I think it's important in Washington DC and in people like Trump have always paid off women to shut up about what he did to them over the years. You cannot run a successful business with women telling the truth about what you did to them. So, whether it's Trump or Weinstein or other rich men this is commonly done over years with millions of dollars to make women "SHUT UP!"
I think it is vitally important for all voters to realize this has been going on for likely 40 or 50 years with Trump and likely almost as long for Weinstein. Roy Moore really isn't rich enough to pay off all the young women he molested only people like Trump and Weinstein and others like them around the world. In the U.S. women like this are paid off. In other countries the women just disappear and are never seen or heard from again by anyone. This is often the sad truth about all this on a worldwide basis. But, it is also true that poorer men even in the U.S. make women disappear for good too.
My concern now is that all this fuss is going to cause the deaths of thousands of poorer women needlessly here in the U.S. because of all the trouble going on now.
However, things might get better for women over the next 50 to 100 years sort of like Women's suffrage over time here and in Europe. The rest of the world I don't see changing in women's direction very fast if at all.
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The agreements that keep some in DC from speaking out
(CNN)As
more and more women come forward with sexual harassment allegations in
the workplace, others are remaining silent -- not because they don't
want to share their powerful stories, but simply because, legally, they
can't.
These are the women who have signed non-disclosure agreements.
Instead,
they are forced to watch as their peers courageously share instances of
sexual harassment in the workplace, all because these women sought to
bring justice to their harassers, and to do so, they compromise with
silence.
On Capitol Hill, they are particularly restricted, several people told CNN.
"It's
hard," said one woman who signed an NDA after making a sexual
harassment claim to the Congressional Office of Compliance. CNN is
withholding her name because she is not supposed to speak about her
settlement.
"I
understand that I signed the agreement and so that's the way it is, but
I do feel as if my voice is missing from the chorus of women speaking
now," she said. "You do feel silenced and that's something I've had to
grapple with."
This
woman made her claim in the last five years, well before the reckoning
that has brought down men in powerful positions in Hollywood, media and
politics.
"The climate back then
was different than right now. Back then it seemed untenable," she said.
"It just seemed like the best option for me at the time. ... But the
positive is that I'm able to put that part of my life behind me without
constantly having to revisit it."
In
hers and many cases, part of the strict confidentiality provisions of
the complaint process on Capitol Hill preclude her from revealing any
information, or speaking disparagingly about the congressman she
accused.
The Congressional
Accountability Act, set up by Congress in 1995, was set up in part to
deal with charges of sexual harassment, as well as other labor disputes
within Congress, and does include some confidentiality provisions.
According
to the statute within the law, as an accuser takes their complaint
through the process within the Office of Compliance, there is strict
confidentiality in the counseling process, strict confidentiality in the
second step, the mediation stage, and confidentiality is a bit looser
in the hearing stage.
Sources
within OOC tell CNN that employees are able to waive confidentiality
during the first counseling stage. But once the parties enter mediation
there is confidentiality in terms of the materials produced within the
mediation.
The non-disclosure agreements that many sign, however, are something separate, outside of the Office of Compliance's process.
"The
NDAs at the end, that is something else that parties come up with
themselves," Susan Tsui Grundmann, executive director of the OOC, told
CNN. "We don't demand it. It's something that binds them. We don't
control it."
However, this is often a gray area.
The
office of Rep. Jackie Speier, who has been one of the leaders on
Capitol Hill to overhaul the process, says it is their understanding
from the mediators, lawyers and accusers they've spoken with that there
are discrepancies between the letter of the 1995 law and what victims
have been subjected to.
Aides
in Speier's office say they have been told by those who have been
through the process that they must remain silent, and agree to the NDA
in perpetuity, to progress and file a complaint.
"Taxpayers
foot the bill and the harasser goes on with his or her life," Speier
said during congressional hearings on the topic in November. "There is
zero accountability and zero transparency. I might also add that during
that process, the victim can't even communicate that they are going
through an OOC process to their family, to their friends or to anyone in
their religious community. So it's really no wonder that staffers do
not seek this process at all."
This
is one of the chief areas of focus for her legislation, proposed on
Capitol Hill -- to spell out specifically that NDA agreements would be
voluntary.
"It's
extremely one-sided and heavy-handed, and basically imposes
confidentiality and non-disclosure for life," said attorney Debra Katz,
who has handled several Capitol Hill cases.
Contrast
that to the accused, who can defend themselves, Katz said, referencing
Michigan Democratic Rep. John Conyers, who denied wrongdoing after a BuzzFeed News report made public that he settled a wrongful dismissal complaint in 2015 after allegedly sexually harassing a staffer.
"I
think that when you have an agreement that's so broad that says you
cannot discuss -- with no carve out for accountants, advisers,
therapists," Katz said. "People feel completely trapped and unable to
move forward in their lives. NDAs don't allow them to heal. They can't
talk about it and can't recover."
The women who often seek help from the OOC need paychecks and jobs to survive in Washington.
"And
they make a calculation that it's not going to be good for their
careers going forward to make a (public) claim, and they'd rather get
something than nothing," Katz said.
The
roughly $27,000 settlement revealed by Buzzfeed against Conyers is an
average settlement for Congressional cases, Katz said, even though they
are very low compared to the private sector.
"People
get very lowballed in Congress," she said. "It's ridiculously low, it's
paltry. Someone with these claims in the private sector, this would be a
highly monied claim."
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