Here's a graphic illustration of what I'm talking about. The women's #MeToo point of view would stop ANY MAN FROM EVER HAVING AN ERECTION EVER AGAIN! The fullness of the #MeToo movement would prevent all births except through artificial insemination.
This is one of thousands of problems associated with it. The #MeToo movement is the death of the human male animal. Women are trying to create feeling safe. Men never feel safe ever. IF men never feel safe women are talking about an impossible scenario that is a fairy tale. It isn't possible or real.
No one is safe. No one can be safe. Maybe you could be safe if you locked yourself in a safe room (but only if you had a month's food stored) and only if your house didn't burn down or there wasn't an earthquake or war or a car or truck didn't drive through your house by accident.
Being safe is more of a state of mind or a state of enlightenment. If you are not enlightened in your consciousness by thinking good thoughts and creating right actions you are never going to feel safe.
However, physically being safe for anyone (100%) is likely not possible. But, enlightenment IS POSSIBLE!
Here's an interesting thought. "The #MeToo movement is a zero population growth plan for earth.
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Michael Haneke: #MeToo has led to a witch hunt 'coloured by a hatred of men'
Austrian film-maker says that movement against sexual assault has
prompted a ‘crusade against any form of eroticism’ that belongs in
Middle Ages
The Austrian film-maker, two-time winner of the Palme d’Or at Cannes, made his concerns known during an interview with Austrian newspaper Kurier, later reported by Deadline. “This new puritanism coloured by a hatred of men, arriving on the heels of the #MeToo movement, worries me,” he said. “As artists, we’re starting to be fearful since we’re faced with this crusade against any form of eroticism.”
While Haneke noted that any act of “rape or coercion” should be punishable, he said that “this hysterical pre-judgment which is spreading now, I find absolutely disgusting. And I don’t want to know how many of these accusations related to incidents 20 or 30 years ago are primarily statements that have little to do with sexual assault.
“This has nothing to do with the fact that every sexual assault and all violence – whether against women or men – should be condemned and punished. But the witch hunt should be left in the Middle Ages,” he added.
Haneke argued that a film such as Nagisa Ă”shima’s 1976 erotic drama In the Realm of the Senses, which attracted controversy for including scenes of unsimulated sex, would not be made today “because the funding institutions would not allow this, anticipating obedience to this terror”.
“Suspected actors are cut out of movies and TV series in order not to lose [audiences]. Where are we living? In the new Middle Ages?” Haneke said, touching on the recent decisions to edit actors accused of sexual misconduct, such as Kevin Spacey and Ed Westwick, out of finished works. Westwick has denied the claims made against him, while Spacey has denied some of the allegations and not responded to others.
Haneke’s comments echo those made in an open letter to Le Monde in January that described the #MeToo movement as a “wave of purification” that had “forced [men] out of their jobs when all they did was touch someone’s knee or try to steal a kiss”. The letter, signed by 100 women, including actor Catherine Deneuve, was criticised by French feminists for conflating “seduction, based on respect and pleasure, with violence”.
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