > The EMT in the basenote may have been treated unfairly by men who
> took out their anger on her simply because she happened to be a woman,
> as you suggest. I suppose these poor men can't be blamed for acting
> out their own victimization on her (and it's all her fault for not
> being willing to "take" all their sh*t.)
Did I miss something? .0 talks about 1 man... so why is this 'men' all of
the sudden?
|
844.49 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 22:54 | 17 |
| > If your not ready to play with the big dogs don't get off the porch:-)
> Seriously tho' men ( white males in particular) are sick of the Whining
> that goes on.
Could we leave race out of this one? It's tough enough with it being gender
related :-).
> insensitive remarks.... I survived without a law suit.. Women are
> getting into jobs that they are NOT the best qualified for..
^^^^
I have problems with this. If they are qualified, they should be able to get
and hold the jobs as long as they are qualified. I do not see they have to
be 'best' qualified. I think basically if you are hireing N people, only
one is actually BEST.
|
844.50 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 22:59 | 8 |
| >
> I don't know. This mother might worry that male firemen might rape
> her and the children before getting them out of the building (since
> many men have so little control over the aggression brought on by
> testosterone.)
Is this a serious comment?!?!?!?!?! What a SEXIST remark!!!!!!!
|
844.51 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Mon Nov 30 1992 23:03 | 16 |
| >
> Are you insinuating a male firefighter would be better qualified
> because he'd get some miraculous protective gene that kicks in at just
> the right moment?
Well, if the upper body strength is there, I doubt the genes kick in at
the last moment.
> I know plenty of women who, upper body strength wise, could trounce the
> average male in a fair contest.
Are they firefighters? I think the point is that the person on top of the
ladder should have the upper body strength needed for the job to get done,
regardless of the gender of that person (or at least I hope that the point).
|
844.54 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Mon Nov 30 1992 23:26 | 18 |
|
> could we leave
okay.
> if they are qualified
The problem is just this, as political correctness invades the
definition of qualified, the standards/qualifications for a position
are changed.. I had to be able to clean jerk 60 lbs to qualify, Sally
Joe Fem had to clean jerk thirty ( but could have a waiver).. Now
unless someone can guarantee me that this AA fireman will never be in
a situation that does not require a greater physical effort than this,
then hang it up, your not qualified, your catered to...
David ( a fireman who met the standard and would be happy to work with
any women that did the same)....
|
844.55 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Dec 01 1992 00:28 | 11 |
|
> the presumption of inferiority is bigotry
The need for an adjusted standard is an admission of inferiority. It
does not however make them inferiorer people..
> the fireman might rape
What an assanine remark.. Not even worthy of a rebuff..
David
|
844.56 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Dec 01 1992 00:29 | 6 |
|
> are you insinuating a male fireman
No. Where do you shop for your straw men?
David
|
844.57 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 09:24 | 13 |
| RE: .44 Joe
> Of course, it was only REPORTED that they would not speak.
Of course. (If it's really happening, any/every male firefighter
and/or police officer who is doing it should receive disciplinary
action. Like I said.)
> But of course a LIST of people not to talk to is ok?
If such a list existed, it wouldn't be the same as refusing to speak
to all persons of a certain race or sex in the course of doing one's
job.
|
844.58 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 09:53 | 13 |
| RE: .45 Joe
>> I don't suppose it would occur to anyone that such behavior is an
>> over-reaction. Of COURSE male firefighters and police officers
>> risk everyone's lives to make a political point. (They're guys.)
> A sexist comment, to be sure.
It's sexist that the (possible) actions of these men (to refrain from
speaking to ALL co-workers of a certain sex) is both justified and
(seems to be) completely condoned. Imagine the howl that would take
place if the 10-15% women firefighters and police officers suddenly
refused to speak to all male co-workers.
|
844.59 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 10:17 | 15 |
| RE: .46 Joe
>> If they are unwilling to do their jobs, they should be disciplined.
>> If this doesn't work, they should be fired.
> Is speaking to your coworkers a job requirement? What about someone
> physcially incapable of speech? The report did not mention if they
> would not speak in a professional capacity (or did it??) or just idle
> chat.
The 'report' sounded to me like a description of men who would no longer
speak to any co-worker who happens to be female. If communication is
part of one's job (and it sure sounds like it for both firefighters and
police officers,) then refraining from speaking to all co-workers of a
certain race or sex is failing to do the job.
|
844.60 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 10:25 | 16 |
| RE: .50 Joe
>> I don't know. This mother might worry that male firemen might rape
>> her and the children before getting them out of the building (since
>> many men have so little control over the aggression brought on by
>> testosterone.)
> Is this a serious comment?!?!?!?!?! What a SEXIST remark!!!!!!!
It's a demo (to show the reaction it would get if someone suggested
that men were "second best" in this job for some reason.) I happen
to think it's extremely sexist to declare women "second best" as a
group. Now you see how I reacted (to myself) when I saw this. It's
a terrible thing to see.
Demos help show others the seriousness of what they're suggesting.
|
844.61 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 10:39 | 8 |
| > It's sexist that the (possible) actions of these men (to refrain from
> speaking to ALL co-workers of a certain sex) is both justified and
> (seems to be) completely condoned. Imagine the howl that would take
> place if the 10-15% women firefighters and police officers suddenly
> refused to speak to all male co-workers.
Yours was still a sexist comment, despite the attempt to side track.
|
844.62 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 10:41 | 6 |
| > It's a demo (to show the reaction it would get if someone suggested
> that men were "second best" in this job for some reason.) I happen
> to think it's extremely sexist to declare women "second best" as a
> group.
Sorry, but it sure does not come across as demo.
|
844.63 | I think I know why some animals eat their young! | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Dec 01 1992 10:43 | 11 |
|
> it's extremely sexist to declare woman " second best"
Suzanne no matter how many times you say it, it just will not make it
so.. I never said that as a group woman were second best, I said they
were the second best choice given the REDUCED STANDARDS they had to
meet... Now stop distorting my words or I will sick Fred Haddock and
Zarlenga on you .. :-)
David
|
844.64 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:07 | 10 |
| RE: .61 Joe
> Yours was still a sexist comment, despite the attempt to side track.
Joe, I've already explained to you what I was getting at with my
comment.
You're being rather over-sensitive (or is it "Oh-so-sensitive") and
over-reacting, don't you think? Get over it.
|
844.65 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:13 | 20 |
| RE: .54 David
> I had to be able to clean jerk 60 lbs to qualify, ...
This is pitiful. Humans are pathetically weak compared to gorillas,
don't you think so?
I thought firefighters had to clean jerk far more than 60 lbs to
qualify. When I worked in television, we had to move 75 pound lights
on a ceiling grid (by taking it off the grid, then riding on a high
scaffold to a point elsewhere in the room and putting it back up on
the grid) - and ALL the women on the production crew, including me,
could do it. Not all the men could do it (some had bad backs.)
Funny, though. One of our supervisors always tried to stop the women
from moving the lights (even though we were all capable of doing it
correctly and efficiently.) I guess the guy needed some excuse to
claim the women were "less" than the men there, so he'd stop us if
he caught us doing our jobs. (We just had to be careful that he wasn't
around when it was time to do it.)
|
844.66 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:16 | 11 |
| > Joe, I've already explained to you what I was getting at with my
> comment.
It was still a sexist comment.
> You're being rather over-sensitive (or is it "Oh-so-sensitive") and
> over-reacting, don't you think? Get over it.
Can I quote you the next time a woman claims a comment made by a male
is sexist? Sexism is sexism.
|
844.67 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:19 | 10 |
| > correctly and efficiently.) I guess the guy needed some excuse to
> claim the women were "less" than the men there,
Did the guy actually MAKE any such claim to anyone?
> he caught us doing our jobs. (We just had to be careful that he wasn't
> around when it was time to do it.)
Surely he must have suspected after the nth "Really, it was elves" :-) :-).
|
844.68 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Animal Magnetism | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:19 | 4 |
| >Sexism is sexism.
yeah, but it's only bad sexism when a man does it. It's neutral when a woman
does it.
|
844.69 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:23 | 19 |
|
> This is pitiful. Humans are pathetically weak compared to gorillas
Well Suzanne when you can get a gorilla to drive the truck and fire
up the pump, let me know, I'll be the first to tell the guys they do
not have a gripe about the girls anymore...
> I thought
Not before writing this you didn't..
> had to clean jerk far more that 60 lbs
> why I had to lift 75lbs
Always trying to show that yours is bigger, what a man:-)
David
|
844.70 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:27 | 28 |
| RE: .67 Joe
>> correctly and efficiently.) I guess the guy needed some excuse to
>> claim the women were "less" than the men there,
> Did the guy actually MAKE any such claim to anyone?
Yes, he did. He was openly discriminatory towards women on the crew
(so much so that the MEN on the crew were ready to report him to the
studio's highest level manager.) Although most of the men started
out not believing women could ever be as good as men at these jobs,
they ended up seeing how wrong they were (and they became the most
active in fighting against those who continued to discriminate and/or
trash women co-workers in the studio.)
The women actually STOPPED the men from taking the discrimination
issues up the ladder (to avoid stirring up this one supervisor even
more.) We knew that most everyone there knew the truth about our
work (and we also knew that the supervisor wouldn't allow himself to
continue looking like such a jerk to his male co-workers forever.)
Eventually, this guy did come around.
>> he caught us doing our jobs. (We just had to be careful that he wasn't
>> around when it was time to do it.)
>Surely he must have suspected after the nth "Really, it was elves" :-) :-).
He assumed the men did it (unless he saw us doing it.)
|
844.71 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:33 | 12 |
| RE: .68 The Doctah
>> Sexism is sexism.
> yeah, but it's only bad sexism when a man does it. It's neutral when
> a woman does it.
Please explain to Joe what is meant when you make a statement you don't
actually support (as a method of making a certain point.)
Joe doesn't seem to understand this particular technique, but perhaps
it would help him if you explained it.
|
844.72 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:34 | 17 |
| .0> The Lt. was suspended 10 days w/o pay. She has since filed suit against
.0> the Lt. and he FD. She continues to work as an EMT.
These days, it can be harassment to treat an adult like an adult.
Adults have to handled like timid, sensitive children, or else they
might be "offended" and thus, traumatized.
The Lieutenant made the classic mistake of speaking his mind ... BIG
mistake with the current harassment laws on the books. In doing so,
he offended the fragile, sensitive, delicate young woman.
He should have documented the insubordination, then, after enough
instances, fired her. He should not have been so careless as to speak
his mind and vocalize his reaction. I bet he handles his next encoun-
ter with a "professional victim" differently.
Live and learn.
|
844.73 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:34 | 15 |
| .28> Yeah I could see the verbal warning now, " For having not talked to
.28> someone you are now reprimanded and subsequently ordered to talk to
.28> these people again". Hells bells Suzanne you may have stumbled onto
.28> something here , wives can get court orders to force their hubbs to
.28> talk to them :-) :-)
You laugh, David, but under current harassment laws, not talking to
someone CAN MOST CERTAINLY BE HARASSMENT. That's one of the more
obvious cases. It can also be harassment to exclude a particular person
from non-work-related conversations, even those that happen on breaks
that are usually considered your own time, such as lunch.
We've come a long way, baby!
1984 arrived only a few years later than expected.
|
844.74 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:35 | 10 |
| .42> I know plenty of women who, upper body strength wise, could trounce the
.42> average male in a fair contest. If someone's got "What it Takes" why
A large, obese woman is not necessarily a strong woman. Or are you
talking about female body-builders?
I'm surprised that anyone would even consider arguing that women and
men are physically similar w.r.t. upper body strength.
It just ain't so...
|
844.75 | | POWDML::THAMER | Daniel Katz MSO2-3/G1, 223-6121 | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:42 | 11 |
| Mike, read it again. I didn't say "all women" now did I?
I said very plainly that I know *plenty* (subset of "all") women who
were stronger than the "average" (subset of "all") man.
I did not say they were overweight. I said they were fit. Fitter than
the *AVERAGE* (again, just to be clear, subset of "all") man.
Can I be any clearly for your benefit?
Daniel
|
844.76 | Wise decision, Jody! | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:48 | 4 |
| re .8
<I'm bowing out for a while now....>
Now _there_ is a comment worthy of the HoF!
|
844.77 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:53 | 23 |
| RE: .69 David
> Well Suzanne when you can get a gorilla to drive the truck and fire
> up the pump, let me know, I'll be the first to tell the guys they do
> not have a gripe about the girls anymore...
When the boys can lift as much as gorillas, you can tell them that
they aren't merely weak humans anymore. :>
>> had to clean jerk far more that 60 lbs
>> why I had to lift 75lbs
> Always trying to show that yours is bigger, what a man:-)
You misquoted (and missed the message) once again. The women were
perfectly able to move the lights, but we weren't officially allowed
to do it (by one supervisor, at least.) We did it anyway because it
was part of our jobs.
If the "clean jerk" standards were changed by someone in the fire
department, it isn't the fault of the women who worked there. It
doesn't make them unqualified (except in the eyes of some of the
jerks who seem to need an excuse to look down on women.)
|
844.78 | right back atcha | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:58 | 3 |
| .75> Mike, read it again. I didn't say "all women" now did I?
----->daniel, read it again. I didn't say "all women" either.
|
844.79 | There was never a problem with Daniel's note. | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 12:05 | 3 |
| If nobody said "all women," then Daniel's statement stands as perfectly
true and reasonable.
|
844.80 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Dec 01 1992 12:05 | 8 |
|
Suzanne,
Proctology works, try it before the thing dies in place :-)
David
|
844.81 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 12:08 | 5 |
|
David, did someone hurt your sensitive, delicate little feelings?
Chill.
|
844.82 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Dec 01 1992 12:12 | 9 |
|
> David, did someone hurt your sensitive, delicate little feelings?
No.. If they did you can bet you would be the first person I would
ask to kiss it and make it all better :-)
David p.s. you have lost your focus.
|
844.83 | It's an improvement. :> | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 12:14 | 5 |
|
You do sound 'chilled' now, David.
Good going.
|
844.84 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Dec 01 1992 12:17 | 10 |
|
> You sound 'chilled' now, David.
> good going
Thanks, I find it helpful to chant my mantra whenever I get upset
over a ludicrous note . All I say is " I am a
man, I have the power to oppress a woman, ahhhh ohhhhhh "
David
|
844.85 | I realize how tough all this is for you. | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 12:23 | 9 |
| RE: .84 David
> ...when I get upset...
Actually, David, your mantra sounds more like this: "I am a man, so
the note that upset me must be ludicrous. It has to be!" :>
You have my sympathies.
|
844.86 | Actually, since one lawsuit is enough - one harassment is enough.) | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 12:30 | 11 |
|
So, meanwhile, the male populations of an entire fire department and
a police department may possibly be refusing to speak (in a work-
related capacity) to ALL persons of a certain sex or race, and some
here believe that these men (if the 'report' is true) are not the ones
with the problem.
If it's ok to punish all the women (in the fire and police departments)
for a lawsuit filed by one woman, then I guess it's ok to punish all
the men at both these departments if it turns out that the Lt. is guilty
of repeatedly harassing the EMT. (Fair is fair.)
|
844.87 | try again | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Dec 01 1992 12:57 | 7 |
| re:.79
A for effort, F for content.
Daniel implied that women are as strong as men.
They're not even close, on average, or at the uppermost end.
|
844.88 | You can't disprove Daniel's actual statement. | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 13:06 | 14 |
| RE: .87 Mike Z.
> A for effort, F for content.
> Daniel implied that women are as strong as men.
He implied no such thing. Here's what he really said:
.42> I know plenty of women who, upper body strength wise, could trounce
.42> the average male in a fair contest.
> They're not even close, on average, or at the uppermost end.
Your statement is a non-sequitor. Daniel's statement stands as perfectly
true and reasonable.
|
844.89 | | POWDML::THAMER | Daniel Katz MSO2-3/G1, 223-6121 | Tue Dec 01 1992 13:06 | 22 |
|
> Daniel implied that women are as strong as men.
Bzzzt. Wrong. Welcome to formal logic and I'll explain it just one
more time for you:
"Women are as strong as men" implies "(All) Women are as strong as
men." "X is Y" is the A (universal) statement. You said I said this
and you are clearly wrong.
*I* said that I know *PLENTY* of women who are stronger than the
*AVERAGE* male. Both of those are very clearly LIMITED samples (The I
statement) "Some women are as strong as some men" is translation into
formal logic.
Are you so desperate to win points that you're going to start
re-inventing the rules of logic?
Daniel (and I haven't used an arrow in the sig for MONTHS in case you
haven't noticed.)
|
844.90 | time to grow up and face reality | EARRTH::MACKINNON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 13:42 | 15 |
| re.0
This kind of thing really saddens me. Both people were wrong.
One used language he shouldnt have, and the other refuse to
do work which she was supposed to do. A reprimand to both
parties is all that should have taken place. It's really
sad that the entire fire and police departments are now
caught in the act. As if we have enough head games to deal
with. Now we have to worry about the possibility of people
who are trained to serve the public not even communicating
to each other. This is rather childish and stands to show
how incredibly immature the entire group of folks involved
is in dealing with reality. I just hope it isnt in my
home town.
|
844.91 | | TALLIS::PARADIS | There's a feature in my soup! | Tue Dec 01 1992 13:43 | 68 |
| Kee-ristmas! Can't we have a little more light and less heat in
here?
I feel that the basenote raised some important issues, but they've
been buried by diggings from numerous ratholes...
[flame retardant: none of the following is meant to *defend* the
actions of the people involved; I'm just trying to *explain* what I
believe are the social dynamics of the situation]
Now, then: the issue seems to be that the men aren't speaking to the
women. Some think this is an act of retribution by the men against
a woman who dared to speak out. Others think this is an overcautious
response by men who fear for their jobs by stepping over the line.
In this *particular* case, I think it's neither. I think it's more
a form of paralysis brought on by the fact that the men's world has
been turned upside down. In traditionally all-male circles (e.g. the
military or in quasi-military organizations like police and fire
departments) there is a *lot* of verbal roughousing and dominance play,
often *very* crude and *very* explicit:
"Wake up, men! Drop yer c*cks and grap yer socks!"
"Whassamatta, don't got the b*lls to pull the pin?"
"This is my rifle, this is my gun........."
Most boys grew up doing stuff like this to each other, so by the time
they get to boot camp or police academy, it's old hat. Those few men
who avoided this sort of tussling when growing up got a rude shock upon
initiation. In any case, it was either "shape up or ship out". Either
you got to be just as good at dishing out the abuse as taking it, or
you quietly retreated and sought some other line of work.
Needless to say, those men in the latter category don't talk much about
their experiences. Part of the definition of a "real man" is being
able to put up with this kind of abuse from other men. Failing that,
one is not a "real man". Our society decrees that human males who are
not "real men" are defective; therefore, men who don't want to put up
with peer abuse carry their shame in silence.
Enter the situation of the basenote. The comment "Are you on the r**"
seems to me like a gender-adjusted equivalent of the kind of hurtful
comments men make at each other all the time in anger or frustration.
Only this time, the victim doesn't want to take it *AND* she has some
societal support for complaining about it... which she does, using all
the force that she and the society around her can muster.
A man in this situation faces the following quandry: he can't treat
a woman like "one of the guys", because what passes for normal
interaction among men can get him in deep trouble when used on a woman.
He can't treat her like a delicate flower of a lady either, because
she's supposedly a firefighter or police officer and therefore must
be able to contend with the rigors of the job.
While many readers of this file can recognize that the above are not
the only two options available, for the majority of the male population
they *ARE*. Treating women as true equals is something that's taken
*me* years of conscious effort to do, and I *still* don't think I've
got it quite right! Absent any role models of enlightenment, a man in
the above situation might very well find himself paralyzed, not knowing
*which* way to turn. Meanwhile, nobody is giving him any *productive*
guidance. They're just telling him "You can't do this, you can't do
that". If nobody teaches him about other paths he may have overlooked,
it's small wonder that he'll retreat into confused silence...
--jim
|
844.92 | Just a reminder that we still don't really know what happened... | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 13:46 | 18 |
| RE: .90
> Both people were wrong.
> One used language he shouldnt have, and the other refuse to
> do work which she was supposed to do.
One thing - let's keep in mind that we don't know if the Lt. really
said what was claimed in the basenote *or* if the EMT really refused
to do a particular task at work.
If such a refusal did take place, we also don't know if it occurred
after the Lt. had asked the EMT to re-clean a clean ambulance bay for
the 10th time (as a way to "ride" or harass her,) for example.
In other words, we still don't know what actually happened. I do agree
that it's very sad that entire fire and police departments have taken
sides in a very childish way (whatever the true story of the original
incident turns out to be.)
|
844.93 | | POWDML::THAMER | Daniel Katz MSO2-3/G1, 223-6121 | Tue Dec 01 1992 13:59 | 20 |
| Assuming the base note is an accurate account, we aren't exactly
talking about sterling attitudes on *either* party, but it is clear
that the EMT was out of line to cop that kind of an attitude for what
was a presumably regular request.
Like Suzanne, I'd like to hear a more official accounting of the story
and input from both invovled parties. For instance, the charge of
actual sexual harrassment, in the present context, seems truly baffling
simply because nothing in the basenote indicates any behavior of that
sort. Presumably, the EMT has some incident that she is calling sexual
harrassment, but I don't what it is in the basenote.
The current situation, IMHO, calls for someone in an official position
to step in and tell the employees to start acting like grown-ups.
People need to communicate on the job and the silent treatment is rathe
childish. If the men involved are afraid, could the basenote clarify
of what? The dispute between the EMT and the LT seems to be just that:
a dispute between two people over job performance.
Daniel
|
844.94 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 14:17 | 19 |
| Daniel,
As for me, based on the one-sided nature of the 'report' in the basenote,
I'm very skeptical about the supposed 'attitude' of the EMT. The 'report'
makes it sound as though she displayed this 'attitude' before the Lt. ever
said a word about 'the r**' (and almost made it sound as though she goaded
him into saying it, thereby almost justifying what he said.)
The 'report' also (very nearly) justifies the actions of the entire fire
and police departments (by claiming they're merely trying to save their
poor selves from "trumped up charges.")
It reminds me of some of the first stories released about the Tailhook
convention (when the aviators claimed "These women knew what was going on
there when they decided to go (and now they're complaining unfairly about
us)", etc., etc.)
It'll be interesting to see more information about it (if the city/town
is ever willing to let the story get out.)
|
844.95 | | SALEM::KUPTON | Ren & Stempy/Clinton & Gore | Tue Dec 01 1992 15:17 | 36 |
| Suzanne....as is typical of you ...everything is anti-women.
In the basenote I explained as I was told that she was requested to
sweep out the ambulance bay. Upon re-inspection, she had not moved the
ambulance out of the bay and had swept around them, whereupon she was
instructed to do so and to resweep the bay. FINI!!!!!!End of
instruction!!!!
She, reacting to possibly his attitude of dissatisfaction of her
work, told him she didn't need this sh*t and she was gonna do it. It
doesn't matter if he screamed and jumped up and down, her reaction came
first and was insubordinate. Male or Female....wrong response. Do the
job, then complain to a higher authority or the union.
He, in reaction was wrong. No if ands or buts.....wrong in today's
climate. Wrong in tomorrow's climate. Plain and simple wrong.
Based on your noting history, in my opinion, she could have pulled
a gun, shot him and dead and you would defend her to the end of the
world. I can't imagine living in your one way world, that to me, places
men at blame for every ill, regardless of circumstance. In your mind,
is it for one second concievable that this woman might be as wrong for
her actions as the Lt for his? Is it so unimaginable that a woman can
be wrong? Is it so unimaginable that she just might be the worst EMT
ever to sew on a patch dealing with the best fire Lt ever, who just
made the first mistake he's ever made on the job?
You also accuse me of one sideness....I gave you the information as
told to me to the best of my ability. In that same paragraph, you
contradicted yourself by saying it sounded like she ...."displayed this
attitude before the Lt. ever said a word about 'the r**'........Go back
and reread the basenote.....she did have that attitude and was
insubordinate BEFORE he said the 'r' word. Apparently you read only
what you want or the above quote would never have been made.
And you wonder why men are the way they are?
K
|
844.96 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Tue Dec 01 1992 15:26 | 8 |
| re .-1
I agree with everything you say.
In addition, I have been wondering what your motivation was in
posting .0 in the first place. I think you have been around this
conference long enough to have predicted that the response would have
been about what it has been. So I wonder.
|
844.97 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 15:45 | 60 |
| RE: .95 K. Upton
You probably don't realize this yet, but you just changed your story:
.0> The Lt. came back to
.0> inspect and found that the bay was not clean and ordered her to move
.0> the medical units and resweep the bay. She replied, "I'm not going to
.0> do it again, it's good enough, and I don't give a sh*t!"
Now you say:
.95> She, reacting to possibly his attitude of dissatisfaction of her
.95> work, told him she didn't need this sh*t and she was gonna do it.
First, you had her outright refusing to do it. Now, you have her
willing to do it (but showing some 'attitude' before she gets to it.)
Surely you don't expect a third-hand (or fourth-, fifth- or who knows?)
account to be taken as credible when you can't even repeat the story
the same way twice. (In short, you blew it.)
> Based on your noting history, in my opinion, she could have pulled
> a gun, shot him and dead and you would defend her to the end of the
> world.
Your ignorance about this is your own problem, not mine.
> I can't imagine living in your one way world, that to me, places
> men at blame for every ill, regardless of circumstance.
You're just incapable of comprehending it when a person writes (over
and over): "We don't know what happened." I guess the sky would fall
on your head if you had to accept that things are not the way you
presume/assume them to be.
> You also accuse me of one sideness....I gave you the information as
> told to me to the best of my ability.
You weren't there. Your story is at least second- or third-hand,
at best (and yes, it is very one-sided.)
> In that same paragraph, you
> contradicted yourself by saying it sounded like she ...."displayed this
> attitude before the Lt. ever said a word about 'the r**'........Go back
> and reread the basenote.....she did have that attitude and was
> insubordinate BEFORE he said the 'r' word.
How I did I contradict myself by describing what YOU wrote?? In any
case, I was right. You did mean it to sound as though the mean EMT
yelled and swore at the poor little Lt. before he ever said anything
about "the r**." Thanks for the confirmation.
> Apparently you read only
> what you want or the above quote would never have been made.
I gave your story the benefit of the doubt by saying it only SOUNDED
like you were accusing the EMT of yelling, swearing and showing
attitude to the poor Lt. before he made his remark. Again, thanks
for making it clear how one-sided your story was (and is now,) even
if you can't get the story straight.
|
844.98 | | NUPE::hamp | Buttonflyed Hug-sponge! | Tue Dec 01 1992 15:49 | 7 |
| >.95> She, reacting to possibly his attitude of dissatisfaction of her
>.95> work, told him she didn't need this sh*t and she was gonna do it.
> First, you had her outright refusing to do it. Now, you have her
> willing to do it (but showing some 'attitude' before she gets to it.)
typo?
|
844.99 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 15:49 | 6 |
| Why don't we wait to discuss all this further when the real facts
are known. All we have now is a changing one-sided story from
someone who wasn't present.
Without the facts, this story is just gossip.
|
844.100 | Who knows what, if anything, she actually said? | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 15:53 | 16 |
| RE: .98 hamp
> typo?
I considered that, too, except that the change in story is more than
just the lack of a word.
First, he had her saying she didn't "give a sh*t" - now he has her
saying she didn't "need this sh*t." (He put the first claim about
her words in quotes.)
In any case, the story has changed (not that it ever had credibility
as a 'n'-hand story in the first place.)
It's gossip, nothing more.
|
844.101 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 15:54 | 16 |
| >
> If it's ok to punish all the women (in the fire and police departments)
> for a lawsuit filed by one woman,
Since when is NOT talking to someone punishment? Oh yeh... it is 'against'
a woman, so it MUST be punishment. Right.....
>then I guess it's ok to punish all
> the men at both these departments if it turns out that the Lt. is guilty
> of repeatedly harassing the EMT. (Fair is fair.)
Is there ANY indication that the LT repeatedly harrassed the EMT? Any claims
by ANYONE, other than yourself, that such was going on? Or is this another
one of the 'demos'? Or just another made up 'fact', and on a non-Friday
no less?
|
844.102 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:01 | 21 |
| RE: .101 Joe
> Since when is NOT talking to someone punishment? Oh yeh... it is
> 'against' a woman, so it MUST be punishment. Right.....
When an entire department stops talking to ALL the members of a certain
race or sex (who happen to be a minority,) it's a form of punishment.
If you think it isn't, why not ask personnel what would happen if all
the white men in your building stopped talking (I'm talking about business
related matters) to ALL your female and/or African American co-workers.
> Is there ANY indication that the LT repeatedly harrassed the EMT?
You must not have seen the title of my note. If the Lt. is guilty
of even ONE instance of harassment, then all the men should be
punished (if it's ok to punish all the women for one lawsuit.)
Of course, if any of these men were punished in any way for the
Lt's actions, the howling and crying about "being painted with a
broad brush (as a man)" would go on for decades. No one would
dare do such a thing.
|
844.103 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:02 | 21 |
| >
> If such a refusal did take place, we also don't know if it occurred
> after the Lt. had asked the EMT to re-clean a clean ambulance bay for
> the 10th time (as a way to "ride" or harass her,) for example.
Huh? Being told to do your job is now harrassment???
Let's see. SOmeone says "sweep up". That person does does not. They are
told a second time to do so. They do not. A third time... they do not.
How is THAT harassement??????????????????????????????????? They are NOT doing
their jobs!!!!!
> In other words, we still don't know what actually happened. I do agree
> that it's very sad that entire fire and police departments have taken
> sides in a very childish way (whatever the true story of the original
> incident turns out to be.)
Then perhaps you would stop the innuendos about the guy's part (gee, we do not
know if this was the 10th time he harrassed here... I am sure we could come up
with some interesting innuendoes about what the woman was doing it all for).
|
844.104 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:06 | 19 |
| > I'm very skeptical about the supposed 'attitude' of the EMT. The 'report'
> makes it sound as though she displayed this 'attitude' before the
Actually, the report states that the LT's comment was made AFTER the comment
by the EMT. I fail to see where anyone could get 'confused' on this.
> The 'report' also (very nearly) justifies the actions of the entire fire
> and police departments (by claiming they're merely trying to save their
> poor selves from "trumped up charges.")
So, what about people who really WERE trying to avoid such trumped up charges?
Naw.... Doesn't fit in with the "perpetual victim" motif....
> It'll be interesting to see more information about it (if the city/town
> is ever willing to let the story get out.)
Yes, before someone has the LT pegged at 32,767 incidents of sexual
harrasement, 2 rapes, and sleeping on duty.
|
844.105 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:09 | 14 |
| <================================================================================
<Note 844.99 Male/Female Division in Public Service 99 of 103
<CSC32::CONLON 6 lines 1-DEC-1992 15:49
<--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
< Why don't we wait to discuss all this further when the real facts
< are known. All we have now is a changing one-sided story from
< someone who wasn't present.
< Without the facts, this story is just gossip.
That reply is about 95 entries late.
(When you grossly misunderstood and attacked the reply of one of the
very few people who is likely to have contributed positively to the
level of the discussion.)
|
844.106 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:09 | 9 |
| >
> In addition, I have been wondering what your motivation was in
> posting .0 in the first place. I think you have been around this
> conference long enough to have predicted that the response would have
> been about what it has been. So I wonder.
This is MENNOTES, NOT =WN=. I fail to see why some men should let some
women stifle what topics can be talked about.
|
844.107 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:13 | 33 |
| RE: .103 Joe
> Huh? Being told to do your job is now harrassment???
Harassment can occur in the course of a day's work (or didn't you
know that?)
> Let's see. SOmeone says "sweep up". That person does does not.
> They are told a second time to do so. They do not. A third time...
> they do not.
Please remember to include words like "suppose this happened," since
we don't yet have the facts.
> How is THAT harassement??????????????????????????????????? They are
> NOT doing their jobs!!!!!
Please remember to include words like "If this happened," since we
don't yet have the facts.
> Then perhaps you would stop the innuendos about the guy's part (gee,
> we do not know if this was the 10th time he harrassed here... I am sure
> we could come up with some interesting innuendoes about what the woman
> was doing it all for).
We don't yet have the EMT's story about all this. We do have the
story that is very (one-sidedly) sympathetic to the Lt., however.
When we have the EMT's story, then I won't speculate on what might
have happened (from her perspective.)
Since the side of the story that is sympathetic to the Lt. agrees that
he did say something about her being "on the r**," I doubt this is the
worst of his actions (or at least I'm very skeptical about it.)
|
844.108 | re .106 (and end up smellin pretty bad, too | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:16 | 6 |
| Yes, men ought never be denied the right to act like an ass. Sometimes,
tho, it would be nice to see men show they are sophisticated enough to
be able to refrain from exercising that right.
Most tom cats quickly learn that polecats are not to be trifled with.
can't win
|
844.109 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:16 | 16 |
| > <<< Note 844.99 by CSC32::CONLON >>>>
>
> Why don't we wait to discuss all this further when the real facts
> are known. All we have now is a changing one-sided story from
> someone who wasn't present.
Why don't you set a sterling example for the rest of us? You could start
with stopping the 'innuendo' about the man (references to his repeated
harrassement, etc). If there are no facts, why do you keep discussing
it and making up 'facts'. No need to answer. It is rhetorical.
> Without the facts, this story is just gossip.
Sure hasn't stopped you from making up facts. Then perhaps you are just
'baiting' people on here; but that is just my opinion.
|
844.110 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:18 | 5 |
| >
> It's gossip, nothing more.
>
So what are you discussing then, if you consider it 'contrived'?
|
844.111 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:22 | 12 |
| >
> When an entire department stops talking to ALL the members of a certain
> race or sex (who happen to be a minority,) it's a form of punishment.
> If you think it isn't, why not ask personnel what would happen if all
> the white men in your building stopped talking (I'm talking about business
> related matters) to ALL your female and/or African American co-workers.
Then do you believe that those women who want to make a conference for
women only be taken to personnel? Why not? It is a group of women wanting
to spepcifically exclude male members, based on gender. That then is
punishment, right?
|
844.112 | | POWDML::THAMER | Daniel Katz MSO2-3/G1, 223-6121 | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:36 | 16 |
| There seems to be a little bit of information missing from all of this,
and without it, it seems doomed to going back and forth without much
progress.
The basenote mentions that the EMT filed a sexual harrassment charge
against the Lt. What it doesn't do is say *why* If she filed a
charged, then she had to cite an example of what he did that was sexual
harrassment in her view. Even if the charge proves to be baseless, she
had to give grounds for making it in the first place....what were those
grounds? Do they have merit? If yes, how are they being pursued? If
no, how is the workplace situation being handled and what will happen
to the EMT?
Does anybody know?
Daniel
|
844.113 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:46 | 35 |
| RE: .109 Joe
> Why don't you set a sterling example for the rest of us? You could start
> with stopping the 'innuendo' about the man (references to his repeated
> harrassement, etc). If there are no facts, why do you keep discussing
> it and making up 'facts'.
I've never made the claim that my speculations were "fact." ON the
contrary, I stated specifically (over and over) that there were no facts.
By contrast, you've discussed the EMT's alleged behavior as if you
were referring to nothing but purely factual material. I guess you
consider this OK for you to do. (Nice double standard you've got
there.)
> Sure hasn't stopped you from making up facts. Then perhaps you are just
> 'baiting' people on here; but that is just my opinion.
You don't get it. When I say, "Perhaps such-n-such happened," it's
treated as if I've claimed facts. When you talk about the EMT's alleged
actions without allowing at ALL that the facts are not known, it's
fine (and wonderful.)
You've been trashing the EMT as not doing her job repeatedly (without
having any such facts,) but you can't stand that a woman might even
QUESTION the actions of the Lt. (and the mere possibility that he really
did harass anyone.)
The basenote says the Lt. was suspended without pay for 10 days (which,
if true, was a punishment given to him by people who DO have the facts
of the case.) Not that this seems to matter to you. The Lt. can't
possibly be guilty of anything, in your eyes (so I guess you believe
it must have been a set-up, or whatever, and OF COURSE, the woman must
necessarily be guilty of not doing her job.) A man wrote the basenote,
so it must be true - right?
|
844.114 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:47 | 30 |
| > > Huh? Being told to do your job is now harrassment???
>
> Harassment can occur in the course of a day's work (or didn't you
> know that?)
Yes, I know that. I also know that WOMEN can harrass as well as men.
That does not make being told to do your job harrassement, or didn't you
know that?)
> Please remember to include words like "suppose this happened," since
> we don't yet have the facts.
Rather amusing since the entire MALE population of the pol/fire dept have
already been branded GUILTY by you, accused of not doing their jobs, and
subject for their version of TFSO.
> We don't yet have the EMT's story about all this. We do have the
> story that is very (one-sidedly) sympathetic to the Lt., however.
> When we have the EMT's story, then I won't speculate on what might
> have happened (from her perspective.)
Well, we do not have the LT full story either, do we? So can derogatory
comments be made about the EMT?
> Since the side of the story that is sympathetic to the Lt. agrees that
> he did say something about her being "on the r**," I doubt this is the
> worst of his actions (or at least I'm very skeptical about it.)
But until then, your innuendo stands? Well you are consistent. And of course
ignoring the EMTs initial comments.
|
844.115 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:51 | 19 |
| RE: .111 Joe
>>When an entire department stops talking to ALL the members of a certain
>>race or sex (who happen to be a minority,) it's a form of punishment.
>>If you think it isn't, why not ask personnel what would happen if all
>>the white men in your building stopped talking (I'm talking about business
>>related matters) to ALL your female and/or African American co-workers.
> Then do you believe that those women who want to make a conference for
> women only be taken to personnel? Why not?
When you have an example of ALL the women in a certain department or
building refusing to speak (I'm talking about business related matters)
to ALL male co-workers, let me know.
(In the mentioned in the basenote, the "no speaking policy" spread to
the police department. Show me a case where all the women in ANOTHER
building or department, or company perhaps, stopped talking to all male
co-workers about business related matters.)
|
844.116 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:55 | 30 |
| > consider this OK for you to do. (Nice double standard you've got
> there.)
Guess who taught it to me? So, what FACTS have I made up? Maybe I should
just call them 'demoes'... That excuse seems to work for you.
> Sure hasn't stopped you from making up facts. Then perhaps you are just
> 'baiting' people on here; but that is just my opinion.
> The basenote says the Lt. was suspended without pay for 10 days (which,
> if true, was a punishment given to him by people who DO have the facts
> of the case.) Not that this seems to matter to you.
of course, it matters. I am sure you are also aware of the fact that
punishments are oft given with the intent of showing a COURT that the
company (or whatever) is taking the thing seriously, NOT that the punishment
was warranted.
>The Lt. can't
> possibly be guilty of anything, in your eyes (so I guess you believe
> it must have been a set-up, or whatever, and OF COURSE, the woman must
> necessarily be guilty of not doing her job.) A man wrote the basenote,
> so it must be true - right?
Did I ever say it was a set up? NO!
Did I ever say the man was not guilty of ONE harrasement charge? NO!
Did >I< make any statements against the EMT? Any innuendo against the EMT?
So, a man wrote the basenote... He must be WRONG, correct?
|
844.117 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:57 | 10 |
| > Then do you believe that those women who want to make a conference for
> women only be taken to personnel? Why not?
> When you have an example of ALL the women in a certain department or
> building refusing to speak (I'm talking about business related matters)
> to ALL male co-workers, let me know.
Well, you do not know if ALL the men aren't talking to ALL the women, do you?
You are talking stricting about gossip, to use your own words.
|
844.118 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Dec 01 1992 16:59 | 4 |
| >You are talking stricting about gossip, to use your own words.
^^^^^^^^^
yeh, I know :-=) "strictly".
|
844.119 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 17:01 | 32 |
| RE: .114 Joe
> Yes, I know that. I also know that WOMEN can harrass as well as men.
> That does not make being told to do your job harrassement, or didn't you
> know that?)
You don't have enough facts to make the claim that the Lt. was merely
asking the EMT to do her job, so it's kinda senseless to keep harping
on this point. If he committed harassment against her, he obviously
went beyond this. Do you need more help with this point?
>Rather amusing since the entire MALE population of the pol/fire dept have
>already been branded GUILTY by you, accused of not doing their jobs, and
>subject for their version of TFSO.
As you probably don't recall, I also qualified these comments by making
them apply to any of these men who *are* actually refraining to speak
to all women at work. (Perhaps I didn't repeat this to you often enough.)
> Well, we do not have the LT full story either, do we? So can derogatory
> comments be made about the EMT?
In addition to the entire topic's worth of derogatory comments made
about her already (especially by you)??? Enough is enough.
> But until then, your innuendo stands? Well you are consistent.
> And of course ignoring the EMTs initial comments.
The EMT is not a noter, so WE HAVEN'T SEEN HER INITIAL COMMENTS. WE
HAVEN'T HEARD HER STORY AT ALL.
Joe, why is this such a difficult concept for you to comprehend?
|
844.120 | boy shoots foot, film at 11 | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Dec 01 1992 17:09 | 8 |
| .89> "Women are as strong as men" implies "(All) Women are as strong as
.89> men."
"Women are X" implies "(All) women are X."
Thank you so much. I shall be quoting you in WN, note 308 the next
time the WNers circle the wagons around the few remaining noters who
still argue that "Men are X" doesn't mean "(All) men are X."
|
844.122 | You goofed, bigtime. Where's your retraction? | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 17:19 | 10 |
| RE: .120 Mike Z.
So meanwhile, Mike, if you *do* hold that "...women are..." means
"(ALL) women are...," then you must know by now that you made a
very clear mistake earlier in this topic when you characterized
Daniel's personal experience of knowing a particular subset of
woman as being a statement that "women are..."
Where's your admission about this mistake?
|
844.121 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 17:23 | 27 |
| RE: .116 Joe
> So, what FACTS have I made up?
What facts do you have that WEREN'T made up? You talk about the
EMT's actions (and STATEMENTS) as if you think you know exactly
what they were.
The EMT's so-called "initial comments" have been changed by the
basenote author since he first posted the basenote, so it's rather
absurd for you to keep referring to them as though they're real.
(Not that it will stop you, of course.)
> of course, it matters. I am sure you are also aware of the fact that
> punishments are oft given with the intent of showing a COURT that the
> company (or whatever) is taking the thing seriously, NOT that the
> punishment was warranted.
So we can't consider that the people who DO have the facts might have
considered the Lt. guilty of harassment. Ok.
> Did >I< make any statements against the EMT? Any innuendo against the
> EMT?
YES!!!! You've stated over and over that she didn't do her job, etc.
without having the facts. You may not realize it, but these do amount
to being statements against her.
|
844.123 | Inbreeding did occur often in the South! | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Dec 01 1992 17:30 | 8 |
|
I should have listened to the advise given me earlier " David, just
ignore her"..... I give up, Suzanne enjoy hating and baiting every man
you encounter that disagrees with you..
David the semi retired
|
844.124 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 17:37 | 7 |
| David - if you're trying to insult the South on my account, don't
bother. My family came from Massachusetts (except for my Mom being
born in Nashua, NH on the way back to MA during my Grandparents'
vacation.)
You can hate me anyway, of course.
|
844.125 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Dec 01 1992 17:42 | 9 |
|
I meant to say north east:-)
> you can hate me anyway
I pity you..
David
|
844.126 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Dec 01 1992 17:48 | 20 |
| RE: .125 David
> I meant to say north east:-)
Yeah, right. :>
>> you can hate me anyway
> I pity you..
Not to worry. I now believe that we *will* see something very close
to equal rights in the next few decades (so all this garbage about
all men at a particular workplace refusing to speak to all women
co-workers can be put to rest once and for all.)
I hope it happens soon enough to occur in the lifetimes of everyone
here (because it really *will* make things better for us all when
we finally get there.)
Peace.
|
844.127 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Tue Dec 01 1992 18:02 | 5 |
| Suzanne, The next time someone tells you that they have no problem with
equality and women's rights, but that they have a problem with your
style of noting, listen to them.
Mike
|
844.128 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Dec 01 1992 18:51 | 9 |
|
> I now believe
I believe that you are partially correct. I believe that what you
would call equality will be viewed as un-equality by those that are
unjustly blamed and punished for the charade..
David
|
844.129 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:18 | 14 |
| RE: .128 David
> I believe that what you
> would call equality will be viewed as un-equality by those that are
> unjustly blamed and punished for the charade..
It's pretty clear that you believe "equality" can be defined as what
men and women had before (in the days when men and women each had
"their places" and women were more willing to stay in theirs.)
Equality (per my definition) would mean that no one would need to be
blamed or punished in any way (including the punishment that is still
meted out to women for the sin of being born into a class of people who
must continue to fight to gain such rights.)
|
844.130 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:24 | 13 |
| By the way, David, if anyone blames you for the injustice of
discrimination, they are quite justified in doing so (since
you've admitted having mistreated the women you worked with in
the fire department.)
You weren't the first person to do this (God knows,) but you're
certainly guilty of perpetuating it (and mistreating co-workers
based strictly on their sex or race.) You even said you knew
it was wrong.
It *was* wrong, and you should hold blame for having done it.
You certainly can't claim you're just this poor innocent white male
who is being blamed for something he never did (that's for sure.)
|
844.131 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:24 | 4 |
| Har har har. Listen to the harangue. Are you stuck on a mobius loop,
Suzanne?
Mike
|
844.132 | or "amyn": as you choose | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:37 | 2 |
| re .127
amen
|
844.133 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:37 | 10 |
|
Suzanne,
You do not understand me.. I am not trying to turn back the clock, I
am suggesting that in this enlightened age we must find a better way to
solve the problem than " An eye for an eye"...
Viva La difference,
David
|
844.134 | As long as you're going for base humor... | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:37 | 6 |
| RE: .131 Mike Smith
> Har har har.
You forgot something. (Where's your belch?)
|
844.135 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:41 | 13 |
|
Suzanne,
I explained the motivation behind it.. I would treat anyone that
used AA as a foothold the same way.. By the way I just finished getting
my butt kicked in racquetball a few minutes ago.. The young lady that
did it is sitting right next to me and I value her alot. She did not
ask for extra points because of gender, she whipped me fair and square
and I respect that....
David( a modified feminist)
|
844.136 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:50 | 15 |
| RE: .133 David
> You do not understand me.. I am not trying to turn back the clock, I
> am suggesting that in this enlightened age we must find a better way to
> solve the problem than " An eye for an eye"...
If we were going for "an eye for an eye," your eyes would be in serious
danger right now, David. Fortunately for you, it isn't the goal in any
sense.
Meanwhile, some action must be taken to solve the problem. It simply
isn't good enough to do nothing (hoping it will all work out ok in
another few hundred years.) The women's movement has already been
working on this situation for over 200 years in Europe and almost
150 years in the U.S. It's long past time for a resolution.
|
844.137 | count the seconds until the knee jerk response | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Wed Dec 02 1992 13:55 | 7 |
| One way to make a serious attempt to solve the problem would be for you
to stop harassing this conference.
You, almost single handledly, prevent any possibility of accommodation
to modern thinking by traditional men.
You, almost single handedly, provide a raison d'etre for anti-feminism
|
844.139 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:04 | 28 |
| RE: .135 David
> I explained the motivation behind it.. I would treat anyone that
> used AA as a foothold the same way..
Some men assume that ANY women in a male-dominated job must have
gotten there through AA, so they punish the women in exactly the
same way you described as having done to the women you knew (even
if the women went through the job search in exactly the same way
the men did.) It's a matter of blatant prejudice on the part of
these men (yet they still see themselves as 'innocent' in the
same way you seem to do.)
> By the way I just finished getting
> my butt kicked in racquetball a few minutes ago..
When men get their butts kicked in a hiring situation, some men find
it absolutely necessary for their personal survival to convince them-
selves that it was an AA situation (even when it wasn't.) Then later,
they punish their women co-workers even more.
Whether AA is involved in a hiring or not, the women applying for the
jobs go through the same process the men go through. It's absolutely
pathetic to realize that some men go out of their way to punish these
women (for having been born women.)
It's something I hope we can stop in the next few decades. It's so
very wrong (as you've even admitted yourself.)
|
844.140 | It still ain't easy bein' Herb. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:12 | 10 |
| RE: .137 Herb "It ain't easy bein' green"
> One way to make a serious attempt to solve the problem would be for you
> to stop harassing this conference.
Herb, haven't you started that private conference yet (with the
thousands upon thousands of personal remarks to me that keep burning
a hole in your keyboard)?
Put it in a sock.
|
844.141 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:13 | 17 |
|
> your eyes would be in serious danger right
Just because we do not see eye to eye does not mean you have the
right perspective Suzanne.. I have told you several times that I
support equal rights for everyone. I have also explained a bizzillion
times that two wrongs do not make a right, no matter how many horror
stories you can demonstrate through out history. The only logical
answer I can imagine is a system of hiring guidelines based on
" merit criteria." Careful consideration must be given to making
it gender and racial neutral, also, society must do all it can to
ensure everyone had equal access to those institutions and programs
that increase a persons merit..
David
|
844.142 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:15 | 4 |
|
Alright I 'll ask it, whats a raison d'etre??
David
|
844.143 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:17 | 10 |
|
Suzanne,
Well never know as long as AA exists.. And another thing, I stated
that my attitude towards those firewomen wsa innapropriate, beyond that
I owe you nothing.. Take a breath Al :-)
David
|
844.144 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:23 | 13 |
| RE: .143 David
> Well never know as long as AA exists..
So it's ok to deliberately mistreat women co-workers (just IN CASE
they have somehow benefited from AA) as long as the law exists???
And you say you believe that two wrongs don't make a right (while
you commit a "wrong" in retaliation for what you believe is a wrong)?
If you're willing to blame all or most women co-workers for the ills
you see in AA, then why don't you also blame all or most men for the
ills of the discrimination that made AA necessary in the first place?
|
844.145 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:25 | 7 |
|
> So it's ok
One more time, no it's not okay, it's human nature.
David
|
844.146 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:25 | 2 |
| raison d'etre: French: approximately translates as "reason for being"
|
844.147 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:29 | 9 |
| re: .134
Suzanne, you wound me. I am far to genteel a person to be belching in
public. I thought you knew that.
Besides, most people don't consider laughter to be base humor, even if
it is only slightly derisive.
Mike
|
844.148 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:30 | 16 |
|
> blame all or most men
A perfect example of what I and others have been saying. The very
prejudicial attitude you claim victim status from, is now apparent
in your own ranks. I do not believe that most men are this way. I
believe that most men LOVED their wives and respected the work they
did. I believe way back when, when the bible was the guiding light
for people, that they simply chose to accept certain roles. I also
believe there were a few MOron men who abused their wives and ruined
it for all of us.. You will no doubt have a birage of historical
examples of abuse, but this is not proof of a majority of males being
sexist!
David
|
844.149 | continuation of .146 | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:32 | 7 |
| so ...
driving force
motivation
rationale
that sort of thing
|
844.150 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:36 | 5 |
|
-1
Danke schon (sp)
David
|
844.151 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:45 | 25 |
| RE: .148 David
>> If you're willing to blame all or most women co-workers for the ills
>> you see in AA, then why don't you also blame all or most men for the
>> ills of the discrimination that made AA necessary in the first place?
> A perfect example of what I and others have been saying. The very
> prejudicial attitude you claim victim status from, is now apparent
> in your own ranks.
All you quoted in your note (from my sentence) was "blame all or most
men" (which is clearly taken out of context from what I wrote.) Was
this deliberate?
> I do not believe that most men are this way.
It's too bad that you are unwilling to give women co-workers the
benefit of the doubt ("as long as AA exists") since it's been my
experience that most women in male-dominated professions have not
used AA to get ahead.
The question is - why is it ok for you to mistreat women co-workers
'as long as AA exists' (even though many of us do not believe that
'most women' use AA) but you wouldn't mistreat men as long as proof
of discrimination exists?
|
844.152 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 14:51 | 10 |
|
> but wouldn't mistreat men
It happens everyday. We got at each other everyday, the only
difference is we think it's part of the competition for top
of the hill . We have rules and we respect them. I fail to see the
logic in the rest of your arguement. Please explain it by analogy..
David
|
844.153 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 15:04 | 28 |
| RE: .152 David
Once again, you've taken a few words out of context to interpret (and
you wonder why you're so confused.)
Here's the whole sentence:
The question is - why is it ok for you to mistreat women co-workers
'as long as AA exists' (even though many of us do not believe that
'most women' use AA) but you wouldn't mistreat men as long as proof
of discrimination exists?
> It happens everyday. We got at each other everyday, the only
> difference is we think it's part of the competition for top
> of the hill . We have rules and we respect them.
Do you mistreat other men by blaming all or most men for discrimination
"as long as proof of discrimination exists?" No, you don't. Neither
do I. However, you DO blame and/or mistreat women for AA "as long as
AA exists" (since you don't know which women have used it and which
women have not.)
> I fail to see the
> logic in the rest of your arguement. Please explain it by analogy..
It's helpful to read individual words *in context*. If you are unable
to do this, then ask questions until the whole sentence comes into
view for you. Perhaps it will help you.
|
844.154 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 15:09 | 17 |
|
Suzanne,
> use it
AA or EEO or whatever is not optional. You do not decide to use it
or not like an umbrella.
> why is it okay for you mistreat women co-workers
It's not, and this is the fourth time I have states thus. I guess
the off line mail suggesting I simply let you continue your crusade
alone is taking on new meaning now.. Goodbye Suzanne, have fun
twisting everything to fit your view..
David
|
844.155 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Wed Dec 02 1992 15:11 | 2 |
| yes, oh and bear in mind it is VERY important to always let a lady have the
last word.
|
844.156 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 15:16 | 6 |
|
-1
Touche' :-)
David
|
844.157 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Wed Dec 02 1992 15:21 | 1 |
| 'Specially this particular lady.
|
844.158 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 15:26 | 22 |
| RE: .154 David
>> use it
> AA or EEO or whatever is not optional. You do not decide to use it
> or not like an umbrella.
Exactly. So, meanwhile, you admit to mistreating women co-workers on
the basis that they've USED it (when, by your own admission, they had
NO CHOICE in the matter.)
Further, you seem to always assume that AA is the only reason why any
woman is ever hired for a job that some man might want. You don't
seem to understand that such an assumption is one of the most blatant
forms of prejudice possible in the workplace.
Meanwhile, when anyone witnesses this blantant discrimination (and
acknowledges it,) you seem to see it as an example of 'blaming innocent
males for no reason (boo hoo.)'
Your justification for having such a blatantly prejudiced attitute towards
your co-workers is: 'it's human nature.' Unbelievable.
|
844.159 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 15:29 | 10 |
|
Hey - you boys can continue to play if you like.
At least David is being honest by admitting he's actually had experience
treating women in a discriminatory fashion (even though he knew/knows
it was wrong.) I admire him for being able to say these things.
Most of the men who commit discrimination against women are light
years from recognizing or admitting it.
|
844.160 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 15:30 | 3 |
|
" The silence is deafening isn't it?"
|
844.161 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Wed Dec 02 1992 16:54 | 4 |
| So that's how it's done. Stop being nice to her and she goes away.
Hmmm!
Mike
|
844.162 | Our boys are in trouble. :> | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 17:00 | 5 |
|
Oh no - these guys are starting to talk to themselves.
Someone call 911 (before they get any worse.)
|
844.163 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Wed Dec 02 1992 17:20 | 6 |
| Oh, I dunno, talking to one's self is not a problem. One only has a
problem if one starts to answer one's self back.
Ya see?
Mike
|
844.164 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Wed Dec 02 1992 21:50 | 41 |
| >
> You don't have enough facts to make the claim that the Lt. was merely
> asking the EMT to do her job, so it's kinda senseless to keep harping
> on this point. If he committed harassment against her, he obviously
> went beyond this.
Beyond asking her to do the job? Beyond harrassement?
>Do you need more help with this point?
I did NOT make the claim that the LT was merely asking the EMT to do her job.
If you look back, please note I said I agreed (based on what was in .0) that
there was ONE case of harrassment. Please show exactly where I said what
you claimed I said. If you cannot, please stop making such claims.
> As you probably don't recall, I also qualified these comments by making
> them apply to any of these men who *are* actually refraining to speak
> to all women at work. (Perhaps I didn't repeat this to you often enough.)
Well, if you cannot show that ALL men in the departments are not talking to
ALL women, then there is no problem. That is allowed according to your logic
of allowing woman only conferences, since ALL of a group are not ignoring
ALL of another group.
> In addition to the entire topic's worth of derogatory comments made
> about her already (especially by you)??? Enough is enough.
Please point out the specific derogatory comments I made, assuming you can.
If you cannot, I would appeciate it if you would stop making up LIES about
what I have said.
> The EMT is not a noter, so WE HAVEN'T SEEN HER INITIAL COMMENTS. WE
> HAVEN'T HEARD HER STORY AT ALL.
The LT is not a noter, so WE HAVEN'T SEEN HIS INITIAL COMMENTS. WE
HAVEN'T HEARD HIS STORY AT ALL.
> Joe, why is this such a difficult concept for you to comprehend?
I do comprehend it. I just do not agree with the fantasy world you seem
to have constructed.
|
844.165 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Wed Dec 02 1992 21:55 | 29 |
| > What facts do you have that WEREN'T made up? You talk about the
> EMT's actions (and STATEMENTS) as if you think you know exactly
> what they were.
So, please show me where I have made up a fact?
> The EMT's so-called "initial comments" have been changed by the
> basenote author since he first posted the basenote, so it's rather
> absurd for you to keep referring to them as though they're real.
> (Not that it will stop you, of course.)
Then the whole story is suspect and the EMT was never harrassed at all.
That should settle it.
It is rather interesting the way you take a story, claim the part about men
is made up and from the other supposedly 'real' story, not only deduce that
the woman was harrassed, but that the man supposedly had a history of it
(and who could forget that the whole non-speaking department [male members
only I assume] should be fired).
> YES!!!! You've stated over and over that she didn't do her job, etc.
> without having the facts. You may not realize it, but these do amount
> to being statements against her.
The 'facts' are shown in .0 (as they can be known at this time). If you do
not accept that the EMT did not do her job as reporeted, then how can you
possibly accept anything related to her being harrassed. Talk about selective
vision.
|
844.166 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Wed Dec 02 1992 21:58 | 8 |
| > ignore her"..... I give up, Suzanne enjoy hating and baiting every man
> you encounter that disagrees with you..
Well, life would be pretty boring if you only ever 'discussed'/'argued' with
people who agreed with what you had to say.
Look at the notes as the I/O exercisor for the heart and/or blood pressure :-).
|
844.167 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Wed Dec 02 1992 22:15 | 9 |
|
-1
> i/o exerciser
it's an input output for something, thats for sure :-)
David
|
844.168 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Wed Dec 02 1992 22:27 | 5 |
|
Anyway, I am going to be dropping out here a bit... The TFSO bombs are
falling a mite close in my group...
This will also allow others to replenish their stock of made-up-facts. ;-)
|
844.169 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 23:29 | 62 |
| RE: .164 Joe
> I did NOT make the claim that the LT was merely asking the EMT to do
> her job.
Have it your way. (.103, "Huh? Being told to do your job is now
harrassment???" Joe Melvin.)
>>As you probably don't recall, I also qualified these comments by making
>>them apply to any of these men who *are* actually refraining to speak
>>to all women at work. (Perhaps I didn't repeat this to you often enough.)
> Well, if you cannot show that ALL men in the departments are not talking
> to ALL women, then there is no problem.
My comments applied to "ANY" men who have taken up the practice of
not speaking to all their women co-workers (in business-related
matters.) If the basenote is a lie and NONE of the men in the fire
department or police department have taken up this practice, then
it's not a problem. If only a few jerks have taken up the practice,
these men should be disciplined for it (like I said.)
> That is allowed according to your logic of allowing woman only
> conferences, since ALL of a group are not ignoring ALL of another group.
Not true. My logic didn't stipulate all (or even some) of ANY group.
For example, I don't think it's a problem if all the men on the
elevator in a high-rise office building refrain from speaking to all
the women on the elevator. My comment referred specifically to
business related activities (where communication is part of the job.)
>> In addition to the entire topic's worth of derogatory comments made
>> about her already (especially by you)??? Enough is enough.
> Please point out the specific derogatory comments I made, assuming you
> can. If you cannot, I would appeciate it if you would stop making up
> LIES about what I have said.
I considered your "Huh?? Being told to do your job is now harrassment???"
to be a derogatory implication about the EMT (since it was in response
to a direct comment I made about her situation.) If you have a
different opinion on this, it doesn't make my opinion a lie (no matter
how many times you decide to accuse me of this.)
.114>>> And of course ignoring the EMTs initial comments.
>> The EMT is not a noter, so WE HAVEN'T SEEN HER INITIAL COMMENTS. WE
>> HAVEN'T HEARD HER STORY AT ALL.
> The LT is not a noter, so WE HAVEN'T SEEN HIS INITIAL COMMENTS. WE
> HAVEN'T HEARD HIS STORY AT ALL.
Since we all agree that neither of these people are noters (and that we
don't have either of their "initial remarks" available to us,) then you
can stop the snide remarks about how I've ignored these non-existent
"initial comments." Ok?
> I do comprehend it. I just do not agree with the fantasy world you seem
> to have constructed.
You yell at me for not commenting on non-existent "initial comments"
and you're NOT in a fantasy world? Geeeesh.
|
844.170 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Wed Dec 02 1992 23:59 | 72 |
| RE: .165 Joe Melvin
>> What facts do you have that WEREN'T made up? You talk about the
>> EMT's actions (and STATEMENTS) as if you think you know exactly
>> what they were.
> So, please show me where I have made up a fact?
You have ZERO (O.0) facts at your disposal, so ANYTHING you've
written as though it were factual is NOT. Clear enough?
> Then the whole story is suspect and the EMT was never harrassed at all.
> That should settle it.
I've already suggested that this whole story might be a fabrication
(which, of course, has no bearing whatsoever on whether or not the
EMT was in fact harassed by this Lt. at some point in time.) It
neither proves nor disproves that such a thing has happened.
> It is rather interesting the way you take a story, claim the part about
> men is made up ...
What part about men do you mean? I've stated over and over and over
and over and over and over that we don't know what happened. If you
tell me how many thousands or millions of times you need to hear this
before it sinks in, I'll write a loop for you that you can run at your
desk (if this will help.)
> ...and from the other supposedly 'real' story, not only deduce that
> the woman was harrassed, but that the man supposedly had a history of it
This is nuts. I never came anywhere near suggesting that these can
be regarded as facts or conclusions. Get a grip!
> (and who could forget that the whole non-speaking department [male members
> only I assume] should be fired).
The basenote claims that all the men at both the fire department and
the police department aren't speaking to any of their co-workers who
happen to be women. I said that if this is true, the persons committing
this childish behavior should be disciplined (even fired.) It's my
opinion.
If it's only the men who are engaging in this practice, then they
are the ones who should be punished. If women have taken up this
practice (not speaking to all men in the department,) they should
be punished equally. You may not agree, but so what?
> The 'facts' are shown in .0 (as they can be known at this time).
The facts are not known. We have a story told in the basenote,
that's all.
> If you do not accept that the EMT did not do her job as reporeted,
> then how can you possibly accept anything related to her being
> harrassed. Talk about selective vision.
As mentioned before (more than once,) it's possible that the whole
story is a fabrication. K. Upton got the story (in the basenote)
from someone "not directly involved," remember (so we're talking
about a third-hand story at best here.)
If the story is a fabrication, it neither proves nor disproves that
any harassment took place. The real facts of the interactions
between the EMT and the Lt. are independent of anyone's third-hand
story.
What really happened? How many times do you need to hear me say
that we simply don't know. (I could put it in the loop for you
to run on your system at your desk if it would help.)
Are you ok now?
|
844.171 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Dec 03 1992 00:01 | 57 |
| > > I did NOT make the claim that the LT was merely asking the EMT to do
> > her job.
>
> Have it your way. (.103, "Huh? Being told to do your job is now
> harrassment???" Joe Melvin.)
Is being told to do your job harrassment or not? Yes or no, please.
I believe the harrassment charge is on the verbal statements of the LT AFTER
the refusal by the EMT. Wouldn't you agree?
Please show where in the extract/quote I used the word "merely"? That is
obviously an addition/interpretation on YOUR part, not mine. Kindly do
NOT attribute to me any credit for your works of fiction. Thank you.
> My comments applied to "ANY" men who have taken up the practice of
> not speaking to all their women co-workers (in business-related
> matters.)
Actually, I believe you used the uppercase ALL... Not ANY... ALL...
>If the basenote is a lie and NONE of the men in the fire
> department or police department have taken up this practice, then
> it's not a problem. If only a few jerks have taken up the practice,
> these men should be disciplined for it (like I said.)
And so should the woman for insubordination (not following direct orders
of that person's boss). Not harrassment, insubordination.
> I considered your "Huh?? Being told to do your job is now harrassment???"
> to be a derogatory implication about the EMT (since it was in response
> to a direct comment I made about her situation.)
Oh, please.. could you explain how this is derogatory to the woman?????????
What exactly is the implication of which you speak?
> If you have a
> different opinion on this, it doesn't make my opinion a lie (no matter
> how many times you decide to accuse me of this.)
You claiming I have said something when I did not is not a matter of opinion.
It is matter of truth (or lack of it). Wouldn't you agree?
> Since we all agree that neither of these people are noters (and that we
> don't have either of their "initial remarks" available to us,) then you
> can stop the snide remarks about how I've ignored these non-existent>
> "initial comments." Ok?
What snide comments? I specifically asked you the same question you asked,
only with genders reversed. How is that snide for one phrasing of the
question and not the other?
> You yell at me for not commenting on non-existent "initial comments"
> and you're NOT in a fantasy world? Geeeesh.
And exactly where have I yelled at you? Especially with a typed medium?
|
844.172 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 00:03 | 72 |
| RE: .165 Joe Melvin
>> What facts do you have that WEREN'T made up? You talk about the
>> EMT's actions (and STATEMENTS) as if you think you know exactly
>> what they were.
> So, please show me where I have made up a fact?
You have ZERO (O.0) facts at your disposal, so ANYTHING you've
written as though it were factual is NOT. Clear enough?
> Then the whole story is suspect and the EMT was never harrassed at all.
> That should settle it.
I've already suggested that this whole story might be a fabrication
(which, of course, has no bearing whatsoever on whether or not the
EMT was in fact harassed by this Lt. at some point in time.) It
neither proves nor disproves that such a thing has happened.
> It is rather interesting the way you take a story, claim the part about
> men is made up ...
What part about men do you mean? I've stated over and over and over
and over and over and over that we don't know what happened. If you
tell me how many thousands or millions of times you need to hear this
before it sinks in, I'll write a loop for you that you can run on your
system, at your desk (if this will help.)
> ...and from the other supposedly 'real' story, not only deduce that
> the woman was harrassed, but that the man supposedly had a history of it
This is nuts. I never came anywhere near suggesting that these can
be regarded as facts or conclusions. Get a grip!
> (and who could forget that the whole non-speaking department [male members
> only I assume] should be fired).
The basenote claims that all the men at both the fire department and
the police department aren't speaking to any of their co-workers who
happen to be women. I said that if this is true, the persons committing
this childish behavior should be disciplined (even fired.) It's my
opinion.
If it's only the men who are engaging in this practice, then they
are the ones who should be punished. If women have taken up this
practice (not speaking to all men in the department,) they should
be punished equally. You may not agree, but so what?
> The 'facts' are shown in .0 (as they can be known at this time).
The facts are not known. We have a story told in the basenote,
that's all.
> If you do not accept that the EMT did not do her job as reporeted,
> then how can you possibly accept anything related to her being
> harrassed. Talk about selective vision.
As mentioned before (more than once,) it's possible that the whole
story is a fabrication. K. Upton got the story (in the basenote)
from someone "not directly involved," remember (so we're talking
about a third-hand story at best here.)
If the story is a fabrication, it neither proves nor disproves that
any harassment took place. The real facts of the interactions
between the EMT and the Lt. are independent of anyone's third-hand
story.
What really happened? How many times do you need to hear me say
that we simply don't know. (I could put it in the loop for you
to run on your system at your desk if it would help.)
Are you ok now?
|
844.173 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Dec 03 1992 00:15 | 63 |
| > You have ZERO (O.0) facts at your disposal, so ANYTHING you've
> written as though it were factual is NOT. Clear enough?
You also have ZERO facts at your disposal, so anything you've written as
though it were factual is NOT. Including your embellishments. Clear
enough?
> What part about men do you mean? I've stated over and over and over
> and over and over and over that we don't know what happened. If you
> tell me how many thousands or millions of times you need to hear this
> before it sinks in, I'll write a loop for you that you can run at your
> desk (if this will help.)
So, save some programming effort and just answer the question: Why do you
embellish the story by adding your own made up 'facts'?
> happen to be women. I said that if this is true, the persons committing
> this childish behavior should be disciplined (even fired.) It's my
> opinion.
Everything you have written is your opinion. It is just that some of
your opinions are more memorable than others. :-)
> The facts are not known. We have a story told in the basenote,
> that's all.
And of course, your additions, oh sorry... 'opinions'. So, do you beleive
in the far side of the moon? Ever been there?
> from someone "not directly involved," remember (so we're talking
> about a third-hand story at best here.)
Probably 20th hand, actually :-)
> If the story is a fabrication, it neither proves nor disproves that
> any harassment took place.
If the story is a fabrication, there were NO events to BE harassment!!!!!
I think I will now bow out of this 'discussion'. I cannot possibly
compete with this gem... Nor would I want to.
>The real facts of the interactions
> between the EMT and the Lt. are independent of anyone's third-hand
> story.
If the story is a fabrication, there ARE no real facts!!
> What really happened? How many times do you need to hear me say
> that we simply don't know.
And how many times do you need to hear that I understand that? What I do
not understand is why you take the case and ADD your made up 'facts' about
the various people in it?
>(I could put it in the loop for you
> to run on your system at your desk if it would help.)
No thanks. My desk only runs at 0.000000001 MIPS, and it would not even go
that fast if were not for Brownian motion :-).
> Are you ok now?
Kindly keep your personal attacks to yourself, please.
|
844.174 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 00:43 | 93 |
| RE: .171 Joe Melvin
> Is being told to do your job harrassment or not? Yes or no, please.
It can be. If someone were to tell a man, "Hey, put a hold on your
testosterone poisoning for a minute and write your next piece of
lousy bug-ridden code, you bleeping idiot" - yeah, I'd consider it
harassment (although it is actually a request to do one's job.)
You asked this as a hypothetical question, so I provided you with a
hypothetical situation as an example. Clear on this now?
> I believe the harrassment charge is on the verbal statements of the
> LT AFTER the refusal by the EMT. Wouldn't you agree?
We don't have the facts, so it's impossible to know the chronology
of events *or* the exact words of either person, if the incident
did indeed take place.
> Please show where in the extract/quote I used the word "merely"?
Let's hope you're clear enough now (on the question of whether it
is harassment to ask a person to do thier job) to get on to other
matters. Obviously, it's possible to do both: a person can ask
someone to do their job in a way that is harassing.) Are you ok
on this now?
>> My comments applied to "ANY" men who have taken up the practice of
>> not speaking to all their women co-workers (in business-related
>> matters.)
> Actually, I believe you used the uppercase ALL... Not ANY... ALL...
Here's what I really said (in .26):
In my opinion, every male firefighter and/or police officer who is
staging a "refuse to speak to any co-worker who happens to be female"
should receive disciplinary action. If the behavior continues, the
guilty parties should be threatened with demotion and/or loss of pay.
^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^
"Every 'x' who is doing 'y'" does not describe ALL people (such as all
men in the fire or police departments) unless ALL such people happen to
be engaged in this behavior. I wrote it as my opinion and suggested
that only the "guilty parties" should be punished. You may not agree,
but so what?
>> If only a few jerks have taken up the practice, these men should
>> be disciplined for it (like I said.)
> And so should the woman for insubordination (not following direct
> orders of that person's boss). Not harrassment, insubordination.
We don't know that this happened, of course. (We also don't know
if all/some/any men are refusing to speak to all/some/any women in
the police and fire departments - so far, anyway.)
> Oh, please.. could you explain how this is derogatory to the
> woman????????? What exactly is the implication of which you speak?
Just a few lines ago, you stated "And so should the woman [be
punished] for insubordination." You have no facts to support that
this has happened, yet you continue to say such things. I consider
it derogatory. You may not agree, but so what?
>>I considered your "Huh? Being told to do your job is now harrassment???"
>>to be a derogatory implication about the EMT (since it was in response
>>to a direct comment I made about her situation.) If you have a
>>different opinion on this, it doesn't make my opinion a lie (no matter
>>how many times you decide to accuse me of this.)
> You claiming I have said something when I did not is not a matter of
> opinion. It is matter of truth (or lack of it). Wouldn't you agree?
The quote I provided above ("Huh? Being told to do your job is now
harrassment???") is accurate. We only have different opinions on
the implications of such a statement.
>What snide comments? I specifically asked you the same question you asked,
>only with genders reversed. How is that snide for one phrasing of the
>question and not the other?
The "snide comment" was partially provided earlier:
.114> But until then, your innuendo stands? Well you are consistent.
.114> And of course ignoring the EMTs initial comments.
As we settled tonight, the EMT had no "initial comments," so I trust
you won't be asking me to discuss the non-existent comments again.
Are you ok on this now (or do you have a few hundred other pressing
points of interest to you that must be satisfied before you can
go on with your life?)
|
844.175 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 01:04 | 69 |
| RE: .173 Joe Melvin
>> You have ZERO (O.0) facts at your disposal, so ANYTHING you've
>> written as though it were factual is NOT. Clear enough?
> You also have ZERO facts at your disposal, so anything you've written as
> though it were factual is NOT. Including your embellishments. Clear
> enough?
I've made it more than clear (many times now) that I do not claim to
have any more facts about this than you have. If you can finally
agree that you don't have the facts, we can put this one point to rest.
>So, save some programming effort and just answer the question: Why do you
>embellish the story by adding your own made up 'facts'?
If you regard statements that begin with "Perhaps..." as an attempt
at providing facts, it's your problem, Joe (no one else's.)
>And of course, your additions, oh sorry... 'opinions'. So, do you beleive
>in the far side of the moon? Ever been there?
I realize all this is very upsetting to you. It's unfortunate.
>> If the story is a fabrication, it neither proves nor disproves that
>> any harassment took place.
>If the story is a fabrication, there were NO events to BE harassment!!!!!
If the story is a fabrication, it has no bearing on whether or not
"any" harassment (at some point in time) took place. It only means
that the specific incident didn't take place.
> I think I will now bow out of this 'discussion'.
Ok. See ya.
>> The real facts of the interactions
>> between the EMT and the Lt. are independent of anyone's third-hand
>> story.
> If the story is a fabrication, there ARE no real facts!!
If the story is a fabrication, the incident itself has no facts.
However, unless the story-teller created ficticious characters,
then the interactions between these two people (beyond the scope
of the fabricated incident) involves facts.
>> What really happened? How many times do you need to hear me say
>> that we simply don't know.
> And how many times do you need to hear that I understand that?
Once would be enough if you could demonstrate such understanding.
Unfortunately, you haven't been able to do so thus far.
> What I do not understand is why you take the case and ADD your made
> up 'facts' about the various people in it?
Ok, I guess you're just having language problems. When someone uses
the word "Perhaps..." at the beginning of a sentence, the usage is
a purposeful way of making it clear that the statement does not involve
actual facts. Ok?
>> Are you ok now?
> Kindly keep your personal attacks to yourself, please.
Yikes. You're still upset. It's unfortunate.
|
844.176 | Let's drop it. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 01:10 | 11 |
| Joe, take it easy.
If you have another few hundred tiny points that you feel pressed
to bring up (regarding this discussion,) don't bother.
We don't know what happened between these two people (if anything,
in case the individuals actually exist.) Until a news story
breaks about it (if it ever does,) we're stuck with the lack of
factual information.
Oh well.
|
844.177 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Dec 03 1992 02:09 | 31 |
| > Let's hope you're clear enough now (on the question of whether it
> is harassment to ask a person to do thier job) to get on to other
>
So, you cannot show where I said 'merely' as you claimed I did?
> Oh, please.. could you explain how this is derogatory to the
> woman????????? What exactly is the implication of which you speak?
> Just a few lines ago, you stated "And so should the woman [be
> punished] for insubordination." You have no facts to support that
> this has happened, yet you continue to say such things. I consider
> it derogatory. You may not agree, but so what?
Must be a time warp. You claimed it was derogatory BEFORE those 'few lines
ago' were written. You have no facts to support that this has happened,
yet you continue to say such things (guilty parties should be punished).
Yes, so what?
> As we settled tonight, the EMT had no "initial comments," so I trust
> you won't be asking me to discuss the non-existent comments again.
If the EMT had no 'initial comments', then the LT never said the things
the fictitious story said. So, it really was a non-event on both sides.
Agreed?
> Are you ok on this now (or do you have a few hundred other pressing
> points of interest to you that must be satisfied before you can
> go on with your life?)
Yawnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn.
|
844.178 | Unequal Equality | MYOSPY::CLARK | | Thu Dec 03 1992 02:09 | 25 |
| Unbelievable. Ms Conlon seems determined to make the supervisor guilty
when, being irritated by the woman's refusal to do her job, said
something on the spur of the moment. So, why is she suing the whole
fire department? The fire department is not at fault, an individual is.
Bet she's trying to get big bucks out of the department (read the city
taxpayers) so she can get on the gravy train like most of the
sue-crazies out there. I totally agree with one of the comments about
the women only having to lift half as much as the men. So what happens
when she has to lift someone out of a burning car/building and they
are too heavy? "Gee, so sorry, but I only lift up to 100 pounds". Think
that's far-fetched? Picture yourself as the person who needs to be
carried out of a burning building. Would you rather see a male who can
lift 200 pounds or a woman who can only lift 100? Guess that depends on
your weight.
Why wouldn't she be content with a public apology in front of the other
fire department members? Simply because she wants those big lawsuit
bucks to lay around the rest of her life. Poor, poor taxpayers of that
city.
Yes we have an equal opportunity program. It's just that some of us are
more equal than others. We have our standards but, by God, we will
compromise them for political expediency and to be politically correct.
|
844.179 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Dec 03 1992 02:17 | 18 |
| >
> I realize all this is very upsetting to you. It's unfortunate.
>
Yawwwwwwwwwwwnnnnnnnnn.
> If the story is a fabrication, it has no bearing on whether or not
> "any" harassment (at some point in time) took place. It only means
> that the specific incident didn't take place.
Well, what more can possibly be said?
> Once would be enough if you could demonstrate such understanding.
> Unfortunately, you haven't been able to do so thus far.
Well, I have gotten to see a good case of double standards in action. For
that I thank you. Good night.
|
844.180 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Dec 03 1992 02:25 | 31 |
| > Bet she's trying to get big bucks out of the department (read the city
> taxpayers) so she can get on the gravy train like most of the
> sue-crazies out there.
Can an individual actually be sued if they are acting for the city?
>I totally agree with one of the comments about
> the women only having to lift half as much as the men. So what happens
> when she has to lift someone out of a burning car/building and they
> are too heavy?
I would expect the same thing that would happen if a male firefighter
encountered someone they could not lift. I sincerely doubt that J-random
firefighter (of either gender) could pick up all possible weights they
might encountered. I have an uncle that I would defy ANY firefighter to
budge :-).
> Why wouldn't she be content with a public apology in front of the other
> fire department members? Simply because she wants those big lawsuit
> bucks to lay around the rest of her life. Poor, poor taxpayers of that
> city.
Well, as has been pointed out... facts are lacking... Actual numbers even
more so. "Big Lawsuit Bucks" is a bit hasty.
request for facts: Does anyone know how the actual weight range
for this is actually determined? Is an average
weight taken of those that MIGHT need carrying?
Is it based on the position of Charon around
Pluto?
|
844.181 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Thu Dec 03 1992 09:23 | 1 |
| ....and the beat goes on.
|
844.182 | My statements began with 'Perhaps,' at least. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 09:36 | 12 |
| RE: .178 Clark
> Unbelievable. Ms Conlon seems determined to make the supervisor guilty
> when, being irritated by the woman's refusal to do her job, said
> something on the spur of the moment.
You don't have the facts to support this version of the story (if the
incident happened at all.) You accept justification for the supposed
actions of the Lt. without knowing the facts of the matter, and I
suppose you think THIS is equality?
Unbelievable indeed.
|
844.183 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 09:40 | 11 |
| RE: .179 Joe Melvin
>> Once would be enough if you could demonstrate such understanding.
>> Unfortunately, you haven't been able to do so thus far.
>Well, I have gotten to see a good case of double standards in action. For
>that I thank you. Good night.
In your opinion, you forgot to add. My opinion differs. So what?
It really ain't the end of the world, Joe. Honest.
|
844.184 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | Tomorrow! | Thu Dec 03 1992 09:49 | 1 |
| I wonder who'll get the last note in before QUARK runs out of disk.
|
844.185 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Thu Dec 03 1992 09:57 | 13 |
|
-1
Me :-)
Clark
good points...
David
|
844.186 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Dec 03 1992 10:56 | 5 |
| Re: .184
Let's not find out, eh?
Steve
|
844.187 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | Tomorrow! | Thu Dec 03 1992 11:31 | 5 |
| re .186
When, not long after I entered that note, I began getting strange error
messages (Error reading prolog?) when accessing mennotes I started to
wonder what I had done. :-)
|
844.188 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Thu Dec 03 1992 11:36 | 5 |
| So you're the one! Suitable punishment will be meted out forthwith.
Mr. Moderator, do your duty and lay on with a will.
Mike
|
844.189 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Dec 03 1992 12:29 | 3 |
| re:.97, the story changing
Both versions are compatible with each other.
|
844.190 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Dec 03 1992 12:33 | 13 |
| .102> If you think it isn't, why not ask personnel what would happen if all
.102> the white men in your building stopped talking (I'm talking about business
.102> related matters) to ALL your female and/or African American co-workers.
Also ask what would happen if only one person did that to only one
other person, and if the matters being discussed were not work-related
but did happen at work.
Same thing.
No need to conjure up images of race hatred here, the simply fact is
that under current harassment laws, you can't do something as basic
as picking your friends at work.
|
844.191 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Dec 03 1992 12:37 | 3 |
| re:.184
Silly question, Dave ... Who ALWAYS gets the last note?
|
844.192 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 12:44 | 14 |
| RE: .189 Mike Z.
> re: the story changing
> Both versions are compatible with each other.
True, both versions of the story (and the different words used for
the EMT's supposed "initial comments") are one-sided third-hand (at
best) accounts that are sympathetic to the Lt. In this sense, they
are indeed compatible.
However, a great deal of credibility is lost when the third-hand (at
least) story-teller changes the EMT's words on the second telling of
the incident.
|
844.193 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Dec 03 1992 12:49 | 6 |
| .122> Where's your admission about this mistake?
I qualifed my statement with "on average" before Daniel had replied.
You are choosing to ignore the second reply which provides additional
information and to focus on the first, which was admittedly incomplete.
|
844.194 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Dec 03 1992 12:52 | 12 |
| .192> However, a great deal of credibility is lost when the third-hand (at
.192> least) story-teller changes the EMT's words on the second telling of
.192> the incident.
In your eyes, but of course, any pseudo-reason will suffice, eh?
Fact is that stories change as more information comes to light.
That alone doesn't affect credibility for me, as long as stories
do not become contradictory without a reasonable explanation. You,
on the other hand should feel free to look for any an all reasons
to try to dismiss or discredit the account in .0.
|
844.195 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 12:52 | 14 |
| RE: .191 Mike Z.
> Silly question, Dave ... Who ALWAYS gets the last note?
The more important question is: Who's ALWAYS monitoring (and talking
about) who's getting the last note? (Such silliness doesn't even
occur to most people let alone become a concern that dominates their
entries at some crucial point in a discussion - "You can have it" or
"We'll let him/her have it" or "S/he always get's it" or "Blah, blah,
blah.")
My sister used to play that game with me when I was 5 years old and
she was 9. I've never known anyone to have such an obsession with
it since then (especially among adults.) It's definitely strange.
|
844.196 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Dec 03 1992 12:55 | 6 |
| re:.195
Over the last year, at least 4 people, myself included, have noticed
this last-word phenomenon.
The answer to your question is "everybody but Suzanne."
|
844.197 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 13:01 | 32 |
| RE: .194 Mike Z.
.192> However, a great deal of credibility is lost when the third-hand (at
.192> least) story-teller changes the EMT's words on the second telling of
.192> the incident.
> In your eyes, but of course, any pseudo-reason will suffice, eh?
The facts of the matter here is that we do not have any facts of this
matter (the incident in the basenote.) The changing story makes it
more obvious, that's all. Even if he had been more careful to stick
to his original wording, it wouldn't change the fact that we're
dealing with a third-hand (at best) story. No one needs to justify
the taking of this story with a large grain of salt.
> Fact is that stories change as more information comes to light.
K. Upton didn't present the changed story as new information. He
seemed to be emphasizing what he'd said in the basenote (only he
just happened to change the story somewhat.)
> That alone doesn't affect credibility for me, as long as stories
> do not become contradictory without a reasonable explanation. You,
> on the other hand should feel free to look for any an all reasons
> to try to dismiss or discredit the account in .0.
The "account" in the basenote was not first-hand or even second-hand,
by the author's own admission. It's also one-sided (as many besides
me have pointed out.)
No one is under any obligation to accept this story as gospel, no
matter how much heat anyone takes for daring to question it.
|
844.198 | The real game is the use of 'last word' accusations as a tactic. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 13:05 | 16 |
| RE: .196 Mike Z.
> Over the last year, at least 4 people, myself included, have noticed
> this last-word phenomenon.
Well, it's true that the obsession with discussing this game has hit
more than one person. It still seems weird to me to watch adults
engaging in this "S/he gets the last word" or "I'll give him/her the
last word" silliness.
> The answer to your question is "everybody but Suzanne."
Nope. A "few people" (4, by your count) do not comprise "everyone
but Suzanne." The vast majority of people in notes never even come
close to the "S/he gets the last word" or "I'll give him/her the
last word" games. It wouldn't even occur to most people.
|
844.199 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Thu Dec 03 1992 13:07 | 3 |
| re: .198
Lordy, you are a fun person to behold.
|
844.200 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Dec 03 1992 13:11 | 7 |
| re:.199
Too funny ...
She sits there and says "we don't have any facts!" but at the same
time she is willing to argue endlessly that the facts have changed
and must now be considered void of credibility.
|
844.201 | He never provided 'the facts' at all, as I've pointed out. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 13:14 | 16 |
| RE: .200 Mike Z.
> Too funny ...
Yeah, I kinda chuckled when I read your note. :>
> She sits there and says "we don't have any facts!" but at the same
> time she is willing to argue endlessly that the facts have changed
> and must now be considered void of credibility.
You can't even get the facts straight in a discussion we're all
watching (I said the STORY changed, not "the facts") - yet you
expect me to accept a third-hand (at best) story about people
we don't even know.
You're a riot.
|
844.202 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Thu Dec 03 1992 13:38 | 12 |
| For someone who doesn't want to accept a 3rd hand story that may or may
not have any validity, you sure have burned up a whole bunch of
electrons speculating on how terrible the men in this legend are
behaving. And then you consume even more electrons denying that
there is any story to comment on.
The contortions of logic and language that you put yourself through as
you strive to put yet one more entry on the record of how terrible men
are and how awful a fate it is to be a women in America are truly
laughable, or disturbing. I haven't decided which, yet.
Mike
|
844.203 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 13:50 | 28 |
| RE: .202 Mike Smith
> For someone who doesn't want to accept a 3rd hand story that may or may
> not have any validity, you sure have burned up a whole bunch of
> electrons speculating on how terrible the men in this legend are
> behaving.
Ha - such speculations are ancient history now. The majority of the
conversation in the last 150 notes or so seems to be concerned mostly
with how awful it is that I dared to question the validity of the
basenote <horrors!>
> And then you consume even more electrons denying that
> there is any story to comment on.
Not so. I've agreed all along that a story has been told here (a third-
hand, at best, story - but a story nonetheless.) Is it true? How can
we know without having the facts? Did the incident even occur? How
can we know without having the facts? We can't. So what?
> The contortions of logic and language that you put yourself through as
> you strive to put yet one more entry on the record of how terrible men
> are and how awful a fate it is to be a women in America are truly
> laughable, or disturbing. I haven't decided which, yet.
Don't torture yourself by such fabrications. Someone offered a story
and asked for "Comments??" I've being commenting, along with others.
It's not the end of the world, Mike.
|
844.204 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Thu Dec 03 1992 14:30 | 10 |
| No, your contortionist habits are not a harbinger of the Rapture. As
to the veracity of what I say, I don't have to fabricate a thing. It
is there for all to see in its manifold splendor. The fact that you
can't, or won't, recognize this surprises me not a whit.
But that's okay, I still think many of your ideas are right on, I just
find the style you choose to communicate your ideas a bit
over-zealous.
Mike
|
844.205 | | POWDML::THAMER | Daniel Katz MSO2-3/G1, 223-6121 | Thu Dec 03 1992 14:36 | 6 |
| Speaking of facts....
I know they were sort of lost in the storm, but does *anyone* have
answers for the questions I asked in .112?
Daniel
|
844.206 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 14:42 | 13 |
| RE: .204 Mike Smith
> No, your contortionist habits are not a harbinger of the Rapture. As
> to the veracity of what I say, I don't have to fabricate a thing.
You did fabricate, Mike. But who cares?
> It is there for all to see in its manifold splendor. The fact that you
> can't, or won't, recognize this surprises me not a whit.
The fact that I disagree with your description of my intent, motivations
(or whatever it was you thought you were describing) isn't suprising at
all. My self-image isn't shaped by your cheap shots.
|
844.207 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Thu Dec 03 1992 15:07 | 6 |
| re: .206
Apparently you care, else you wouldn't have gone on with your
complaints after your "who cares" comment.
Mike
|
844.208 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 15:35 | 10 |
| RE: .207 Mike Smith
> Apparently you care, else you wouldn't have gone on with your
> complaints after your "who cares" comment.
So, shall I point out that you 'cared' enough to try reading
something into my comments after the "who cares" remark?
Who cares? :>
|
844.209 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Thu Dec 03 1992 16:22 | 4 |
| Ah, but you see, I didn't say I didn't care. You did, and now you are
hoisted on the petard of your own inconsistency. So there!
Mike
|
844.210 | | EDSBOX::STIPPICK | Caution. Student noter... | Thu Dec 03 1992 16:23 | 8 |
| And the beat goes on... and on... and on...
La-de-da-de-da
Concise stupidity can be invaluable. Verbose stupidity is simply
tedious. Repetition without refinement tends to blunt a point rather
than sharpen it.
Karl
|
844.211 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 16:41 | 12 |
| RE: .209 Mike Smith
> Ah, but you see, I didn't say I didn't care. You did, and now you are
> hoisted on the petard of your own inconsistency. So there!
Wow, I've seen grasps at straws, but you must have needed a microscopic
tweezer for this one. (And, by the way, I didn't say I didn't care.
I said, "Who cares?" See how difficult it is to get the facts straight
even for eye-witnesses who have it available *in writing*? Third-hand
story-telling is looking more unreliable by the minute.) :>
You did give me a rare smile in this topic, though. :>
|
844.212 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Dec 03 1992 17:06 | 8 |
| re:. Mike Smith
Amazing, innit?
By the way, shall we add yer name to the "I'm convinced she must have
the last word in every discussion" list? Hmmm? I do believe she has
provided a considerable amount of evidence today regarding that specific
phenomenon.
|
844.213 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Thu Dec 03 1992 17:29 | 1 |
| qed
|
844.214 | When you have kids, they're gonna love your youthful spirit. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Thu Dec 03 1992 17:30 | 9 |
| RE: .212 Mike Z.
> I do believe she has
> provided a considerable amount of evidence today regarding that specific
> phenomenon.
When you tire of this game, Mike, perhaps you could graduate to "Made
you look!" It would be a great move up for you. :>
|
844.215 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Thu Dec 03 1992 19:29 | 11 |
|
Zar,
Add me to the list.. I will donate 10% of my meager income to study
the phenomenon (sp)..
David
|
844.216 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Fri Dec 04 1992 09:12 | 1 |
| Izzat like tithing?
|
844.217 | Go for it! | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Fri Dec 04 1992 09:21 | 11 |
|
David, if you're going to donate money, why don't you guys develop
and market this as a video game (in the "Age 5 and up" category.)
Players go through a maze of cheap shots (where they are alternately
ordered to take the 'last word' then accused of *trying* to take it.)
Of course, one problem would be that as long as the game is played,
there can't really be a 'last word.' (But the folks who end up
playing the game may be too young to realize this.) :>
|
844.218 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Fri Dec 04 1992 09:50 | 6 |
| Now, now, Suzanne. You really should get off your high horse, as
regards your complaints about cheap shots. History has shown you to be
every bit as capable of using them when it suits your purpose as anyone
else.
Mike
|
844.219 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Fri Dec 04 1992 09:58 | 9 |
| RE: .218 Mike Smith
> ...as regards your complaints about cheap shots.
Once again, you've given an inaccurate first-hand accounting of
events. Shame on you! :>
My mention of 'cheap shots' was an observation.
|
844.220 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Fri Dec 04 1992 10:16 | 3 |
| Gee, so was mine.
Ping...
|
844.221 | | POWDML::THAMER | Daniel Katz MSO2-3/G1, 223-6121 | Fri Dec 04 1992 10:21 | 1 |
| I've seen tennis matches with fewer volleys.....
|
844.222 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Wild Mountain Thunder | Fri Dec 04 1992 10:23 | 3 |
| > I've seen tennis matches with fewer volleys.....
Some live for the volley, some live for the match.
|
844.223 | | BUSY::TBUTLER | Carpenter Diem - 'Sieze The Tools' | Fri Dec 04 1992 11:22 | 3 |
| This is turning into the "let's all bash on each other and not actually
discuss anything" Conference. I'd like to know where you guys find the
time to write all of these hundreds of jabs back and forth!
|
844.224 | sigh | TALLIS::PARADIS | There's a feature in my soup! | Fri Dec 04 1992 11:59 | 9 |
| Re: .223
Tell me about it! I tried to inject some new ideas over 100 replies
ago... and nobody seems to have noticed. The participants in the
jab-fest keep sniping back and forth, and folks who *might* want to
debate the issues just "next unseen" after reading a dozen or so
jabs...
Maybe this file needs a rathole topic?
|
844.225 | this conference IS a rathole | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy bein' green | Fri Dec 04 1992 14:13 | 16 |
| First, a point of clarification.
I believe a woman has just as much right to be an insensitive jerk as
any man or even as several men.
now, in re your
<"turning into the "let's all bash on each other ...">
It's been like this since 1989 at least. Some of the names change,
(too many haven't), some of the issues change (some are eternal),
some of the political perspectives have changed. And believe it or not
a few of the people actually seem to have learned a few things.
But the one element that has remained constant is that it is an
unseemly -and damned immature- shouting match.
|
844.226 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Fri Dec 04 1992 14:46 | 13 |
| The next time people wonder why a woman (who is being 'treated' to the
supposedly routine rough-n-tumble play in her traditionally male job)
turns to the courts to lodge a grievance about it, stop before calling
her an "oh-so-sensitive" type. Also, refrain from suggesting that she
just rough-n-tumble back at the guys.
Then think about the wars (in a literal sense) that would develop if
women fought back in kind every time they're rough-n-tumbled at their
workplaces (especially considering what it costs some men if they
appear to lose the battle to a woman.)
Meeting in court starts to sound a lot less volatile than such an
alternative.
|
844.227 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | and the living shall envy the dead... | Fri Dec 04 1992 14:56 | 1 |
| What are you talking about?
|
844.228 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Fri Dec 04 1992 15:04 | 5 |
|
> What are you talking about?
Male/Female Division in Public Service (and elswhere.)
|
844.229 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Fri Dec 04 1992 17:53 | 11 |
| > > What are you talking about?
>
> Male/Female Division in Public Service (and elswhere.)
That fictitious topic, that since there were no facts, was not worth
discussing?
<laying in the weeds to get the last word, which I KNOW I will not... too
much competition :-)>
|
844.230 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Mon Dec 07 1992 19:50 | 7 |
| Gentlemen ... never follow a rodent down the rathole.
It only wastes your time and distracts you from the matter at hand.
Now, perhaps we can get back to discussing the matter at hand, while
ignoring the rodent(s) who poke their heads out every now and then for
attention.
|
844.231 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Mon Dec 07 1992 19:51 | 3 |
| re:.0
Any more on this Ken?
|
844.232 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Dec 07 1992 20:29 | 16 |
| RE: .229 Joe Melvin
>>> What are you talking about?
>> Male/Female Division in Public Service (and elswhere.)
> That fictitious topic, that since there were no facts, was not worth
> discussing?
The topic is a bunch of 1's and 0's (which can exist without any
facts to back them up.)
A person isn't required to have facts to venture opinions on all sorts
of subjects, but it would be rather silly and downright ignorant for
anyone to suggest that pointing out the lack of facts is off the topic.
Such a suggestion would amount to intellectual dishonesty.
|
844.233 | Or, since it's YOUR game, you can take your 'last word' now. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Mon Dec 07 1992 20:45 | 10 |
| RE: .230 Mike Z.
> Now, perhaps we can get back to discussing the matter at hand, while
> ignoring the rodent(s) who poke their heads out every now and then for
> attention.
It's more prudent to watch out for snakes (especially those who live
in waste water.) They leave a trail of slime that's beyond disgusting.
[Mike Z.'s gonna whine about this - just watch.]
|
844.234 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Mon Dec 07 1992 20:47 | 1 |
| The EverReady Bunny of "last words" has spoken.
|
844.235 | | COMET::DYBEN | Hug a White male | Tue Dec 08 1992 00:17 | 7 |
|
> the Everready Bunny of " last words" has spoken.
Tag :-)
David
|
844.236 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Dec 08 1992 08:59 | 5 |
| Moderator hat on - I am going to delete without notice any more of these
inane "gotcha last!" notes. I, and I think the rest of the readers, have
had quite enough of them. Thanks.
Steve
|
844.237 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Dec 08 1992 12:37 | 5 |
| Amen.
.230> Now, perhaps we can get back to discussing the matter at hand, while
Ken, any more information re: the story in .0?
|
844.238 | It seems odd that the story, if true, hasn't hit the papers. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Dec 08 1992 13:09 | 5 |
| Thanks, Steve.
If any facts do become available (at some point) about the situation
described in the basenote, I'd be interested in seeing them, too.
|
844.240 | | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Dec 08 1992 15:01 | 11 |
| Getting back to the basenote once again, I'm still intrigued that
nothing about this has hit the news. If the situation is really
happening (especially in both the fire department *and* the police
department,) it must be very hard to keep it secret.
When/if we ever do get any real facts about the situation, I'd like
to know how they managed to keep it out of the public eye (via media
attention) for so long. It's very strange.
Perhaps it's a new-styled urban legend. Until we see the first facts
about this surface, we'll never know.
|
844.241 | Update as of 12/8 | SALEM::KUPTON | Ren & Stempy/Clinton & Gore | Tue Dec 08 1992 15:16 | 57 |
| I attempted to get more "factual" information. As I spoke to the
person who originally told me of the incident I was attempting to see
if there was a slant to the story. There did not appear to me to be a
bias.
The Lt. has served his suspension. A city review found them both
to be in error. He for the sexual remark, she for insubordination. His
request for her to resweep was found not to be harassment and was
justified. They found that her failure to do the job as assigned
warranted disciplinary action. Past performance and work history were
not allowed as evidence for either party. They stayed strictly with
this incident. It was noted that her refusal could lead to termination
as it occurred prior to the remark of the Lt. They felt her remarks
were not acceptable for a fire service professional.
They found his remark about being "on the r*g" to be derogatory and
in poor taste for an officer of the Fire Dept. It was out of line and
they felt his suspension was warranted.
They recommended is that she be suspended 10 working days without
pay from the department. She has threatened suit over the suspension
as part of her suit against the city.
The city has decided to go to court and has placed her on suspension
without pay until the suit is settled. If she drops the suit, they will
reinstate her full time and give her back pay for any time lost. If she
proceeds and loses, they'll terminate her.
From what I was told, most of the previous damage has been smoothed
over and things are about as normal as can be expected under the
circumstances. The person speaking to me says that there is still
guarded speech in the buildings and that everyone is exceptionally
cautious in mixed company.
From what I was told, *I* think that everyone would be happy if the
lawsuit was dropped and some more damage control could be done. From my
observation, it appears that most people, male and female are satisfied
with the review results.
If I hear anything more, I'll put it in.
note: I didn't think to ask some important questions like:
Who made up the review board? Were there any women on it? Was it
empowered to make only recommendations? Are the fire and police
departments required to implement recommendations? Was it the result of
a grievance procedure? Just know that it was a review.
Please don't tell me what they "should" have done, "could" have done.
I'm the messenger.
Right or wrong, it appears that some people have decided to do
'something' to remedy the situation and get things back to as normal as
possible before a police officer, fire employee, or worst of all a
civilian has to suffer the consequences. I applaud them for taking
action and hoping that it will go "away".
Ken
|
844.242 | | SALEM::KUPTON | Ren & Stempy/Clinton & Gore | Tue Dec 08 1992 15:19 | 1 |
| that should read...."not hoping it will go "away".
|
844.243 | | SALEM::KUPTON | Ren & Stempy/Clinton & Gore | Tue Dec 08 1992 15:26 | 18 |
| Let me say something else....
I was told alot of other things that I will not place inthe notesfile.
Much of it was opinion and observation. There has been a lot of trash
talk and I did ask why this has not been in the paper. Apparently she
has retained an attorney but no suit has been filed, only threatened.
I don't know and the person who told me doesn't know if she is on
suspension as recommended or suspension pending suit. If she accepted
the review suspension and shows up for work, I would assume the matter
has been settled to everyone's satisfaction .......
It may have been in the local papers but my inlaws haven't seen
anything in the daily paper.
I'll check on this in a week or so to see what if anything occurs.
I'm really busy and can't stay up with the file......I tried to get
through some of the replies.....I gave up.
|
844.244 | Your source also said there was no suit at all, only a threat. | CSC32::WSC641::CONLON | | Tue Dec 08 1992 17:18 | 18 |
| RE: .241 K. Upton
> The city has decided to go to court and has placed her on suspension
> without pay until the suit is settled. If she drops the suit, they will
> reinstate her full time and give her back pay for any time lost. If she
> proceeds and loses, they'll terminate her.
RE: .243 K. Upton
> I don't know and the person who told me doesn't know if she is on
> suspension as recommended or suspension pending suit. If she accepted
> the review suspension and shows up for work, I would assume the matter
> has been settled to everyone's satisfaction .......
It sounds like your second-hand source has a great deal of confusion
and uncertainty of his/her own about this situation.
When definite facts are available, it will be interesting to hear them.
|
844.245 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | the power of surrender | Wed Dec 09 1992 09:40 | 21 |
|
I would hope the whole department would bring in a consultant or
someone who *knows* about the laws and policies of that city in regards
to sexual harassment (what it is, what it isn't).
I hope this person would come in and ask people to express how they
feel about the incident, and what it meant to them - what they thought
should happen as a result, and how they felt when it did or did not
occur. I also hope they would clarify to everyone what is and is not
sexual harassment, how the city or state views it, actions they can
take if they feel harass, actions that may be viewed as harassing, and
most of all the vision that we're all in this together. Also, I would
hope they would create enough comfort with the topic so that when
someone feels they are being harassed, they can speak it ("that felt
like a harassing comment.") without fear, and people can be comfortable
with one another knowing there is less threat or risk of unwarranted
charges because all have agreed to discuss it either with one another,
or with a balanced third party, prior to acting (if at all possible).
-Jody
|
844.246 | | TENAYA::RAH | resident technical | Thu Dec 17 1992 14:00 | 7 |
|
no doubt the radfems can string this out and dissemble until some
facks more favorable to their side (how dare the evil patriarchs
reprimand an insubordinate fem) can be located, derived, or, more
likely, manufactured.
|
844.247 | if you want to stir up the pot | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, Mtn View CA | Thu Dec 17 1992 14:22 | 5 |
| nah, Robert, some of us radfems find the status quo wonderfully
and old-fashionedly comforting. Nice to know that we'll never
lack for neanderthals to rail about.
DougO
|