Donjeta
Adji Desir, missing from Florida
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2009
- Messages
- 19,246
- Reaction score
- 630
All good Questions but again. questions.
I don't know if any of this is true. I just can not believe that he did this to dozens of women and it was never known before now. Sometimes people remember wrong or according to their conscience. Since there is no proof of contact or witness, until there is proof of evidence beyond an accounting from decades ago, I just can't believe it.
But it was known before now. It became a matter of public record when the first woman filed the lawsuit against him in Philadelphia. The one that had 13 other women lined up to testify. But the press gave the whole story a pass at the time. (Probably found it hard to believe that the warm and fuzzy Dr. Huxtable was actually a monster underneath his warm and fuzzy sweater.) Miss Scarlett, you are certainly entitled to both your opinions and your hinky meter. I don't think there is a desire here to see you belittled. It looks to me like more of a desire to educate you. Forgive me, but you do seem to be a bit naïve. Not that I think most of us here would have thought "Oh, yeah. That Bill Cosby, he fits the picture of a serial rapist." Speaking of hinky meters, as I wrote early on, my own was going off years ago. I was never a fan of Cosby, and there was just something I never liked about him. Couldn't put my finger on it, but it was there. I think I watched that TV show once. Didn't like it. Never watched it again. I just watched a clip of Phyllicia Rashad on some show defending him. Poor woman.
One last thing, I am now wondering if Cosby didn't in fact have some sort of a reputation "behind the scenes". The reason I think this is that those TV networks and universities WERE extremely fast in dropping him. I mean like, bingo, goodbye. Despite all his donations. I think somebody knew something.
Lachelle Covington went to the police in 2000, 3 days after her experience with BC.But it was known before now. It became a matter of public record when the first woman filed the lawsuit against him in Philadelphia. The one that had 13 other women lined up to testify. But the press gave the whole story a pass at the time.
<Snipped>
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Do colleges ever rescind honorary degrees? I can't recall hearing of a case.
Frankly, doing so would not only bring more bad publicity to the institution but cast doubt on its other honorees. I can easily see the trustees deciding to stay silent on the whole subject (particularly since explaining the rescission would almost certainly require slanderous statements that would open the U. to a law suit). IIRC, Temple has dropped its fundraising connection to Cosby, which surely cost the university a lot of coin.
http://www.uregina.ca/president/exe...univ-secretary/honorary-degrees/protocol.htmlThe Senate, acting on the recommendation of Council or on its own initiative but after report by the Council, may revoke that Degree or Degrees, including Honorary Degrees, Diplomas, Certificates or Distinctions of the University and all privileges connected therewith of any holder of the same who shall have been convicted of any criminal offence which shall be held (by the Council) to be of an immoral, or scandalous or disgraceful nature, or whose name shall have been removed for misconduct by a properly constituted legal authority from any official register of members of the profession to which he/she belongs or whose conduct, in the opinion of Senate, shall constitute a breach of any agreement made with the University as a condition of the conferment of such degree or degrees, diplomas, certificates or distinctions.
The Senate may restore, on cause being shown, and after report by the Council, any person so deprived, to the degree, distinction or privileges previously enjoyed by him/her without further examination.
http://www.mesotheliomacenter.org/m...ho-caused-an-asbestos-environmental-disaster/An Italian criminal court convicted Schmidheiny for his gross negligence, citing an environmental disaster in Italy. Two of his company’s plants in Italy killed thousands of workers and residents due to prolonged asbestos exposure. Originally sentenced to 16 years, the Appeals Court upheld the original verdict and prolonged his sentence to 18 years. The Court explained that Schmidheiny was well aware of the risks of asbestos exposure. He participated in misinformation campaigns intended to deceive workers about the dangers, claiming safety if handled properly.
http://www.nhregister.com/health/20...o-revoke-honorary-degree-over-asbestos-deathsMayors of 35 Italian towns with up to 3,000 residents who died from asbestos-related mesothelioma have written to Yale President Peter Salovey, asking that the Swiss billionaire they hold responsible for the fatalities be stripped of his honorary degree. The letter follows a petition by more than 50 Yale graduates, including leaders in asbestos research, demanding that Yale revoke Stephan Schmidheiny’s award.
I just had an interesting discussion with my mother...shared with her that my DH is involved inon the internet... great... She answered in two ways...soo..Do you think your husband does anything right?!?Soo... Have you thought about going to therapy with him...Uhhhh.... I am not the
seeker... :doh:Thanks mom... :no:
I just had an interesting discussion with my mother...
shared with her that my DH is involved inon the internet...
great... She answered in two ways...
soo..Do you think your husband does anything right?!?
Soo... Have you thought about going to therapy with him?
Uhhhh.... I am not theseeker... :doh:
Thanks mom... :no:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/...r-on-bill-cosby-no-one-is-surprised/22558917/Groundbreaking comedian Roseanne Barr says Hollywood women knew about allegations that the "great comic" Bill Cosby sexually assaulted multiple women over the years, but no one said anything.
...
"We all heard it for a long time, and it surprises nobody," she said flatly, during an interview on the set Wednesday of Cristela where she was guest-starring.
"We all know women who know somebody, if they didn't go through it themselves with Bill Cosby," she said. "There are hardly any women — hairdressers, waitresses, working women — who don't know somebody (affected by the allegations)."
...
Barr is not alone. Comedian Patton Oswalt also says the Cosby allegations were well known among comics.
"It was a very badly kept secret in the comedian world, and a lot of us would talk about it. (Comedian/documentarian) Bobcat Goldthwait would mention it all the time," he said on the You Make It Weird podcast with Pete Holmes in December.
"Maybe it's not the end of it. ... I have hopes for this great comic. I do. I have hopes that he would just make it clean, and make it, you know, make it right, and I do think he could do that," she said.
Asked how he could make it right, Barr said, "There's so many ways. He's got a billion bucks."
Night two, you go after Cosby. A lot of black comics have not wanted to attack a guy who opened so many doors …
Unfortunately, some of those doors were to hotel rooms. (Laughs.)
Did you have any hesitation?
He was never a hero of mine. I liked Cosby, but I have a different relationship with him than a lot of people because I didn't grow up on The Cosby Show. I grew up on I Spy and Chet Kincaid. I remember in the late '70s, early '80s, my mom met Bill Cosby down in San Diego at this tennis tournament. She came back and said, "We asked him for his autograph, and he was so mean, so nasty. He said, 'I don't do that.' " I was like, "Man, what an *******." My opinion of Cosby at that point was like, "What a jerk." I never even watched The Cosby Show. I always thought, "That's great that that show is on," but about him I was like, "Whatever, Cosby." Richard Pryor was my hero. Richard Pryor was keeping it 100 [percent real].
Wilmore went on to ask why people seemed to dismiss the many accusations against the comedian.
"Is it just because they're women? Because I would say enough have come forward. The current tally stands at 35 women. How many more do we need?" Wilmore asked. "That's like if Bill Cosby drug and raped every U.S. President from George Washington to John. F Kennedy."
Wilmore got serious for a moment (but just a moment).
"Let's consider for a second that Cosby didn't do it … OK, we're done!"
Not getting support from the people you are hoping will be there for you is really disheartening, no getting away from it.
Just a thought, FWIW. A library offers a quiet place, often with individual carrells at which you can sit, make notes, open a book and just be so that you can take stock of the world and not have to deal with distractions for part of your day. It may make it a little easier to assess what your needs, goals, and hopes are, and what the next steps are that you want to take. At various points of upheaval in my life, I've found an oasis in public libraries, university reading rooms and halls, convent libraries, and the reading room at the local YWCA.
Please remember that there are discussion threads (IIRC) which may be helpful to which other WS members may direct you.
I believe that you'll discover strengths within yourself that you may not yet know you possess, IHNC.