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I think there are a few things people are missing in this whole scenario.
(1) O'Reilly was like the top dog, or the boss at Fox. Sexual comments from him are not the same as comments from Johnny the mail room boy. The mail room boy has zero power in the workplace. O'Reilly had an enormous amount of power at Fox. Comments by Johnny could be shrugged off quite easily. Comments by O'Reilly could be interpreted in a threatening manner- like if the woman did not reciprocate, she might feel her job is in jeopardy.
(2) We don't know what these women dressed like (not that it matters). They may have been very modest in their dress, and not seeking attention at all, contrary what some others have posited.
(3) This is a WORK place, not social. There is an amount of decorum that should be practiced at work.
I am neither a liberal nor a feminist, but I don't think women should have to put up with listening to sexual comments or innuendo at work.
It does not matter who it comes from, when a man is crude it hurts his looks substantially (this is in response to the claim that if O'Reilly looked better, the women would not have complained).
I realize I'm straitlaced, but I think men should know that they work with all kinds of women, and the straitlaced squares may get offended by what they think is a harmless comment.
(1) O'Reilly was like the top dog, or the boss at Fox. Sexual comments from him are not the same as comments from Johnny the mail room boy. The mail room boy has zero power in the workplace. O'Reilly had an enormous amount of power at Fox. Comments by Johnny could be shrugged off quite easily. Comments by O'Reilly could be interpreted in a threatening manner- like if the woman did not reciprocate, she might feel her job is in jeopardy.
(2) We don't know what these women dressed like (not that it matters). They may have been very modest in their dress, and not seeking attention at all, contrary what some others have posited.
(3) This is a WORK place, not social. There is an amount of decorum that should be practiced at work.
I am neither a liberal nor a feminist, but I don't think women should have to put up with listening to sexual comments or innuendo at work.
It does not matter who it comes from, when a man is crude it hurts his looks substantially (this is in response to the claim that if O'Reilly looked better, the women would not have complained).
I realize I'm straitlaced, but I think men should know that they work with all kinds of women, and the straitlaced squares may get offended by what they think is a harmless comment.
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