Note:
I know that writing this article and some of the subjects I have to discuss
will end up getting me excoriated by quite a number of commenters and writers
on this site. There was a time when that would have bothered me immensely. I'm
long past it now.
I'm
fully aware that the unfortunate fact I'm a white, cis male can only bring out
the worst parts by trying having this conversation. But I've seen female writers, African-American
and members of the LGBTQ+ community try to have ones on similar problematic
subjects and they are almost met with the same kind of verbal castigation from
the virtual mobs. Combined with my own experiences, particularly in recent
months, I realize that there are always going to be people who care more about
being, to use an appropriate phrase for this article, the loudest voice in the
room. That this seems to be their only goal has to be considered part of
the problem our society is facing today.
Yet
these conversations must be had, nevertheless. So for those of you who
don't want to have them, considering this a 'trigger warning'. Go and find
people who will completely agree with you no matter what. I've never been that
kind of writer before and I'm not going to start now.
Okay.
Here goes nothing.
I remember in the late spring and
summer of 2016 how overjoyed so many people among the liberal elite were when
Roger Ailes was forced to resign from Fox News. The fact that the reason was
because he was guilty of a pattern of sexual harassment over a period of
decades almost seemed incidental to so many of these 'good liberal people'. To
them Ailes was the monster who had spent the last twenty years building up a
conversative news network that had solely been responsible for dividing the
nation, destroying the liberal consensus and brainwashing millions of otherwise
intelligent Americans to vote Republican. That was the crime that the Stephen
Colbert's and Rachel Maddow's of the world wanted him charged with. That he had
sexually abused and harassed countless
women, including commentators such as Gretchen Carlson and Megyn Kelly, didn't
in my recollection really trouble them that much then – or as I'll write in a
bit, perhaps even now. Considering what
has followed in the last decade I always got the feeling that all of the
victims of Roger Ailes were never truly considered in the same strokes as so
many of the women who have been victims before. I'm gotten the feeling both
then and now that for all their so-called liberal principles, they truly
believed that those women got what they deserved not only when they signed up
for Fox News but when they became conservatives in the first place.
I remember there was this feeling
of joy that was combined with the certainty of Donald Trump's electoral defeat
in November, that the liberals were witnessing the death knell of all things
conservative. Hilary Clinton would become President (though to be clear the
left wasn't necessarily happy about that as much as Republicans losing) and
then all that would remain would be to mop up the wreckage the right had done
to the country.
Needless to say that didn't
happen. Fox News still remains as prominent as it was, even if no longer
controls the narrative of the right as it once did. Hilary's victory in 2016
did not come and Trump has never left the political scene since. In the aftermath
of that upset there has been much action among the left for a 'reckoning' in
many parts of our society, including sexual harassment – though to be clear
they consider the #MeToo and Times Up movement completely separate from
anything that happened involving Fox News.
But in the ten years since Ailes
resigned – and not long after passed away –
from an objective level its very difficult for the impartial observer to
see what has changed in our society in regard to this particular
subject. Harvey Weinstein has gone to prison, as have a few prominent industry
figures. Some executives have been forced to resign their position but they
have not faced justice in the traditional sense. No real legislation has been
passed at a national or a state level that has done anything to help the women
who have been victims of sexual assault or abuse at any level. (Let's leave
everything involving Epstein aside for the moment.)
What has seemed to happen forms a
familiar pattern:
After a prominent individual
dies, women who worked for him start coming forward with stories of years, if
not decades, of abuse.
We learn how the power structure
protected all of these powerful men from the criminal justice system. Many of
these individuals who are still alive express remorse.
The event receives prominent
media coverage for a while.
Nothing really changes for
anybody.
I've seen this pattern play out
countless times in the last few years. It's referred to usually as a
'reckoning' with the 'toxic culture of our society'.
'Reckoning' is one of those words
that the left has put into use more and more about every part of America and
the rest of the world that doesn't fit today's norms of race, gender or sexual
preference. Usually it's phrased as how "America has to come to terms with
its complicated history." That's the polite version. Most of the time its
used as a bludgeon to argue how horrible our society has been, how horrible its
always been, and how it is incapable of changing.
This in itself is nothing new,
even among scholars. As I keep writing it goes back practically to the days of
the abolitionist movement. It's not the
same thing with so many of the powerful men who have gotten away with horrible
crimes against the powerless for years.
Except it is.
Going back to the days of the
Roman Empire and in every culture across the globe, the powerful and wealthy
have always been able to get away with horrible and unthinkable crimes against
the populace. For the record, this is not a sin that is regulate to America or
the West; it can be found in the tribes of Meso-American society, most of the
Asian cultures, societies in African and the Middle East. The powerful will
always be surrounded by the rich and they will always allow them to get away
with unthinkable crimes, many of them involving sexual deviancy at a horrific
level. The fact that America is no different is upsetting but not surprising.
There are laws place, of course,
but as I've written before the rich and powerful can find ways to overcome them
and always have. That's one of the perks of being rich and powerful. The
wealthy and powerful have always been able to have an easier time evading the
criminal justice system. If you truly believe otherwise, you've been watching
to many Law & Order reruns.
And the justice system has always
been tilted in favor of the defendant. "Innocent until proven
guilty' has been one of the hallmarks of the American justice system. I don't
pretend it works perfectly by any means but it is far better than in say,
Russia, China, the Middle East or any of the other dictatorships that populate
the world.
Again yes the system is weighed
against the poor and yes, that does include people of color. But let's not kid
ourselves that it's always been about the poor. If you disagree with my
statement, let me remind you of Bill Cosby. His wealth and position protected
him, just like it did so many other wealthy and prominent white people. That's not news either, it's one of the perks.
I don't pretend to understand
anything that victims of sexual assault or abuse go through. I know that it
must be dehumanizing and horrible. I truly emphasize with them and I grieve
with them. But the statute of limitations is in place for a reason. The
only crime that isn't subject to it is murder. So again the issue is
with the laws.
Fine they were written by white
men and yes they did much to protect themselves. Let's engage in some magical
thinking. You really think if African-Americans or women or LGBTQ+ people had
been present when it came to writing laws, they wouldn't have created
loopholes to protect their genders or races from prosecution? They can do
that if they want, if they ran for public office and became part of the process
then makes laws better for people. But I don't expect this logic to apply to
the activists who believe that it is more important to draw attention to
an outrage then do the work makes sure they don't happen again.
And for the record I'm not
convinced the current branch of leaders have realized that they aren't exactly
helping. As I speak states like California are changing the name of the state
holiday that honored Caesar Chavez based on the allegations that have been made
against him. Setting aside everything else, how does that do anything to
actually help the women who've spent years as victims? You've changed
the name of a holiday that people like me had no idea existed. It's like
thinking that making Juneteenth a federal holiday is going to make up for two
hundreds years of slavery or renaming Columbus day Indigenous People's Day. Its
cosmetic, its symbolic and in the case of the victims of Chavez, I think its
insulting. Does Gavin Newsom truly believe by doing this it comes close to
atoning for all the decades of trauma these victims say they've gone through?
And that actually brings me back
to Gretchen Carlson and so many people at Fox News. After years of harassment
they sued the network and Ailes and they received financial compensation and a
public apology. They went through the law and they got the only recourse they
could.
Yet ten years later none of the
left-leaning websites or writers ever talk about Carlson or Kelly in the same
breath that they do of Ashley Judd or Rose McGowan and all the victims of
Harvey Weinstein. Nor do we hear them mentioned in all the names of all the
victims of sexual harassment that have come out of the woodwork in the decade
with admiration or even respect.
And we all know why. These women,
then and now, are very much still conservative and Republicans. And I'm
relatively certain all that 'blaming the victim' and 'believe women' that have
been trundled about by all of those good liberal people for the last decade has
never applied to any of the women who worked at Fox News during the 20
years Ailes was in charge. Like everything else, they are Republicans first and
everything else second, even if one of those things is a victim of repeated
sexual harassment.
To be clear I don't watch Fox
News any more then I watch MSNBC or CNN or any of the many other news outlets
these days. But I've read my share of articles abusing so many of these former
journalists, particularly Kelly when she had her brief tenure at NBC a few
years back. They were infuriated that NBC would dare let anyone who'd worked
for Fox News be part of the mainstream media.
To be clear just a few years
earlier film and TV had done there own retelling of the story with the limited
series The Loudest Voice on Showtime and Bombshell in theaters. Both
were critically acclaimed and the latter earned three Oscar nominations for
Charlize Theron as Kelly. Yet even at the time I could really sense the left
leaning Hollywood was reluctant to tell these stories, much less recognize
them. Yes they fit the narrative Hollywood wanted to tell as part of speaking
truth to power but it went against their sensibilities to see Kelly and Carlson
as victims in the traditional sense.
More to the point all the defense
that has been raised every time a woman who is the victim of a powerful man and
why they might not come forward has never seemed to apply the same way to any
of the countless victims of Ailes over his tenure as Fox News. I can just hear
the conversations in Hollywood. "What did they expect when they
chose to work for men like Murdoch and Ailes?" they no doubt said to
themselves. "They had to know what they were signing up for when they
became conservative."
And this certainly applied to
Kelly when she ended up on at NBC. She was let go a few months after her tenure
started. By this point I'm willing to bet none of the same people who talk
about the outrages inflicted by so many powerful men over the decades are
trying to find all of the women that Ailes supposedly harassed and assaulted
over his tenure.
And for the record there is
evidence he may have lost his job at NBC in the early 1990s because he was
guilty of the same practices there: The Loudest Voice essentially
confirms it. But ten years after his death no effort has been made to find
those victims either. You'd think given how much the left loves to dance on the
graves of those they hate they'd be turning over every rock to do so,
particularly considering everything involving the makeup of the current
administration.
Instead the loudest voices go out
of their way to talk about a 'reckoning' for our society. By which they mean to
relitigate the bad behavior of historical men decades after it is too late to
do anything about it except the endless deconstruction among our society that
the left brings. And I've seen this pattern play out for thirty years as well
because Roger Ailes helped perfect it on Fox News. His anchors use it as another
cudgel to argue that the left, which he has made clear is the entire Democratic
Party, hates America and wants to complete tear it down. They will then go out
of their way to imply that the only way to save America is to vote Republican.
The liberal establishment, the
Colbert's and Jon Stewart's and everyone else, would always mock Fox News as
beneath the intelligence of their viewers, while ignoring the effectiveness of
it as a political technique. They clearly didn't learn their lesson after
Ailes's death, if anything they've doubled down on being everything he claimed
they were. For all the left's talk of 'reckoning' in the decade since Ailes's
passing, they still refuse to reckon with their own blind spot when it came to
the machine he built. Instead they increasingly vilify all those who are part
of that world – including the women that were the victims of the same horrific behavior
during his life. Megyn Kelly and Gretchen Carlson are always going to be
Republicans first and anything else second. That the left can't see this double
standard, arguably the most horrific of any of the ones they've put up over
their careers, is perhaps the biggest reason to reject their view of their
world as much as the conservative one.