Tannin wrote:
think positive wrote:
Just how common are false complaints?
Nobody knows. The one thing we can be 100% sure of is that the incidence is going to skyrocket now that it has become fashionable to accuse.
think positive wrote:Who would open themselves up to that sort of microscope unless they had too?
Anyone with a grudge. Anyone in a tough battle for promotion. Anyone who
didn't get promoted. Anyone with poor social skills who misunderstands a perfectly normal innocent incident and blows it up into something it wasn't. Anyone.
I understand where you're coming from, but I'm not as pessimistic.
The #metoo movement started in the USA and they have different laws to us.
Their statute of limitations works differently to ours, so there's a time limit over there (as I understand it) to report an incident
The right to free speech is enshrined in their constitution, so libel and defamation laws are very different. Over there, people can make accusations on social media with little fear of recourse, while the subject of the accusations undergoes trial by media, social and traditional, potentially ruining their life.
Here, as we've seen, publishing accusations can lead to defamation trials.
I think we have a better balance. There's a number of proper channels available to someone who wants to lodge a complaint where it can be assessed by some form of judiciary. Simply making accusations in public without using those channels is a recipe to get a public colonoscopy.
I have some sympathy for the ABC journalist who wasn't the one who made the issue public. Others made it public and she was basically forced into a deny or confirm conundrum.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.