brighidin
remember me as a time of day
- Joined
- Nov 13, 2007
- Messages
- 1,978
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- 14
Thanks for starting a thread on this, I was going to do it last night initially full of indignation on Ghomeshi's behalf but now...I'm not so sure.
I have been a big fan of JG for many years; his easy-handed and yet incisive interviews were part of my days living in Canada. When I first read an account of his sleazoid behavior on xoJane from 2013 it made me cringe about missed signals as well as feel a little uncomfortable about how a man in his position could take advantage BUT at the same time the bad writing coupled with writer's seeming lack of integrity made the whole thing seem at best an exaggerated bad date tale and at worst a little bit of sour grapes vengeance.
http://www.xojane.com/it-happened-to-me/non-date
When I read of his dismissal and subsequent FB post I was disappointed that CBC didn't give JG the benefit of the doubt, at least until there were official charges laid - even Toronto's crack-smoking mayor was only suspended while investigation continued - so CBC's reaction seemed harsh. Now CBC is promising another interview with another victim tomorrow so the whole thing has become a social media smorgasbord of he said/she said.
I wish we lived in a world with less voilence towards women. I wish violence against women was properly investigated and punished without stigma. I wish victims of abuse could come forward without fear. I'd hoped that JG wasn't a sleazy dirt bag but I feel the wave of accusers might be pressing at the floodgates...and it's going to be ugly and there's going to be no winners...
I think a lot of people feel this way. It really sucks for his fans. And I agree re: losing the stigma around violence against women.
He got ahead of the story by claiming that he has proof that all the women he abused consented to that abuse. Today, we know that is not true. He's already said what he has to say while his victims were afraid to speak. I think that reporters should pick up the story, and should speak for the victims.
He was not fired for his personal behaviour unrelated to his job. He was fired because he is a violent predator of women and, according to the work related morality clause, that's not okay.
His 55 million dollar lawsuit will be thrown out in less than a minute. He's a façade. There's nothing behind it.
He should have kept his mouth shut and sought work elsewhere. He opened the door, essentially inviting everyone to prove him wrong.
Yes. That slick FB posting was supposed to help but it's really just so obviously a gross way to try and shape the story.
He probably had a camera in that teddy bear and it was in the back of it. Sick pig. JMO
Ugh. When I read the parts about the teddy, I was like whaaaa.... That's some creepy chit." But I didn't even think there would be a camera. I think you guys are right about that.
Not MSM by any stretch but an interesting look at the history and silence:
http://www.nothinginwinnipeg.com/2014/10/do-you-know-about-jian/
No, but Melissa Martin, the author of that blog, does write for the Winnipeg Free Press, and has published in the Globe (I think, or else the Post) so she's definitely part of the media.