T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
798.1 | yecchh | COLORS::TARBET | | Sat Apr 09 1988 09:28 | 4 |
| My reaction is almost identical to yours, Meigs: she was cowardly
and immature, maybe even stupid. Certainly despicably thoughtless.
=maggie
|
798.2 | | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Sat Apr 09 1988 12:41 | 5 |
| perhaps the student behaved irresponsibly, but is it fair to expect
every young person to exercise mature judgement at all times? it
sounds to me like the university failed. from what meigs is saying,
they used the student's complaint as an excuse to get rid of someone
they didn't want working for them.
|
798.3 | | ENGINE::FRASER | S & Y _&_ & Y | Sat Apr 09 1988 23:38 | 11 |
| Re: foregoing,
In a way like NOTES, perhaps - in an atmosphere of imbalanced
sexual discrimination, a man who speaks his mind (rightly or
wrongly) can be complained against and disciplined for saying
what he thinks, regardless of the fact that he is a boor, a
sexist clown with an outdated attitude - but is it worth his
livelihood to score a point? I don't think so.
Andy
|
798.4 | my thoughts | DANUBE::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Sun Apr 10 1988 21:17 | 29 |
| in re .0
About six years ago I was sitting in on a class with my 'special
needs' son to see if he was properly placed. While the chidren
were at lunch a little boy came up to me and told me that his
'friend' hurt wanted me to pull down his pants to look at his
penis becuase he said it was bleeding. I instead took him to the
nurses's office. About a year later I saw the same little boy in
a local store and greeted him, since he recognized me and also said
hello to his mother...she then proceeded to tell me (once I had
told her how I knew her son) that she had taken him out of the
school because he had been touched on the privates by the teachers
there.
Given my previous encounter with her son, I found myself seriously
doubting that there was anything at all wrong with the situation,
but that it was rather a case of total failure of miscommunication.
I think the situation with the professor is of a similar nature.
Being myself a touchy huggy sort of person...and having a father
who is the same...I think that we have come to a time when a person
with a generous an affectionate heart can get in trouble for just
being warm and reaching out to someone...if that someone is already
troubled.
I would agree with the previous answers that the University failed
in its responsiblities in handling this case.
Bonnie
|
798.5 | | HEFTY::CHARBONND | to save all Your clowns | Mon Apr 11 1988 09:03 | 11 |
| re .0 That sends a lousy message to those of us who are
working at becoming *more* physically expressive.
Sounds like the prof was just a person at ease with his own
need for touch. Although he probably was a bit insensitive
to the (in)appropriateness of expressing that need, I think that
he could have been told to "cool it" in a non-hurtful way.
A bad over-reaction by many.
dana
|
798.6 | Don't blame the witness; blame the judge. | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Mon Apr 11 1988 09:57 | 17 |
|
I agree with Liz. I think the University used this complaint
as an excuse to "retire" this administrator. If the student
was uncomfortable with being touched, she had every right to complain.
We all have different levels of comfort around touching and being
touched. I think it should have been possible for the University
to make a fair judgement in this case. I'll also add that from
the short story presented, I can't be sure that *didn't* happen.
I suspect that in many cases of sexual harassment, there are
character witnesses for the defense who will say, "he's a swell
guy. he's just affectionate." I'm certainly not willing to
blame a young woman for "ruining a career" when all she did (as far
as I know) was to make her feelings known to the appropriate
school officials.
Justine
|
798.7 | Carrying A Big Club | FDCV03::ROSS | | Mon Apr 11 1988 10:13 | 24 |
| Similar stories already abound at DEC:
- Men having charges brought against them for asking a woman
if she wants to out for lunch
- Men having charges brought against them for stopping to have
a chat with a woman
- Men having charges brought against them for bringing flowers
in to the women working in their groups (but not to women in other
groups) -----> DISCRIMINATION CHARGES
And the beat goes on............
I understand the Corporation (under its present policies) must
investigate ALL charges of harassment/discrimination - and take
action - if justified, in order not to leave itself open to
lawsuits from alleged harassees.
However, if the Policies do not become more clearly defined, the
Corporation just might find itself on the receiving end of more
and more lawsuits from alleged (but-later-exonerated) harassers.
Alan
|
798.8 | Is It Based On Gender? | FDCV03::ROSS | | Mon Apr 11 1988 10:31 | 9 |
|
RE: .6
I've often wondered if a woman who complains about being touched on
the arm or a shoulder by a man - and who bring sexual harassment
charges against him - would do so if she had been touched in the
same places by another woman?
Alan
|
798.9 | | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Mon Apr 11 1988 13:00 | 37 |
| RE: .7
On the other hand, sexual harrasment does exist at DEC, and
you can't make a judgement based on what little information
you gave in .7. Thank goodness all complaints are looked
into instead of just dismissed as trivial.
I never complained the time I went to a business lunch with
a colleague and he asked me to have an affair with him. I
don't know whether I should have or not. I'll never forget,
though, having to go back to work with him (he drove), and
crossing my fingers that he wouldn't try to touch me before
I could get back to my office. And then he asked me to give
him a kiss anyways, and keep the offer in mind!!
RE: .0
I've been in situations where men I barely know stand too close
to me and I think I would have been very upset if they had
touched me even if it was just on the arm. And I'm not paranoid
(I notice they don't stand as close when I'm with another man.)
I don't blame the woman in .0 for going to others to complain
instead of directly confronting the man. It takes a lot of self
confidence to confront someone, especially someone in authority.
I agree that the school had to make the decision (and how do
we know that others hadn't complained?). From what I read in
.0, it sounds like the school misused the situation.
I think it's sad that people aren't more warm and touch each
other more casually. But I know I don't want that from a
stranger (let's at least wait until we start to become friends).
...Karen
on a tagent: You ever notice how women are obligated to kiss
and hug others, but men can just shake hands? I wish women
would shake hands more.
|
798.10 | There is a time and place | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | The best is yet to be | Mon Apr 11 1988 13:10 | 26 |
| I believe that we as a society (not women in particular) depend
on 'authorities' to resolve minor issues.
The student should have spoke to the professor first. And then
escalated the issue if she felt uncomfortable with the situation
and the issue was important to her.
It seems like there is a lot of 'reporting' and 'complaining' on
every level. Things like city ordinances for trash removal for
example. The slightest infraction has neighbors on the phone
complaining to the authorities. Often times the situation is resolved
before the authorities get there...and the result is resentment
between neighbors.
Sexual harassment...is so loosely defined that it can be used as
a weapon by disgruntled people. And when this happens it dilutes
the serious cases and true offenders are not punished for their
behavior.
I do not believe it is possible to have an environment free of sexual
harassment. I think we have to take responsibility for the behavior
we expect from others. If we use every strategy we have and we
still feel there is a problem, then go to the authorities.
|
798.11 | A caveat and a quote | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Apr 11 1988 13:16 | 21 |
| Ummm, some of the incidents being mentioned here (as ~I heard
about~'s) sound like they could be, well, not really true. Now,
it's a lot to ask, and I don't really expect anyone to do it,
but I would recommend that people read one or more of Jan Brunvand's
books on Urban Legends before passing on any more ~I heard about~'s.
_The_Vanishing_Hitchhiker_ is the first, and perhaps the best; the
others (so far) are _The_Choking_Doberman_ and _The_Mexican_Pet_.
(You remember the recipe for Mrs. Fields' Chocolate Chip Cookies
passing around the next last spring? The story with it was an updated
version of the Red Velvet Cake urban legend.)
From the Personnel Policies and Procedures, Section 6.03:
"In determining whether alleged conduct is sexual harassment, the
nature of the sexual advances and the context in which they
supposedly occurred must be examined."
(Words like "alleged", "supposedly", and "context" should allay any
unfounded fears that might be sprouting out there.)
Ann B.
|
798.12 | a few thoughts | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Mon Apr 11 1988 13:47 | 36 |
| 1. Thanks, Ann
2. The situation was FUBAR from the beginning. OK, maybe the student
was uncomfortable with asking the man not to touch her. Well, then
*move* 6 feet or so! WEll, OK maybe she wasn't comfortable with
*that*, either - next step tell someone in the administration. NOW:
it's the administration's responsibility to handle the situation
properly. What did they do? They said "Wow! An opportunity to get
rid of Old Fred"
For all its ivy-covered reputation, the "education biz" at any level
can be VERY cutthroat. I think this guy had a "contract" out on
him, and the administration saw this as "their chance".
3. Dana, I couldn't agree more. I think the world *needs* more
touching, not less. (Non-sexual type touching. But then, we have
a lot of work to do to get our act together in that area) It's equally
difficult for men and women. I refrain from touching males, for
example, for fear that it will be taken as an "invitation" to something
I didn't mean. I can see where men with perfectly honorable "friend"
intentions refrain because a woman might think the intention is
otherwise - because, of course, it most often *is*. And let's not
forget how touch can communicate a power mismatch, too. (This issue
might indeed have affected the situation in .0. What the young woman
might have been feeling was a "power-touch" which is so easy to
confuse with a "sexual touch" from a man. And maybe it does come
down to the same thing, anyway.)
4. RE: The same touch from a woman. Certainly the situation is very
different. The sexuality/power-play combination is not at work.
Any "danger" from such a touch is almost non-existent if it's from
another powerless person, like another woman or a child.
--DE
|
798.14 | I Don't want To Believe What I'm Reading | FDCV03::ROSS | | Mon Apr 11 1988 14:58 | 19 |
| RE: .12
> I can see where men with perfectly honorable "friend"
> intentions refrain because a woman might think the intention is
> otherwise - because, of course, it most often *is*.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Nothing like an insulting, sweeping generalization to not prove a point.
> 4. RE: The same touch from a woman. Certainly the situation is very
> different. The sexuality/power-play combination is not at work.
Are you intimating that there's never a female-to-female power
play, or that one woman's touching another on the arm or shoulder
should never be construed as being, perhaps, sexual?
Alan
|
798.15 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Mon Apr 11 1988 16:44 | 36 |
| If the University authorities had been acting responsibly, I think
they should have given the guy a written warning (first offense,
not to go in his file) which basically said "Look Joe, we have known
you a long time and we suspect it is groundless. Nevertheless,
we have to protect our students. Would you please think very carefully
about what you are doing with your hands and protect yourself and
us by behaving circumspectly." If it happened again, I think he
should get another letter. A third time would be grounds for
firing.
If he had done something demonstrably sexual (exposed himself, forced
her to kiss him, 'felt her up',) then this course of action would
be way too tame. But where there is reasonable doubt, I think that
a warning or two are appropriate.
I think women should be encouraged to express their feelings directly
to the person involved if they can and to express them to an authority
if they cannot confront the person.
There are men I could confront, and men whom I wouldn't try to
confront, and I'm nearly "twice 18". It's very hard to do, and
the woman involved is often treated as though she is imagining things
even when she is not.
When I was teaching, we were encouraged to withold affection even
from young children, especially if we were alone in the room with
them. When a five year old skins her knee, and is crying, I think
everyone's instinct is to pull the child onto your lap and comfort
her. It's very stressful situation not to be able to do that.
It's one of the reasons I'm no longer teaching.
Male teachers, unfortunately, had to be much more careful than female
teachers. Either way, the kids are the losers.
aaarrrggghhh!
|
798.16 | What about her feelings? | PROPOS::MCCAUGNEY | | Mon Apr 11 1988 17:28 | 42 |
| The last reply I tried didn't fully transmit...here's one more try!
Personally, it does sound as though the university acted a little
too hastily....however, we don't know all the facts. It seems quite
possible to me that this professor could have been previously
warned...especially considering the fact that EVERYone was familiar
with his tendency to "touch" while conversing. I find it difficult
to believe that this would be the first complaint.
Yeah....maybe she should have said something to him...but often
we find ourselves without the "proper" response at the time it is
needed. Considering her age.....this is believable (I'm about twice
her age..happens to me all the time!)
I honestly feel she did the right thing and don't believe the blame
should be put upon this girl! What courage it must have taken to
make this complaint....I'm sure she's since thought and wished she
herself had said something!! In fact..it would have been easier
for all concerned!!
Maybe she doesn't like just ANYone touching her ANYwhere while
conversing, no less a stranger known for 5 whole minutes.
Personally I HATE IT WHEN ANYONE TOUCHes ME WHILE
CONVERSING..ESPECIALLY A STRANGER!! When my husband touches my
shoulder and then moves to my upper arm...IT FEELS LIKE A CARESS!
Not everyone is entitled to that!
No, I am not a person who likes that sort of contact...never have
been...never will be...not all my relatives are like that either,
it's not something that's necessarily learned! Its just the way
I AM...and that's ok!
Did anyone in this discussion ever consider that maybe this girl
has gone thru some other type of dramatic assault?? Or someone close
to her?? She's entitled to her feelings.....
I certainly hope my daughter has the kind of courage it took this
girl to report this professor....especially since it seems so trivial
to some. Seems to me this was not the first of such complaints.
Kathy (LOOK at me when you talk to me! please...)
|
798.17 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | Peel me a grape, Tarzan | Mon Apr 11 1988 20:38 | 28 |
| Whoops. I was obviously too vague in the .0. The college indeed "had
a contract" on the admin, and was looking for a reason to force him off
staff. Let me make it plainer. They wanted to get rid of the guy;
they used the complaint as their 'public' reason, and the were gleeful
when the complaint feel into their laps.
> RE: .7 I never complained the time I went to a business lunch with
> a colleague and he asked me to have an affair with him. I don't know
> whether I should have or not.
I think you acted properly. His behavior sure sounds boorish and stupid,
but it doesn't stike me as sexual harassment. If he tried some kind of
nasty strategy -- let's do this or I'll ruin you in this department --
that's harassment. Or if he asked every third working day for a long time.
But a co-worker saying let's date or let's have an affair doesn't strike me
as harassment.
> You ever notice how women are obligated to kiss and hug others, but
> men can just shake hands? I wish women would shake hands more.
Yeah! Cheek touching is not too much trauma. Starting the handshake motion
four feet away also works well. I like shaking hands.
RE: 12 "a powerless person like a woman or a child."
I do not regard myself as powerless, I am not powerless, and since you
write clearly and well in a widely-read public forum such as this, I
can assume you are pretty damn far from powerless yourself. Meigs
|
798.18 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Tue Apr 12 1988 08:03 | 9 |
| re .10:
Huzzah!
(I could relate a boring story about a DECcie who complained to
personnel for having been called a 'weenie' in a notes conference,
but since Joyce's note says it all so well I won't bother.)
--Mr Topaz
|
798.20 | IT'S A SICK, SICK WORLD INDEED | ANGORA::BUSHEE | This isn't Kansas Toto | Tue Apr 12 1988 10:47 | 14 |
|
I know I'm always aware that my actions may not be taken
in the same manner that I display them as, thus I live
by a simple rule.. "I touch no one and no one touches
me!!". If by chance someone does try to get too close
and touchy, a simple COLD stare will usually pass on
my intent very quickly.
I was not however aware that if a male co-worker asked
a woman out it could be taken as such. Does this hold
true for the woman also? What a sick world it is when
you can't even talk to another without risking you job!!
G_B
|
798.21 | DEC wouldn't make a case over something like that, unless... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Apr 12 1988 10:59 | 10 |
| RE: .20
Don't panic, George. That sounds very much like an Urban Legend
to me (and I don't know a soul in DEC who would run to Personnel
over a simple date request.)
If it turned to daily badgering, that is another story.
Meanwhile, let's not get tooooo carried away. :-)
|
798.22 | nope, George is right | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Tue Apr 12 1988 12:35 | 17 |
| re: .21
Sorry to wreck your faith in human nature and DEC, Suzanne, but
asking for a date frequently is harrassment.
If the man doing the asking is married, or in a position of
authority over the woman who's being asked, it's likely to
be considered an open and shut case. After all, if he's her
boss, she may well not feel free to turn him down.
When my group took the sexual-harrassment seminar a couple
of years ago, the personnel person delivering the film explicitly
warned the men in the group that requests for dates were off
limits unless you were both single and on the same level, and
even then it was risky.
--bonnie
|
798.23 | I Guess I Have An Overactive Imagination | FDCV03::ROSS | | Tue Apr 12 1988 13:12 | 21 |
|
RE:. 17
> Whoops. I was obviously too vague in the .0. The college indeed "had
> a contract" on the admin, and was looking for a reason to force him off
> staff. Let me make it plainer. They wanted to get rid of the guy;
> they used the complaint as their 'public' reason, and the were gleeful
> when the complaint feel into their laps.
Maybe it's just my Machiavellian mind at work (or possibly, just watching
too much TV), but could it be possible that the college, wanting to get
rid of this guy - and knowing his mannerisms - just happened to suggest to
this student that she engage this administrator in a conversation, with an
understanding that "future considerations" might be granted her, in return
for her filing a complaint.
Nahhhhhhhhhhhh. That's too far-fetched.
Couldn't happen in real life.
Alan
|
798.24 | Now I understand... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Apr 12 1988 13:36 | 17 |
| RE: .22
Yes, I did forget about manager-employee relationships (and
the dangers involved in trying to start one...)
Never realized how touchy it was for a peer to ask another
peer out on a date in DEC. (Considering how many employees
end up getting together at some facilities, there must be a
lot of folks not bothering to complain about being asked
out -- either that or there are a lot of women doing the
asking...) :-)
Hmmm... Maybe that's why a number of men became somewhat rabid
awhile back (in another conference) on the subject of wanting
women to ask them out.
Just kidding! :-)
|
798.25 | | HPSMEG::POPIENIUCK | | Tue Apr 12 1988 13:48 | 11 |
| The thing that bothers me is when a woman is an all an out flirt,
leads the men on in the group by buying into the crude remarks and
laughs and thinks there funny and then turns around and runs to
personnel when things get out of hand. This has happened in a group
that I have worked. The woman should of in the beginning stood
her ground on what is acceptable behavior and I'm sure the men would
respected that right, they did for me. But when a man (or woman) has
been made to feel its o'k to act this way they will continue.
This kind of behavior makes other woman who are professional in
the work environment look bad.
|
798.27 | NEWS FLASH - Dr. Leo arrested film at 11 | ANGORA::BUSHEE | This isn't Kansas Toto | Tue Apr 12 1988 13:53 | 12 |
|
So I guess I was correct to assume that sexual harassment
really only applies to males here in DEC-land? If this
is so, does anyone know the basis for it?
On a side note, life must sure be a bear for someone like
Dr. Leo B (whatever his name is). Now there is a person
that lives to touch!!!
G_B
P.S. Hi Suzanne!!
|
798.28 | doesn't make sense to me | QUERY::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Tue Apr 12 1988 14:18 | 33 |
| re: .27 --
Leo Buscaglia. Yeah, he'd have a real hard time in an
equal-employment opportunity environment. Maybe that's why he's a
speaker and consultant instead.
Actually I do know of one case where a woman was dragged up for
sexual harrassment of a man; she kept propositioning him even
after he told her he was otherwise attached. She's not with the
company any more but I don't know if she left because of that.
It makes me feel very sad to think that warm-hearted and
sympathetic men like George and Eagle are scared out of reaching
out to get to know people better by the threat of possibile
punitive action.
This whole business of calling in personnel (DEC, university, or
whatever) to deal sort out our dealings with men bothers me. It
seems too much like running home in tears to Daddy expecting him
to make those big mean boys leave us alone.
I'm not talking about situations where a man is using his position
of power to get a woman, or where he's withholding promotions
or whatever; those are legitimate concerns. I'm talking about
things like backing away from a touch or declining a proposition.
If we can't even handle an unwanted proposition from a co-worker,
how are we going to handle equal rights? It seems we're crying
for equal rights and responsibilities but we turn around and
expect to be protected by the same laws. I don't see how we can
have it both ways. Either we're equal, or we're protected.
--bonnie
|
798.29 | | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Tue Apr 12 1988 14:24 | 43 |
| Well, Alan, we may actually agree on something. I wouldn't necessarily
put it past the college admin. to set the guy up if they wanted
to get rid of him badly enuff.
RE: Women touching other women. Certainly such a touch *could* be
sexual, however it is less likely , unless the two women already
knew each other and/or were in a less professional environment.
In ANY case, the touch would NOT have had the "one-up" power
implications.
RE: Women as powerless
1) How powerful/less *I* am personally is irrelevant, as is power
in NOTES-land.
2) Of the two peple involved in the incident, the young
woman was the less powerful because she was First: female, Second:
younger than the prof. THird: a student. His touching her communicated
his *power* to do so. Another woman, even if a prof herself would
be much less powerful than the man. A female student would've been
on the same footing, ie., equal in power.
3) The potential physical violence involved when a more powerful
man touches a less powerful woman does not exist when a woman touches
another woman.
NOTE: Now, just because I said "potential" doesn't mean I said
"actual". And just because I said there was not potential violence
on a woman's part doesn't mean there haven't been incidents of such
violence. There are, however, no such incidents between strangers
of this type (as opposed to street gangs, etc.) that I've ever seen
documented.
RE: Asking a woman for a date
Seems like we're back to the old power issue again. IF the man has
some kind of employment-power over the woman, the issue becomes
much more complicated. Between peer employees, I really don't see
any problem unless the rejected party begins some kind of bothersome
"campaign" - can't take "no" for an answer, type of thing.
--DE
|
798.30 | | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Tue Apr 12 1988 14:34 | 14 |
| Oh yeah, one more thing. How could a man feel so free to touch the
young woman, when another woman would feel less free? (Assuming
any sexual intent in such touch, which is problematic at least)
Because it's still much more acceptable to be a lech than a lesbian.
If the old boy were liked by the college admin AND were a
well-documented lech, they would've protected him all the way. "Oh,
he's a harmless old guy....you're over-reacting..." etc.
The guy's days were definitely numbered.
--DE
|
798.33 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Apr 12 1988 15:02 | 33 |
| RE: .25
> leads the men on in the group by buying into the crude remarks
> and laughs and thinks there funny and then turns around and
> runs to personnel when things get out of hand...
Sounds like the old argument that women "INVITE" rape by dressing
in a certain manner (or traveling alone in certain places.)
Do you think that women should strictly refrain from joining
in with peers when they kid around (or else be responsible if
one of her co-workers thinks she is "hot" because of it and
makes a pass or whatever?)
Perhaps the reason why harrassment rules are so strict (at the moment)
is because DEC realizes that there are going to be a lot of gray
areas between male and female employees while women are in
the process of becoming peers with men in greater numbers.
Telling women that we must *never* kid around with men (and
must, instead, lay down the law to them about what behavior
we will *allow* in our presence) is just as restricting (MORE
SO, in fact) than telling men that they'd best not ask their
women co-workers out on dates.
Such demands on women would limit our ability to function
as equal peers at work (and would be much more limiting to us
in our WORK than it would be for men who are merely being
asked to find potential dates elsewhere.)
I'm not saying that men *should* be discouraged from asking
women for dates at work. Just trying to find some sort of
perspective here.
|
798.35 | This may not be what you originally meant in .25, however... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Wed Apr 13 1988 04:42 | 45 |
| RE: .34 is still being written
Ooops. Your note got lost on the net somewhere.
Just wanted to add a couple of thoughts here. While I may agree
that some kinds of humor are not appropriate for the workplace
(and I may be personally against such humor for philosophical
and/or political reasons,) what bothered me about what you said
is the implication that if women buy into certain kinds of humor
at work, then they have no right to complain if they are sexually
harrassed later because of it.
Like I said before, there are a great many gray areas involving
relations between men and women at work, but my basic feeling
is that I dislike the idea that a woman can be considered guilty
of inciting sexual harrassment if she is anything less than
"100% pure" at work (i.e., never allows herself to engage in any
sort of humor that could be considered to have put her in a
"compromising situation" where men are concerned.)
Others can explain this far better than I can, but what I'm
trying to say is that a person who "loses control" at work
(and sexually harrasses another) is responsible for his or
her own actions. If a man sexually harrasses a woman at work
because a group of peers engaged in crude humor (and the woman
peer just happened to laugh along with everyone else,) HE is
still responsible for his actions. When a woman laughs at a
dirty joke (or whatever,) that doesn't mean that she INVITES
and DESERVES sexual advances (especially at the office.)
I have no problem with discouraging crude humor because it is
boring, tasteless, sexist/racist or downright offensive, but
I dislike the idea of being made to feel that women should
discourage it out of fear of being sexually harrassed (and having
no recourse because they are thought to have *invited* it by
appearing to "accept" the crude remarks.)
By the way, I do agree that false charges of sexual harrassment
are wrong (and serve to trivialize the *real* instances of
harrassment that make corporate policy about such things important
and necessary,) but I wanted to make a distinction between "false"
(frivolous) charges of harrassment and *justified* charges that
come out of having engaged in behavior that is common among
some/many men and culturally discouraged for women (such as
laughing at crude humor.)
|
798.36 | ramblings before coffee | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Apr 13 1988 10:08 | 32 |
| re: .35
You bring up a good point, Suzanne, and one that I hadn't thought
of before.
And I probably should have, since I'm known to enjoy some very
raunchy jokes (I buy Playboy for the cartoons . . . ) I certainly
don't think I'm asking for sexual harrassment!
Although I have become much more circumspect at work in the last
couple of years. I don't joke around as much about anything, I
don't send stuff to my friends over the network, I don't stand
around in the halls in the afternoon chattering. The whole
climate at DEC is much more restrictive and much less fun.
Fun, it seems, has become a dangerous thing.
And I sometimes wonder if the things we are gaining by restricting
everything people say really make up for the things we are losing.
Again, I'm not talking about the real harrassment when men in
power threaten the women under their control, but about this
need to restrict our speech and behavior to that level of
innocuousness that will please the least common denominator.
This bothers me. The constitutional provisions for free speech
weren't designed to protect people who were saying things that
nobody objected to. It's supposed to protect the unpopular,
the stupid, the radical, and the downright weird.
Ah, well. A necessary evil, I suppose.
--bonnie
|
798.37 | | LIONEL::SAISI | | Wed Apr 13 1988 15:08 | 17 |
| This is not in response to any particular note here, but to
the general fear that someone may get charged without knowing
they have done anything wrong. The Employee handbook says
"Individuals who believe that they have been subjected to
harrassment are expected to make it clear that such behavior
is offensive to them...". I interpret this like the social
honor code they had at my college: you are expected to
take up a complaint with the person in question before going
to the "authorities". Maybe personel is not following this.
Part of the problem is that the individual likely to be brought
up for sexual harrassment is also the individual least likely
to see what is wrong with it, hence the reaction "What'd I do?".
I don't see how you can get in trouble if you treat work like
a sexless environment in what you say and do, if not in what
you think. Some people feel that would make things very boring,
but I am willing to put up with a few less laughs.
Linda
|
798.38 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT_DW | The Colonel | Wed Apr 13 1988 15:48 | 11 |
|
Some years ago I was teaching: shortly after I got the job I
joined the appropriate union (else I wouldn't have kept the
job...) and got a pile of leaflets from the union rep. One of
these dealt with avoiding charges of sexual harassment.
It stated very clearly (in red ink if I recall correctly) that
staff members of academic establishments should amongst other
things avoid totally *any* physical contact with students.
/. Ian .\
|
798.39 | | HPSMEG::POPIENIUCK | | Wed Apr 13 1988 16:35 | 11 |
| Re: .35, I don't feel you are being fair when it comes to sexual
harrasment, what you are talking about is not harrasment (actually
it is for anyone who is the receipant of such charges). Hey,
walk a way from the situation, if you don't like it. I myself can get
pretty explicit if its with someone who I can trust (men and woman
alike). If you say o'k, you can talk like that in front
of me, NO PROBLEM. How the hell, are they suppose to know when
you change your mind. Until suddenly they brought into the bosses
office being explained they have been charged with sexual harrassment.
Give me a break!
|
798.40 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Wed Apr 13 1988 21:47 | 13 |
| Re: .35
>When a woman laughs at a dirty joke (or whatever,) that doesn't
>mean that she INVITES and DESERVES sexual advances
True. But I can see that it might be confusing for her coworkers
if she doesn't make it clear what she does and does not find
acceptable. Unless you're told, you have to cross a boundary at
least once to find out where it is. One of the steps of getting
acquainted is moving the boundaries from "social" to "personal"
range. Most people have a pretty good idea of where the social
boundary is (even if they choose to ignore it), but personal boundaries
are usually mapped by trial and error.
|
798.41 | No offense meant to you about any of this... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Apr 14 1988 07:16 | 47 |
| RE: .39
> I don't feel you are being fair when it comes to sexual
> harrasment, what you are talking about is not harrasment
> (actually it is for anyone who is the receipant of such
> charges).
How do you know what exact behavior I was talking about when
I used the words "sexual advances"? (You didn't state explicitly
what behavior *you* were talking about, and neither did I.)
I don't think of a dirty joke as a "sexual advance" (and I would
imagine that a woman who has been laughing at "crude humor"
would not consider it as such either.)
You said "when things get out of hand" (so I assumed that the
behavior went, at some point, well PAST the stage of crude humor
and on to something more personal.)
All I was trying to say was that if a man commits what we would
AGREE is "sexual harrassment" towards a woman, it shouldn't
matter whether or not she had been willing to laugh at crude
humor along with the rest of her group at some point.
> Hey, walk a way from the situation, if you don't like it...
> How the hell, are they suppose to know when you change your
> mind.
I'd appreciate it if you would not change your personal pronouns
like that (to make it sound as if you are speaking to ME about
something that I do personally.) We were talking about a
theoretical situation involving a theoretical woman (not me.)
I'm hoping you understand by now that I am in no way condoning
a harrassment complaint made by someone who accepts "certain
behavior" one minute, and then refuses to accept the SAME "certain
behavior" the next minute (and goes to Personnel.) Like I said
earlier -- you originally said "when things get out of hand"
(which I took to mean that things had gone BEYOND the orginal
"crude humor" stage.)
If "when things get out of hand" translates to mean REAL SEXUAL
HARRASSMENT, the woman's earlier enjoyment of crude humor should
not be taken as an INVITATION for someone to harrass the woman
sexually.
That's all I was trying to say.
|
798.42 | Work is not always a good place to test behavioral limits... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Apr 14 1988 07:33 | 14 |
| RE: .40
> ... But I can see that it might be confusing for her coworkers
> if she doesn't make it clear what she does and does not find
> acceptable. Unless you're told, you have to cross a boundary
> at least once to find out where it is.
The workplace is not the smartest place to experiment with
limits on acceptable human/sexual behavior (if you catch my
drift.)
When in doubt about the location of boundaries of unacceptable
behavior at the workplace, it is far wiser to fall well SHORT
of those boundaries than to find them by crossing over them.
|
798.43 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Apr 14 1988 13:30 | 16 |
| Re: .42
>The workplace is not the smartest place to experiment with limits
>on acceptable human/sexual behavior
It is, however, a place to make friends. Experimenting - deliberately
trying something to see what will happen - is stupid. When working
on friendship, it's the process of finding common ground that can
lead to crossing boundaries.
>it is far wiser to fall well SHORT of those boundaries
Fortunately, most people do. Pushing the limits is a good way to
kill off a burgeoning friendship. I suspect the people who cross
boundaries most often are the more self-centered ones, who expect
(consciously or not) people to adapt to their own tastes.
|
798.44 | On playing the game | BRONS::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Thu Apr 14 1988 19:24 | 76 |
| One of the many conflicts involved in women attaining the
equality that they have every right to is the impression that
many men get that women want to join the game, but don't want to
play by the rules. Not all men get this impression nor do they
get it about all women, nor is it entirely justified, but it is
a real effect and a real road block, and we all of us, mena nd
women alike need to know about it and overcome it.
It semms to me that it's sort of at the heart of the complaint
that some women join in in the hijinx and then without warning
call in the authorities.
Men, because of the stereotypes and expectations we set up in
this culture, are used to getting away with acting badly towards
each other in the name of good clean (or not so clean) fun. It's
something that carries over from being kids on the playground.
It's like all the crap you put up with to be initiated into a
fraternity. If you're one of the guys, then the other guys are
gonna "kid you around" and some of that "kidding" can appear
cruel from the outside, some of it can actually be cruel, but
"real men" don't go to the authorities any more than "real boys"
would go crying to Mommy.
Once you're part of the gang you are expected to go along with a
certain amount of off-color behavior. If it is really offensive,
you're supposed to let the others know in a way such that they
can honorably back down. You don't publicly challenge them in a
way that it would be too cowardly to back down or where they
would have to acknowledge being intentionally mean. You don't
bring in outside forces except as a last resort.
Now the problem with all of this is that it doesn't really make
sense, and there's no simple way to learn where the boundaries
are and what the rules are, and when you should challenge
someone and when to call in outsiders. Many men only barely
learn the rules. Some never master them and some think the whole
game is stupid. Women who were brought up as girls and not as
boys have an even harder time learning the rules.
This means that women breaking into groups that have
traditionally been all male don't know the rules and even if
they do, are likely to recognize them as both arbitrary and
stupid and not something that someone sensible would want to put
up with. As a result, they are liable to be criticized at one
moment for lacking the gumption to stand up to someone who is
out of line and then at the very next for over-reacting.
Most men tend to think of themselves as powerful, or at the very
least are unwilling to admit that they aren't. This means that
they are often not threatened by things which would be very
threatening if they happened between people of different levels
of power. Many women breaking into male environments quite
reasonably feel that their power is still rather provisional,
and thus feel threatened by things that the men around them
might not. Also, because women have really been less powerful
and because there is a whole additional dimension upon which
they may interact--sexually--the situations may really be more
threatening in an objective sense.
Due to all of this, the women don't act as the men expect them
to act, and the men often don't understand why the women are
doing what they do, and vice versa. A lot of misunderstandings
ensue. It isn't at all clear what the right solution is. There
probably isn't one, but rather many that all have to happen at
once.
Women need to learn the rules of the game. Men need to
understand that women don't understand them, but ought to be
able to play anyway. The rules need to change because they
aren't necessarily appropriate. New rules have to replace the
old so that there always rules and they are always known. We
need to learn to assume that "wrong" actions don't always mean
bad motives, but may just reflect a different understanding of
the rules of the game.
JimB.
|
798.45 | Making The Theory Work | FDCV03::ROSS | | Fri Apr 15 1988 09:22 | 11 |
| RE: .44
Nicely put, Jim. I think your note explains the theoretical
perspective of how we all - men and women - got into the morass
in which we find ourselves today.
Would you be willing to try to translate some of the issues you
raised, to some of the "nuts-and-bolts" events that have been
related within this 'string'?
Alan
|
798.46 | | ANGORA::BUSHEE | This isn't Kansas Toto | Fri Apr 15 1988 10:32 | 23 |
|
RE: .44
I don't know if I buy that Jim, some of the things that
some of the men think they can get away with in dealing
with women is not something I was ever told was proper.
Sure we had "rules" to be part of the group, but in no
way did that ever imply you had crate blanc to do/say
what demeaning thing you felt like to women. It just
seems to be too easy to just shrug off this sort of crap
as "normal mens behaviour". Well, it's not in my books,
nor any of the groups I have been part of.
Aslo, on the subject of when a woman goes along with a
dirty joke. How can anyone assume just cause she would
think it's funny and laugh, that she gives every male
the right to say/feel what ever they want? If anyone
tells me a dirty joke and I do laugh at it, does that
mean they then have the right to grab at me and make
all kinds of rude remarks? Why do some men have to think
this way? There is no connection between the two, a joke
is a joke, but demeaning another in a sexual manner is
no joke.
|
798.47 | that fits with my experience | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Fri Apr 15 1988 10:51 | 27 |
| re: .46 re: .44 --
My experience as a working woman has been that as soon as I start
playing the game by the men's rules, I lose my status as a "woman"
deserving the special treatment that forbids what .46 accurately
labels as "this sort of crap." The few times I have been on the
receiving end of that sort of thing (mostly outside of work) it
has struck me as almost exactly analogous to the hazing you read
about taking place in the military academies -- like they're
testing me and want to see how I react, what kind of stuff I'm
made of. And if I handle it in a way that makes them respect me,
they accept me.
I've never had any trouble working with men by the rules of the
men's groups. I've always been accepted as an 'equal' as long as
I could do the work of an equal. I don't always go along with
those rules; I don't always think they're right and I don't think
I have to remake myself into a man in order to do my job well.
I have never been harrassed in any sexual way in a work situation
at Digital. I attribute it to my father, who was very observant
about the rules of the game and taught me how to play if I wanted
to. And although he understood those rules very well, he didn't
play by a lot of them. He went his own way and I think many of
his colleagues thought of him as rather unmasculine.
--bonnie
|
798.48 | | LIONEL::SAISI | | Fri Apr 15 1988 17:14 | 33 |
| Re .44, Jim, I can relate to what you are saying, and often
sexual or put-down-women type remarks are made as part of
initial ribbing when a woman joins a group. The end result
of hazing is supposed to be admission to the group. But
sometimes truely malicious remarks are made intentionally,
with the goal of excluding the woman permanently. If this
is done each time the woman attempts to join in, I would
construe that as harrassment.
Also there is a difference between a sexual putdown and a generic
one. It is like if two people get into an argument and are calling
eachother names, and one of them shouts "You <minority>."
To me that is a different type of putdown. It takes them off
of equal footing, and reminds the insulted person, "You are lower
than me in this society".
I get the impression from the last group of notes,
that people think women are running to personnel in droves over
the occasional off-color joke. This sounds like paranoia
to me, like when they first allowed a woman to place rape charges
against her husband, many men seemed to think that women were
going to abuse this "power".
In my 2 years at DEC I have observed 3 cases of what I would
call harassement, 2 involved inappropriate touching, one of
those also involved persistent requests for dates after being
turned down, and the third was of the continued malicious remark
type mentioned above. None of these incidents were reported
to personnel. I think the average employee does not like to
make complaints to personnel for fear of being labelled a
"troublemaker".
Linda
|
798.49 | | LIONEL::SAISI | | Fri Apr 15 1988 17:18 | 6 |
| Also, regarding the "we all have to go through hazing",
I think that the non-typical entrant gets it much worse.
If anyone saw the movie about the Citadel (a military
academy), the black student got it about 10 times worse
than any of the other freshmen.
Linda
|
798.50 | I wonder what's true | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Mon Apr 18 1988 09:17 | 16 |
|
re: .48
In our area we are under the impression that relatively trivial
sexual harrassment complaints are one of the reasons personnel
is behind in helping with some organizational issues we're
worried about.
I don't know if it's actually true that personnel is swamped with
such complaints or if it's true that the complaints are trivial.
I suspect that in this case, what people believe is true is more
important than what really is true.
--bonnie
P.s. :) I don't believe anything I see in the movies . . . :)
|
798.51 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Mon Apr 18 1988 09:36 | 23 |
| It's been useful for me when in a new situation to look around and
observe how women who are treated respectfully and professionally
are behaving. I notice how they dress, where they go, what they
laugh at, how they behave in meetings. I keep some of my own
preferences and tendencies "toned down" until I've observed other
women long enough to know what the norms of the group seem to be.
This doesn't mean I necessarily mimic them, but rather that the
information gathered saves a lot of trial and error.
It's also interesting to observe the ones who are the most frustrated
about personal relationships and power. In some cases, they are
in a no-win situation that's not being managed well, but in
other cases they are trying too hard to be liked and accepted,
have thoughtless personal habits like constantly interrupting others
and finishing sentences for others, or lose their sense of humor
the minute the joke is on them and become self-righteous.
I'd like to read more about these things. Has anyone read any good
books lately about interpersonal dynamics at work?
Holly
|
798.52 | | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Tue Apr 19 1988 01:45 | 105 |
| Please don't think that I meant that all misbehavior towards
women was "just good clean fun" or that women are treated the
same way as or as well as men. That wasn't my intent. Similarly,
I didn't mean to indicate that there was an epidemic of
harassment complaints.
On the other hand, it doesn't take going to Personnel to fail to
play the game by the rules. You can also fail to play by not
standing up for your rights, and thus abdicating from the game,
or by fighting back the wrong way, or by going off in a huff, or
by starting out strong and then playing the victim.
Can I put this into less theoretical, and more practical terms?
I'm not sure. I don't think I can do so effectively, because
there's so much situation specific judgement involved that
people are bound to disagree with the details of my
recommendations for any given hypothetical scenario.
Maybe I can do a little by analogy. There's a lot of similarity
between men and dogs or wolves socially. Aggression within a
pack is very symbolic, real danger being held well behind a
shield of posturing. Also, a lot of pack dynamics is based on
vulnerability. You expose your throat to your fellows, and the
fact that they refrain from ripping it out underlies the pack
bond.
Amongst people, at least amongst men who tend to act like the
hunters that our forefathers were, the posturing and the
intentional vulnerability is very real, too. Being open to those
around you means that you make yourself vulnerable, you even go
mock fighting called play or rough-housing. The fact that it
doesn'r escalate to real fighting helps to cement the bonds. The
fact that a lot of play is mock fighting allows you to
demonstrate how competent a fighter you would be if it did
escalate, and how good you would be against non-pack members.
At times, however, the play gets a little too real, claws come a
little too close to the soft spots. Then it is important to turn
serious, but not hostile, and draw the line. The proper response
is to back off and apologize for accidentally coming too close.
Real conflict is avoided by the buffer of the posturing.
With regards to off-color humor and other "kidding around" that
comes too close to offensive, the trick is to stop and draw the
line. You stop playing and flex your muscles. You may show your
teeth, or even snap momentarily, but you don't turn it into a
major confrontation. You don't threaten. You just remind them of
your comptence. Me, I'd physically back off a little, say
something like "I'm sorry, but that's NOT funny", deliver a
withering glance and then soften, open up a little and smile.
I'd expect a sketchy appology or acknowledgement, and a change
of subject.
Most often, that's enough. You snap. They learn. No one gets
angry and the bounds are drawn. Sometimes it's not. Sometimes a
dominance struggle ensues. The offense is repeated until either
you retreat your line and acknowledge their superiority, are
driven off, or you push the line back on them until they
acknowledge your dominance.
How you handle this is up to you. Personally, I'm a pretty
aggressive and dominant person. I tend not to start dominance
struggles, but except when it is called for organizationally
(recognizing the dominance of my manager, etc.), when dominance
struggles start, I don't back down. This may very well not work
for most people. I do think, though that some degree of
aggressiveness is needed by everyone.
If the boundary is crossed repeatedly, if the off-color jokes
and offensive behavior continues, I would lay down the law
formally--in private. Privacy is important so that the other
person can back down. My tactic would be to say "This is
offensive. I insist it stop." I would not invoke policy unless
my right to insist was questioned.
If this failed, I would document (or get witnesses to) the
offensive behavior, my claim that it was offensive, and my
assertion that it was unacceptable. If that fails, I would use
the dominance hierarchy and the documentation, starting with the
lowest level of the system as possible. I would specifically
tell the supervisor or manger that I wasn't looking for
punishment, just an end to the offensive behavior.
All of this is done with an eye not towards punishing the person
who has misbehaved, but towards demonstrating on the one hand
power (including being able to wield the organization as a tool
or weapon) and determination to use it if need be, and on the
other hand an understanding of and willingness to play by the
rules. The message is "I'm willing to be vulnerable within the
pack, but I'm dangerous to mess with so don't take advantage of
the vulnerability--better we save our aggression for outsiders".
I've put all this in very graphic and aggressive terms.
Understand that this is an analogy. The rules of men are not the
rules of dogs or wolves. It needn't be viewed in terms of threat
and violence and aggression, although many people do. The issues
can be stated more positively. You need to demonstrate your
worth, your openness, the limitations of acceptability and the
importance to you of those limits. You need to do it in a way
that allows the other person to back off gracefully when they
overstep. A proper afternoon tea and drawing room etiquette are
just as good analogies (especially if Miss Manners had a hand in
the etiquette).
JimB.
|
798.53 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Apr 19 1988 09:38 | 29 |
| Jim, I agree with what you're saying.
As I read, I tried to imagine a man using some of the different
strategies you suggested. It wasn't hard. The person confronted
is kind of surprised, manages to indicate that they were just playing
around and didn't realize you'd be offended, makes a mental note
to be a bit more careful around you, and that's the end of it for
both of them.
I can imagine some women who have a great deal of
power/charisma/credibility getting the same reaction.
I can also imagine a number of other capable, articulate women
confronting men in a constructive way...
For example, a woman confronts a man as Jim suggested. To the woman's
face the man mutters an apology. She leaves, he goes next door to his
buddy and says "F***ing B***h". The buddy replies, "Aw, it's probably
just that time of the month." A month later in a meeting the man
belittles an important presentation the woman is making, and she can't
figure out why.
It happens. There are lots of variations on the theme. It often
leaves me feeling that I can ignore it or escalate it, and I often
ignore it if the relationship is not a close work relationship.
Holly
|
798.54 | | LIONEL::SAISI | | Wed Apr 20 1988 11:24 | 16 |
| re .50,
Bonnie,
It would make a big difference to me whether the impression
were true or not. If personnel is actually "swamped" with
trivial complaints of sexual harrassment then I would wonder
why they aren't holding educational meetings about what does
and does not constitute harrassment and to clarify Digital's
policy. I also think that they are acting unprofessionally
by stating formally or informally that the complaints they
receive are "trivial". It sounds to me like they are doing
a poor job of handling the situation.
If on the other hand, that is just everyone's impression,
then I think they owe it to the women in the building, who
may be subject to resentment because of this rumor, to correct
it.
Linda
|
798.55 | The Rules | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Wed Apr 20 1988 13:16 | 11 |
| Jim is right-on about "The Rules". IT happens that I learned them
only because I was involved in sports and taught with men during
my career. "The Rules", even for athletes, differ greatly for women.
Personally, I hope that one of the things feminism is about is
changing those "Rules" which are so silly, and replacing them with
sensible people-to-people "rules". Maybe then women and men will
begin to speak the same language.
--DE
|