Posted on 08/09/2018 3:33:34 PM PDT by EdnaMode
In an interview with the Times meant to promote her upcoming Greece-set reality show, Lindsay Lohan made her thoughts known on the #MeToo movement, thoughts that underline a recurring problem with how we talk about those who come forward to report harassment and abuse.
Despite opening by saying that she [didnt] really have anything to say, and that she didnt think she could speak on something she hadnt experienced, Lohan went on to do just that.
Im going to really hate myself for saying this, Lohan told interviewer Simon Mills, but I think by women speaking against all these things, it makes them look weak when they are very strong women.
She also said that she believes some of the allegations of abuse are false. You have these girls who come out, who dont even know who they are, who do it for the attention, she said, echoing one of the more pernicious myths used to discredit victims.
If it happens at that moment, you discuss it at that moment, she added. You make it a real thing by making it a police report. She offered up her own experiences as an example; though she said she had never lived the experiences of the women coming forward to report abuse and assault, she cited a physical fight between herself and an ex-fiancé, explaining that the best revenge is success.
With these statements, Lohan, who in October 2017 defended Harvey Weinstein in a since-deleted Instagram video, is amplifying harmful rhetoric that discourages those who have experienced sexual abuse or assault from speaking out, and reinforces the claim that false accusations are common. That very rhetoric contributes to the shame and fear that frequently keeps victims from reporting their abusers, a barrier to making abuse a real thing in Lohans view.
Lohan is far from alone in this kind of thinking. In a nationwide survey conducted by Vox and Morning Consult in March, 27 percent of women said that they were very worried about men being falsely accused, with another 36 percent saying they were somewhat worried. In truth, only 2-6 percent of cases of sexual violence in Europe and in the US are found or suspected to be false.
In other words, concerns of making accusations for the attention arent supported by fact but they are supported and perpetuated by statements like Lohans.
Oh mercy nurse!
i had the Farah Fawcett poster hanging in my mortar platoon FDC track at Grafenwoehr in 1977. now i feel old.
Dorm wall - Texas Tech, Lubbock Texas; I feel old every dang morning!
Slobber all over her, I would.
If you’re one of the 2-6% wrongfully accused ....
Too bad she's 32
The fact that some women lie about rape or sexual harrassment at work does not make actual rape or actual harrassment ok. I was overjoyed at the #metoo movement as a time that needed to come.
And to me the most ironic thing about the whole #metoo movement in Hollywood, was it was a man who dared keep trying to publish what many, many, knew Weinstein was doing for decades. And it was a lying woman with plenty of money and power who chose to keep covering for him and pretending she didnt know. Letting other, younger, weaker women get hurt, while she enriched her coffers and continued making her self-worshiping pretentious movies.
She has nice....clothing accessories.
Terrill Motor Machine
Hollywood Fla
Brick wall in front of my parts catalogs
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.