You're Wrong About - Anita Hill
Episode Date: May 26, 2018Mike tells Sarah about the complicated legacy of Anita Hill and the not-particularly-complicated facts of her case. Digressions include “Tootsie," Garrison Keillor and the Donner party. Mike, f...or reasons unknown, seems to believe that one flies “down” from Charlotte, North Carolina, to Washington, D.C. Continue reading →Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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You know the teens that are like, I'm not like one of those regular teens.
I'm insufferable in an adult way.
Totally, I was extremely one of those teens.
I think that's why we're doing what we're doing now.
So welcome to You're Wrong About, the podcast where we circle back to people, places, and things
that have been misremembered.
I am Michael Hobbs.
I'm a reporter for The Huffington Post.
And I'm Sarah Marshall.
And I'm a writer for BuzzFeed in the New Republic and also some other places.
And Sarah's joining us from a closet this time.
Also with the flu.
Well, I'm just, I'm getting over a cold.
So I hope that I'm at the sweet spot of getting over a cold
where you sound just vaguely like Kathleen Turner.
So do you want to tell me what you remember about Anita Hill and her legacy?
Yeah, so when Clarence Thomas was being confirmed, I guess as the verb is a Supreme
Court justice, Anita Hill, who had previously worked, I believe as a subordinate of him came
forward and said, accused him of sexual harassment at the time that they had worked together.
And this became the aspect of his confirmation hearings that received the most attention.
And what I wasn't old enough to notice at the time, but feel like I've observed when I've
researched the topic in a background way for other pieces in the past is that she was really
rigged over the coals and that people really didn't seem to understand what sexual
harassment was.
And that it was one of those events that taught Americans what sexual harassment was,
but where the person who made that lesson happen had to really suffer because of it.
I mean, I know that he ultimately became a Supreme Court justice,
but then I don't know what happened to her life after that.
So that's what I feel like I know about it.
Yeah, I think the first thing we should do is there are a number of Anita Hill debunkings
on the internet, like on YouTube, which has become this cesspool now.
And a lot of them are of the character of like, oh, like Anita Hill had a parking ticket in 1984.
So Clarence Thomas couldn't have sexually harassed her.
I want to be clear that like that is not my project here.
I spent about three months last year working on a video about the legacy of Anita Hill and
about just sexual harassment more generally.
So I watched the entire hearing.
I watched all four hours and 30 minutes.
I also looked into a lot of what sexual harassment was like before Anita Hill
and what sexual harassment was like after Anita Hill.
And so I want to be really clear that this is a believe women men are trash podcast.
This is not going to be a let's be skeptical of Anita Hill's claims because basically I will get
into eventually the contortions you have to do to not believe that Anita Hill is telling the truth.
So what I'm really interested in debunking or not even necessarily debunking but more like
complicating is the legacy of Anita Hill.
So one of the statistics that you often hear is that before Anita Hill,
there were about 7000 sexual harassment cases filed in the United States every year.
Two years after Anita Hill came forward, there were 18,000 filed.
So the number of sexual harassment cases almost tripled almost overnight.
And so the legacy of Anita Hill has always been as this kind of breaking point.
It's much more complicated than that and I want to get into the interplay between law
and these very prominent figures that we kind of hold up as the symbols of one issue.
Kind of like we were talking about with the Matthew Shepard episode.
Okay, so something that I have always vaguely associated with the case but don't know what
the context of it was exactly and I associate this in my mind with the way people alluded to
cigars around Monica Lewinsky in 1998, which was something I also didn't know what it was about
for years and years. Okay, so in the allegations of sexual harassment in the workplace,
what was the thing about pubic hair and soda? What was that?
What's interesting is that the accusations that Anita Hill were leveling against Clarence Thomas
by the standards of today are not all that severe.
Because the standards of today are like worst case scenario.
He's been running a high profile rape ring for decades and all of your favorite actresses
have been assaulted at some point. Yeah, so by the standards of today, it's like,
you know what, if it wasn't like an episode of SVU, then like, eh.
Well, yeah, so yeah, I mean, that's one of the sad things about this is that Harvey Weinstein
has now become the yardstick by which everything else gets measured. It's like, oh, it's only like
20% of what Harvey did or it's only like 60% of what Harvey did. Yeah, it's a mill of Harvey.
So basically the pubic hair and the Coke thing was one of the examples that people latched onto
as one of the things that Clarence Thomas said to her that is an extremely inappropriate thing
to say to somebody at the workplace was, is that a pubic hair on my Coke can?
Was apparently what he said to her in the office one day and her accusations against him were
essentially he made a series of extremely awkward and extremely uncomfortable passes at her during
it was eight years before the trial. So when they were working together at the EEOC, which is weird,
the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission, which is the government agency responsible for
adjudicating sexual harassment claims. This is one of the weird coincidences of this case.
But it's actually interesting. I mean, this is one of the reasons why Anita Hill was so divisive
was because the accusations that she was leveling against him were the kinds of things that women
recognize as really gross and really unwelcome in the workplace, but that guys recognize as, oh,
it's just harmless flirting. It was the kind of thing that it divided a lot of families where
women hear these accusations and they're like, oh, fuck this. And men hear the accusations and
they're like, well, what's all the complaining about? Well, I bet some women also heard about it
and were like, this is the kind of shit that I had to put up with with my boss for 40 years.
So why is it that you get to block someone's Supreme Court nomination, sweetie? There was a lot
of that. It broke down on supergenerational lines, too, that a lot of these people who had maybe worked
as stewardesses used to get fired when they turned 32 or got married. And so a lot of people that had
begun their work lives in this context were kind of like, well, that's how men are. That's what the
workplace is. It's like complaining about filing your expenses or something. It's like, well,
that's just a component of the workplace. It's like men trying to sleep with you. And it's kind
of like, you know, what are these millennials whining about? I mean, there was kind of a little
bit of that tone in it of just, well, why can't you just get used to this? It's really not that
big of a deal. And so if we take Anita Hill's narrative of it, like, did he say any other
memorably weird or awkward things? Yeah, he talked a lot about his porn habits. So he would come in
and he'd tell her about like, oh, I watched like the hottest porn the other day. And he would talk
about there was a character, the famously also there was a character in these pornos that he
was watching called Long Dong Silver. Really? He would talk about this at the workplace and kind
of hold it over her head and make comments about her appearance, make comments about other colleagues
appearance. It's sort of his, the definition of the term hostile work environment that it just
created this sort of tone where her colleagues, she could tell we're being judged on their looks
and she could tell that she was being judged on her looks. And he would flirt with her constantly.
And he would just kind of talk about liking porn. He would talk about having sex with his wife.
I think he talked about masturbation at one point, just things that were kind of icky.
And he was her boss. And he was her boss at the EOC. Yeah. I think the first thing to debunk
about the trial is that Anita Hill didn't come forward. So this was not a case of Anita Hill
is watching TV and she sees this guy on CNN and she goes, Hey, that's my former boss. I'm going to
call up the Washington Post. That's not what happened at all. And that's totally my assumption.
And that's, I think that's totally the cultural narrative. And that's probably because I assume
that's what I would want and that I would see him on TV and be like, I'm not allowing my grossest
boss to be a Supreme Court justice. To me, it seems like a little bit of laziness by journalists
that it's very easy to say the year that Anita Hill came forward, right? You always hear that
verb. Anita Hill came forward, right? Because it's the sexual harassment is over. Yeah,
exactly. And you know, it gives her agency, right? That it's like she wanted to break her silence
about this asshole that had been harassing her and do her duty to keep him from getting into power.
But what's actually what's really interesting about this is so he harassed her eight years before
his confirmation hearing, all this EEOC nastiness took place. And then she basically didn't, you
know, she told people at the time she wrote in her diary at the time. But that was it. She just
kind of went on. She lived her life. She became a law professor in Oklahoma. And then she was
interviewed for they were doing a background check on him as part of this process, where they were
just kind of interviewing a lot of his old colleagues. And so she had an interview with the FBI
in which it is illegal to lie. So they asked, what is your work relationship with Clarence Thomas?
She told them the accusations of harassment. Someone at the FBI leaked her testimony to the press.
And then this she, this is why her hearing took place on a Saturday was because she was not scheduled.
She was not part of this hearing. She was not part of the narrative. This was never supposed to be
the sexual harassment confirmation hearing of Clarence Thomas. It was already after the hearing
had already started when we found out, Oh, wow, there's this person out of nowhere, literally
nowhere. Like if you're quietly being a law professor in Oklahoma, like what could you do
to greater decrease the odds of being of consequence to things happening in Washington?
Yeah. And it seems like that was the first detail that got lost, right? With that she was not someone
who wanted to come forward. She was also subpoenaed. So again, it's not like she's like, Oh, I can't
wait to fly to Washington and like stick it to this guy. She got a knock on her door and a subpoena.
So she had to show up. So this is not a case of someone who was like a crusader. And this is,
again, why all of these accusations of she's like a women's lib superhero. She's like a radical.
She's trying to change the country. It just doesn't make any sense. Basically, I was thinking about
this that to believe that she made up the accusations, you would have to believe that she made up
harassment by Clarence Thomas, wrote it down in her diary, told four of her friends about these
made up accusations, then didn't tell anyone for eight years, then waited for him to be nominated
as a Supreme Court justice, which there are very long odds on that, right? Then waited for the FBI
to contact her, then waited for someone at the FBI to leak her testimony so that she could then
bring forward this narrative that she had concocted. So that is literally that's what you have to
believe if you think that she's making this up. So this was not a case of someone who wanted to be
the center of the story. It's someone who really was very reluctant to be there. And when you think
about it, handled herself with incredible grace. I mean, if you see her testimony, she's super
smart. She's not having any of their shit. She's constantly asking like clarifying questions.
She's like, um, I don't understand. Can you please rephrase that? She's super just total badass and
not accepting any of the framing that any of the senators are giving to her for someone who's never
given testimony before for someone who's not used to this level of attention. It's actually amazing
how poised she remains and how cool she is after four and a half hours of being questioned by this
incredibly hostile panel of like old white dudes that clearly do not believe a word that she's saying.
Yeah. And so what, I mean, is there a lot of advanced press before the testimony? Are people
excited and tuning in to watch it? How does that go down? It's one of the most watched events of that
year. Wow. It's like super bold level ratings. That's amazing. A lot of people aren't necessarily
watching it live because it's on a Saturday. But CNN, I mean, all the networks are covering it.
It's front page. There's all this kind of whispers and innuendo in the press about that she has
something called erotomania, which is something where your crush on somebody is so bad that you
make up this whole narrative in your head. So basically she is in love with Clarence Thomas.
He rebuffs her advances of which there is no evidence, but she came on to him. He said he
wasn't interested. And then this was so stressful to her that she made up this entire thing.
Who could resist Clarence Thomas, Michael? Like if you were working with that hot hunk of brisket.
Right. And so this narrative that she has erotomania has as much evidence behind it as that she is a
vampire or that she is a werewolf. This has literally no evidence behind it. But it kind of
becomes these whispers that are starting to circulate around the hill that, well, she's a little loopy.
She's a little skanky. There's some rumors from her students at the university that she shows
up to class drunk. Again, no evidence. We have no idea where this is coming from. Or if that was
even ever said by somebody, it just kind of circulated. Isn't it telling that the most plausible
counter narrative is that she's just completely insane? Right? Like totally out of touch with
reality. You know, it's like, well, either, you know, this series of completely plausible things
happened or she's completely insane. Yeah. Or she's in love with Clarence Thomas and then
has been striving through sheer spite and an incredibly complexly laid plan
to destroy his life for no personal gain of her own. And also these plots where a woman is supposed
to have had this great plan. You know, it never works out. Like Tanya Harding was supposed by
people to have this arch plan to like sucker everyone and get all this money and win the Olympics.
And it's like, well, that really didn't work out if that was the plan that she had, you know? And
it's like, oh, we caught them. We caught these women who had these terrible self-serving plans.
And it's, you just look at it and you're like, you know, if the American public was smart enough
to figure out this diabolical plan, like that suggests that maybe there was never a diabolical
genius plan in place. Maybe it's just all some stuff that happened. And we made it up so we
could feel like we were catching someone at it. Yeah. I mean, one of the other weird things looking
back is that it's obviously very risky now to come forward with the claim of sexual harassment
against a high profile person, right? If you want to accuse somebody of sexual harassment,
your name is in the media, your face is in the media, you're going to get dragged through the
mud. But think about how much more high risk it was back then, right? That sexual harassment,
the term sexual harassment was only coined in 1975. Wow. The vast majority of the population
didn't even know what sexual harassment was. And even trial judges and juries at that point
didn't accept that sexual harassment existed. So to come forward in 1991 and say, I was sexually
harassed by this extremely prominent, extremely well-liked public figure was much more high risk
than anything like that would be now because the entire concept of sexual harassment was not acceptable
to people. So another thing that nobody said at the time that, you know, it's the same thing,
why is she choosing now to come forward? What does she really want? And the idea that you would
have a dick boss and not make a big stink about it. But then when your dick boss was about to become
super, super powerful, you would come forward. Like that's when you would want to tell people that.
That actually seems perfectly logical to me. Like that's not that difficult. Like I've had mean bosses
in my life. I have not made a federal case out of it. If one of them was about to become president,
I hella would come forward with it because they were dicks and I don't want them to have any more
power. Like it's not that hard. Well, why do you think we remain so attached to this idea that a
woman has something to gain by coming forward with accusations of abuse that she levels against a
powerful man who's usually entrenched in society in some way and who people really want to believe
would never have done that kind of thing? Because the big stories are always about men who the
community looks at and finds it to be unimaginable that he could have done what he's accused of,
either because of the position he holds in his community or what he represents or his
public persona. So I think there's a misconception among the public that coming forward with sexual
harassment claims is really lucrative. It's actually much less lucrative than we think it is.
And it's really only lucrative for people who come forward against public figures. So I do think
that there is some incentive to basically hold public figures hostage, right? That like George
Clooney is really rich. I could say that George Clooney like groped me somewhere and like maybe
he would want to settle out of court with me because he doesn't want the trouble and maybe I
can get a million bucks out of it. That's fine. I can see that there is that incentive. I still think
that happens much less than we think it does. With things like regular like if you work at an
insurance company, that incentive is not there to accuse your boss of sexual harassment when like
he's not a public figure. You're not going to get anything out of it and you're going to get all
this negative publicity and you're going to be known within your field as someone who quote-unquote
makes trouble. So the incentives don't make any sense for anybody and it especially didn't make
sense for Anita Hill because first of all, she didn't come forward, obviously. Secondly, there
was never going to be any money involved. And third, the amount of publicity that she was getting,
it was like Monica Lewinsky level fame at that time for this essentially random person who was
just a quiet lady. Like she never had stepped out into any public debates. She'd never like printed
op-eds in the local newspaper. Like she had been super chill. Well, I guess going through and looking
at the archival material about this event, how did you see that viewpoint represented? Was it like
newscasters saying some believe that Anita Hill blah blah blah? You know, I mean, how did people
communicate that? Well, I was watching the hearing looking for clips that I could use in this video
of mine. So I kind of wanted to find clips of senators being the worst because I wanted to
demonstrate just kind of what Anita Hill had to sit through. And so I was watching this looking
for these clips. And what was interesting was it was actually really hard to find kind of smoking
gun clips that showed just how dickish these guys were. But when you actually sit down and watch
it, the entire tone of it is just, it's like this intangible negativity where they're interpreting
everything she says in the least charitable possible way. So there's this entire line of
questioning where he sexually harasses her at the EEOC. They vaguely stay in touch. He writes her
letter of recommendation at some point. He is in Oklahoma for a conference or something. He
mails her to let her know, calls her to let her know, whatever. And she's like, Oh, hey, let me
pick you up at the airport. You're going to be in town. We can catch up. And the senators are like,
what? But you said he sexually harassed you. Why would you possibly keep in touch with a man
who had sexually harassed you? And Anita Hill is basically saying, she's like, well, look,
he's my former boss. He's a really prominent person. This is how professional life works. You
just have to be, you have to be in contact with people even when you don't like them to like
live your life. This is something that I just had to do. And so, of course, the way that they
paraphrase that back to her, they're like, Oh, so you're saying you had to stay in touch with your
harass her to advance your career. Is that what you're saying? And it's like, well, yes, I guess.
I mean, whatever, like we can all name 10 people in our professional field that we do not like.
And yet we remain cordial with because they might be helpful at some point. Like,
this is not a Martian behavior. Yeah, if women didn't constantly smooth over sexually inappropriate
behavior for male colleagues and superiors, then like, no academic department would get any work
done. No factory would produce items, you know, I mean, no, no store would be able to sell merchandise.
Like the our entire economy and and system of systems of government and order in America
are glued together by women ignoring gross things sexually that happen to and around them.
Like that's just how we're trained as workers. So another thing that's really important here
is there's another accuser. So even at the time, we knew that there were two other accusers.
One of them, who's named Sukari Hardnett, sent a letter to the committee saying,
I saw Clarence Thomas treat women like shit. If you were young black female and reasonably
attractive, you knew full well, you were being inspected and auditioned as a female by him.
Women know when there are sexual dimensions to the attention they are receiving. And there was
never any doubt about that dimension in Clarence Thomas's office. So she's on record with her name
the whole thing. Another accuser is named Angela Wright. And she is a reporter for a newspaper in
Charlotte, North Carolina, weeks before the trial, one of her colleagues mentions they're
looking they have an opening for a columnist on the opinion page. And she goes, Well, let me try
writing like a sample opinion article. I've never written an opinion article before. But like, let
me just try it. So she writes an opinion article saying Clarence Thomas is unqualified for the
nomination. Here's why he sexually harassed me. So this is like a bombshell accusation. But she
just like types it up as like an opinion column gives it to her editor, not intending it for
publication, not intending it for anything. Wow. Two days later, she gets a call from the Senate.
So someone at her paper somehow got it into the hands of some Senate staffers. The Senate staffers
have an hour and a half long interview with her in which she's under oath. And she talks about
exactly the same thing that he would comment on her breasts, he would comment on other people's
breasts, he would talk about women, he would talk about her, he once showed up at her house unannounced,
like late at night, he just showed up. No, he kept saying like, Oh, soon you'll be dating me.
Like he just made these kind of Donald Trumpian kind of gross like used car salesman remarks.
Yeah, like the old actor in Tootsie who shows up at at Dustin Hoffman's apartment and won't
stop singing, you know, like it's just the sad spectacle of grossness. Like it's not threatening,
but you just, ah, if you had to work with that. Oh, it is exactly that sound. It's like, oh,
like that's basically everything she's describing is basically just like, oh,
but what's really interesting about this is so they take her testimony, they ask her, they're like,
Are you willing to testify? And she's like, Fuck no, I don't want to be a public figure. Like,
why would I want to be thrust into the national spotlight? Of course, I don't want to testify.
Hours later, she gets a subpoena. So she's like, Oh, God damn it. So now I really have to testify.
So they fly her down to Washington for the hearing, but they never call her. Oh, wow. So she
literally sits in an office in the Capitol waiting to be called for the hearing and she never does.
And the reason is basically that she is a complicated person that she was fired from her
previous job at USAID. And when she was fired, she sent a letter to her boss about bad management
practices, about the fact that her boss was terrible, about the fact that they were running
the department really poorly. And she, this was back in the memo days right before emails.
And she like CC'd like literally carbon copied all these other people in Washington.
Is that what CC stands for? I'm having a moment of feeling my age.
Yeah, it's a literal carbon copy. Yeah. Wow. Okay. So she carbon copies all these other
offices, like all these other agencies to her boss's boss. It's like, you know, people do this
with email now, they'll do like a reply all, yeah, the performative BCC. So she does this,
she, she kind of gets a reputation as being a firebrand. But apparently her criticisms of
that agency were correct. Clarence Thomas sees this mail and is like, well, she seems really
smart. She seems really cool. I want to hire her. So at her interview, he's like, look, I know about
the letter. I know you're a firebrand, but I also know you're super smart and I want you working for
me. So he hires her, then, you know, we get all the sexual harassment stuff. Then she gets fired.
So this is another reason why the committee doesn't want to call her to testify is because
she's been fired. I love, I read the Senate, the Senate interview with her. And like, this is
another thing to just like all the people that came forward with sexual harassment claims back
then were just such bad asses. So the Senate people are like, oh, you got fired by Clarence
Thomas. You're saying he sexually harassed you. Obviously, sexual harassment is the reason you
got fired, right? And she's like, no, absolutely not. I was bad at my job. She's like, immediately
just like insisting. She's like, nope, I was bad. It had nothing to do with sexual harassment.
Well, he did hire her because he decided she was a firebrand. So it makes sense that she might be
not qualified for exactly that thing. I mean, all she says is that she was ineffective.
Although what's interesting is that then apparently they contact Clarence Thomas.
And he says that he fired her because he caught her using the word faggot.
This is another weird like wrinkle to this that like Clarence Thomas who has voted against
every gay rights case that has come to the Supreme Court back then branding himself as like a gay
rights crusader like that to me just seems weird. So what's really interesting is so the
journalist I read this great profile of Angela Wright from like five years after the trial.
So the journalist who's writing this profile asks Angela Wright about this. They're like,
Clarence Thomas says he fired you because you use the word faggot. And she's like, oh, I did use
the word faggot. She's like, that's true. She's like, yeah, I was super homophobic back then.
But like that isn't with my firing. And like, he's just using that as ammunition. And I don't
think he ever heard me use the word faggot. So she's sort of bizarre on Mark Furman, just like a
cheerful black woman whose slurs had nothing to do with the actual case. And it's just like, oh,
yeah, I did that irrelevant. So it was a specific incident in which she called one of her colleagues
a faggot. So it was it was directed at a specific person. So this journalist, I love this like kind
of journalist. So the journalist somehow tracks down this random employee who like 15 years ago
may or may not have been called a faggot by Angela Wright. They track him down. And he's like, first
of all, Angela Wright is awesome. I believe everything she says. B, I heard her use the word
faggot, but never about me. And he's like, and she's fine. I don't really mind. Well, like that's
the like, that's the level that we're at of like complexity. Now that we're at where it's like,
okay, she did use the word, but not in the actual specific incident that France Thomas referenced.
They really fact checked that. Yeah, like they really went for it. Like they really investigated
the use of the word faggot in like 1986 or whatever. But all of this, all this complication
is basically the reason why the Democrats did not call Angela Wright and left her sitting in an
office for like 16 hours waiting to get called is because they knew that the Republicans were
going to bring all this stuff up, that if they put her on the stand as a credible witness,
that then the Republicans' mere machine would go into hyperdrive and all of this stuff would come
out and this would be litigated in public. Why was she fired and what was the letter? And to me,
this whole thing is an example of capitulation. All of the accusations against Angela Wright,
and she points this out in her testimony. She's a hella smart lady. She knows that she would be
a quote unquote bad witness. So she's like, look, I know all this stuff is going to come out
if I'm on the stand. Like I know I'm a somewhat controversial figure among people that
I've worked with and I know that their bookings are going to use that. And so the Democrats
basically cave. They don't want it to have the fight. They know that these accusations against
her, which when you think about it are pretty specious. Either Clarence Thomas sexually harassed
her or he didn't. Whether she used the word faggot has nothing to do with that. Whether she wrote
a letter to her previous boss has nothing to do with that. And neither one of them dispute
that her firing had nothing to do with sexual harassment. So it really doesn't have any bearing
on her testimony. And yet they know that the way that politics was beginning to work at that time
was that they would have had to have this fight in public. Well, and it seems like, like you tend
to end up with one totemic figure. I mean, there was a case that was advancing toward the Supreme
Court at the same time as Roe v. Wade and Roe v. Wade just got there faster. And that's why
Norman McCorvey and Sarah Weddington are the women who are iconically tied forever to that
Supreme Court victory. But that's, that's arbitrary. And that was timing. So it's, it feels like that
there was some knowledge that they had to, they had to get like the best one, the best accuser.
And this maybe is also proof that you just, you shouldn't be too good or too tirelessly
quiet and virtuous at your job. Like maybe be a little bit of a pain in the ass and a little bit,
you know, fireable because then you won't be a perfect, the perfect person to give
politically fraught testimony before people who want to tear you apart. Like maybe be the
person who doesn't get called. I mean, this is one of the things that struck me watching the hearing
is that you really don't get better victims than Anita Hill. I realized that that's a,
that's a crass way to put it. But you know, she went to Yale law. She's this quiet professor in
Oklahoma. She didn't want to be a crusader with these accusations. And yet the smear machine
still happened. That to me just shows that there's no such thing as a victim who's not
going to get these smears. So you might as well just come forward with every victim.
And like it's going to get spread out more if there are more people. And yeah, you always hear
like, Oh, let's not give them ammunition. But like Anita Hill is an example of not giving them
ammunition. And yet they went with what they had. And I think one of the, one of the aspects of
Angela Wright's testimony that I thought was really interesting. Again, this woman is like
blatantly honest about everything and just super cool. And her whole thing, she's like,
yes, Clarence Thomas sexually harassed me, but I don't actually care. She's like,
I've received that from every boss I've ever had. The reason I think he's unfit for the Supreme
Court isn't actually sexual harassment is because he was a terrible boss. He was a dick. He took
credit for other people's work. He was really vindictive. He ruined the careers of people he
didn't like. He was in it for himself. He was basically just a workplace bully. To me, it's
this fable about how we place sexual harassment in this very specific category of like wrongdoing
that we have no tolerance for. And yet workplace bullying and just being an insane dick boss
is in this category of like, eh, it happens. And to me, it seems like I don't want to take sexual
harassment out of the no tolerance box, but I would like to put workplace bullying into it.
I think of workplace bullying as a gateway drug to sexual harassment that most of these sexual
harasser guys from Harvey Weinstein on down also have a history of just insanely abusive
behavior to everybody and it's terrible. And then it manifests itself partly as sexual harassment.
It's basically just a dehumanization of women, especially, but of everybody around you at work.
Yeah. To me, it's really compelling that she makes all of these also substantiated
accusations about him being terrible and like, nobody cares about them. They have disappeared
into the winds of time. That's true. Another reason why those are really relevant is because
why did Anita Hill pick him up at the airport? Because if she didn't, he would ruin her career.
Yeah. We know from Angela Wright that he has a history of ruining the careers of people that he
doesn't like. When people get on his bad side, he's really vindictive. So that is exactly the
reason why you would have some sort of testimony from Angela Wright at the committee hearing,
so that she can say, yeah, if Anita Hill had come forward with these accusations eight years
earlier, he would have ruined her career. She never would have gotten a letter of recommendation
for him. So of course, she had to be nice to him. It's actually bolsters her case of why she had to
be nice to this dickhead and pick him up at the airport. Yeah. I mean, speaking of having multiple
people able to come forward, this also makes me think about how there's no one iconic victim of
Bill Cosby who has to wear that victim mantle. Like one of the iconic images, I think, is that
New York Magazine cover where they had something like 35 women on the cover. And so the sense is
not of one person, but of a mass and of person after person saying, I experienced this pattern.
And just if we have that breadth of testimony, I think as people were more inclined to, you know,
if we hear it from just a few people, it's just harder for us to say, well, that person is an
outlier, that person is the problem. Yeah, exactly. I mean, we also have now we have the testimony of
Clarence Thomas's girlfriend at the time, who also says he used to come home and talk about the
women at work all the time. And he was kind of like, he was just kind of a sleazeball. So
we really have evidence of a pattern, whereas at the time, all we had was an isolated incident.
And it really was seen as an isolated incident. And that made it so much easier to smear Anita Hill,
because not only are her accusations not super Harvey-ish, not super severe, but she's also the
only one making them. So how does Anita Hill get smeared? What does that look like? Oh my god,
this is like the most frustrating and obnoxious aspect of this whole case, because you know,
I'm always obsessed with like the media thing. So there's a journalist for the American spectator
called David Brock. I can tell that you just love him and you think he's great. I know from my just
like growling his name. So he writes an article for the American spectator called, I believe,
the real Anita Hill, in which he prints a bunch of sort of hearsay, whatever. It's like,
it's very machine politics. It's very just like, let's take everything we have that makes this
woman look bad and let's throw it at the wall and see what sticks. This gets the attention of a
right-wing donor called John M. Olin. He gives David Brock, we didn't know this until years later,
but he gives David Brock a bunch of money to take a year off and write a book, also called
The Real Anita Hill. Oh boy. So he goes off, he writes a book about how one of his theories is
that the whole thing was the result of a miscommunication that apparently Anita Hill was on the
phone with somebody who asked her did, it was, I'm going to get this wrong, but it was something
along the lines of like, someone asks her, did Terrence sexually harass you? And Anita Hill
couldn't hear because she was on the phone. So she said yes, because she had some other boss
that was named Terrence. And then according to David Brock, it was like, ooh, but by the time
anyone realized that she had misspoken, it was too late. And so his whole theory is that like,
she is like so embarrassed about mishearing her friend on the phone that, you know, she has to
testify for four and a half hours. Boy, that's like a runaway Seinfeld episode. Jerry accidentally
accuses someone of workplace sexual harassment. Exactly. And this is, this is where we get the
accusations from her students. Like one of her students says she came on to me, but then it's
not clear if it, if he ever even was her student. It's literally just like the worst hearsay. But
what's interesting about it, so the book comes out, the book gets reviewed everywhere. It gets
reviewed in the Washington Post, the New York Times, most of the reviews are negative. But the
fact that they're reviewing it gives it prominence. It tells people this is an important book. Maybe
this book is bad, but it is important. So it becomes a runaway bestseller. This guy, David Brock,
buys a house in Georgetown in DC and calls it the house that Anita built. Oh no. He makes his entire
career on this bestseller. So fast forward 10 years later, he writes a book called The Conscience
of a Conservative where he says, Oh, I made it all up. Oh my God, dude, I can't believe that happened.
And like no one ever took, there was never a big media moment of like, did it, did it, you know,
this just didn't, that thing you based all your beliefs on in the 90s was faked. Like this keeps
happening and we never hear about it. I mean, this is what's so insanely frustrating to me about this
is that it's sort of like one of the chapters of this book. He talks about like being a movement
conservative, whatever. And you know, there's all these other examples and Anita Hill is like one
chapter of this book. And he, it's to the point where he writes a note handwritten to Anita Hill
saying, look, I'm really sorry for what I did to you. Send it in the fucking mail, David Brock.
And I'm like, well, did he give the fucking house back? Like, does he still have the house?
What level of assholery where like Anita Hill, it's actually really fascinating. Anita Hill really
could have cashed in. She was getting all kinds of job offers. She was getting book offers. She's
never sold the film rights to her story. Maybe she did recently, but she didn't at the time.
She did write a book, but it was a relatively modest book contract. And it was only after
David Brock's book came out that she wrote a memoir to correct the record of what David
Brock had said about her. Well, yeah, what a law professor thing to do. Like, well,
I'm going to write something very measured now about what factually did or didn't happen. And I
will do so without any expression of fury, even though everyone richly deserves it in all directions
around. And she has been like such a class act in the, I mean, she never does interviews.
She has not become like someone on like the TED Talk circuit about sexual harassment,
which she easily could have become, right? I mean, if she wanted to, she could have made a real
career out of this of being like a professional pundit on this. And, you know, she's smart.
She's awesome. Like she would have been great at it. But again, that's not the kind of person
she is. It's very clear now what kind of person that she is. So this guy caches in, she never
caches in, and then hit this book comes out 10 years later saying it's all hearsay. It's all
nonsense. But like you can still buy the book on Amazon. It's still around. Of course. The fact
that this book is based on total bullshit has not like seeped into the public consciousness.
It's part of the record. I guess as an example of you can't undo what's already been done.
Like people can't go back and unread that book. Even if you hear you read a book and then 10
years later, you're like, oh, the author says it was bullshit. You're probably going to have a sense
of, well, some of it's bullshit, but like, doesn't she seem sketchy? Right? Like, you're going to
have a sense that like she seems a little wacko. I'm sure some of the details don't check out.
Right. Maybe she did come on to her student. Who can really say that's the taste that he's left
in everybody's mouth. Right. And then he's now cashing in on the I used to be a conservative
and now I'm not anymore with which is its own brand of bullshit. But that to me is like the
saddest legacy of this was that it really was very obvious, even at the time that there was
no incentive for her to lie. Yeah. Like all of this information was known at the time and nobody
pointed out the obvious things, which was that if she was lying about this, she has nothing to gain
from it. And when that's the case, you really do have to take what somebody's saying pretty seriously.
Yeah. And we have like such a belief and like, I guess the woman who's totally insane and brilliant,
but it's like insane people aren't brilliant. Like we really don't know that in America.
And it also seems relevant that this is a situation where I mean, was this really also just
the Democrats where, you know, weren't they just trying to block a political Supreme Court
justice nominee and we're just scrabbling around for stuff. And we're like, Anita Hill,
let's throw her under the bus. Like is that what happened to here? Well, my understanding is that
nobody wanted to do this. There's a lot of a lot of the academic articles on this talk about how
kind of behind the scenes, the Democrats didn't want to be seen as blocking the nomination of
an African American justice. Right. They were beginning to be the party of social justice at
this point. They didn't want to drag this out. And so that's the weird thing about the whole
Anita Hill hearing is that they wanted this to be a quick confirmation hearing. It was kind of
already a done deal. And yet because it came out in the press, so the press was printing these FBI
leech transcripts. And so the Democrats were under all this pressure to, well, I guess we
have to call her now. I guess we have to hear from her. But they did it in this like half-hearted
way where they didn't really want it to derail. I mean, this is another sort of conspiracy theory
explanation for why they didn't call Angela Wright is because that's just going to drag it out.
It's going to bring it on longer. It's going to alienate African American voters who are already
pretty fucking alienated in 1991. And so the Democrats basically made this calculation.
They were like, well, look, the press is pressuring us. We have to hear from her. But we don't
actually want to investigate this too much. And we don't want to get at the scope of this.
We just want to kind of give her a platform, give her some time and then move on to the nomination.
Although his nomination or his confirmation was one of the closest. It was 48 to 52.
That is close, though. That's surprising. I mean, what were the other issues that came up?
It's actually interesting. The only other controversy before, and this is one of the
reasons why the committee hearing was supposed to be taking such a short time. The only other
controversy was that he wouldn't go on record as having an opinion on Roe vs. Wade. So this was
like the beginning of this template where every justice in their confirmation hearing just pretends
to be a blank slate. They're like, oh, Roe vs. Wade, I don't know that one. I never thought about
that one. When was that? 73? That was literally his argument. He's like, well, I haven't looked
into it. I haven't formulated an opinion on it. Oh. He's a master. They're all masters at this
point. They know exactly what you have to say. You can't say yes. You can't say no. He was doing
this tactic. That was the controversy before all this, right? It was pretty boring. The rest of
the country was not really tuned into this. Great week for women. Yeah. So to me, the most
debunkable element of this is the legacy of Anita Hill, where we talk a lot about
the way that in the years after Anita Hill came forward, ah, sorry, I just said came forward.
Yeah. The years after she was pushed forward or dragged forward or forced to walk the plank.
That is a better way of putting it, actually. So in the years after Anita Hill walked the plank,
it is true that the number of sexual harassment cases filed nearly triple. That's actually
a real thing. But what's really interesting about Anita Hill is that there's this figure who kind
of puts sexual harassment on the cultural consciousness, right? That nobody was talking
about sexual harassment in 1990. And then the whole country was talking about it in 1992.
And most people give the rise in sexual harassment cases. They give that credit to Anita Hill,
that people started having difficult conversations with their husbands,
difficult conversations with their bosses, et cetera, based on kind of the inspiration from her.
However, what was actually going on behind the scenes was for years before Anita Hill
ever had to walk the plank, sexual harassment law had been terrible in the United States.
It basically wasn't illegal for about 30 years until 1981 was the first case where sexual
harassment was actually tried under the 1964 Civil Rights Act. So before 1981, sexual harassment
wasn't illegal. It was just something women had to deal with in the workplace. And the legal argument
was always that it's not discrimination. So you can't try it under discrimination laws because
it can't be because you're a woman because like a man could get groped at work too. And then women
would be like, well, men aren't being groped at work. And then the males would be like,
well, but they could. So it's not because you're a woman. It's just something bad happened to you
and we're terribly sorry. So basically the argument for like decades was groping is already illegal
sexual assault is already illegal rape is already illegal. We don't need this whole set of laws
just because it's happening in the workplace. They're already illegal. So everything's fine.
And what are you complaining about? So it's only in 1981 that we finally got this quid pro quo
harassment standard of saying, I will only give you a promotion if you sleep with me.
That doesn't become illegal until 1981. And then in 1986, we get the hostile work environment
standard that it doesn't actually have to be this black male model. It can also just be
everyone is being terrible to me at work because I'm a woman. Hmm. And then had we had any advances
in the kinds of sexual harassment that are illegal since then in the workplace federally?
Well, this is what happens with Anita Hill is that basically there's there's drip drip drip
of cases. And eventually somebody's going to have to make a movie about this because
all of these early cases in the seventies and eighties are all low income women of color.
It's case after case of like women who are bank tellers and truck drivers and one of them is a
prison guard. These are women who are not privileged and women who are coming forward at intense
personal costs, right? Many of these cases make it the Supreme Court. Many of these make it a
circuit courts. It's huge risk. And so there's this kind of drip drip drip of legal developments.
But the law, the actual law that they're trying these cases under the court keeps interpreting
the law in better and better ways. But the law itself just like sucks ass. So the 1964 Civil
Rights Act, women are not entitled to jury trials. So all of the cases that are being decided are
being decided by judges, like one judge decides whether you got harassed or not, and he decides
the damages. So of course it's the same kind of questions that Anita Hill got. It's what were
you wearing? There's one case, Michelle Vincent, who was basically held hostage by her boss for
four years. He said almost explicitly, I will fire you if you don't sleep with me. They end up
sleeping with each other more than 50 times over four years. And at the first trial, when she finally
files suit, the judge is like, well, why did you sleep with him? I don't understand. Like,
if you didn't like it, why did you sleep with him? They just don't understand.
So it's like someone asking you to explain the entire experience of coercion to them,
but they're not actually giving you enough time. Exactly. You know, it's mostly male lawyers. It's
all male judges. So one of the big fights is over jury trials and trying to get juries involved
in the sexual harassment process. But then another problem is damages. So the most insane thing to
me, and I like had to call lawyers to like confirm this, was that before 1991, there was no such
thing as punitive damages or compensatory damages for victims of sexual harassment. So if the sexual
harassment was so bad that you quit your job, you would get compensated for that. So you would get
back pay. But if you didn't quit your job, there's nothing to compensate you for because there's
been no damage. You can't sue for emotional pain and suffering and you can't sue for punitive
damages. There's no such thing as either of these things. So there's literally cases where judges
find miraculously in favor of defendants and give them nothing. They're like, well, you didn't quit.
Right. They're like, so you choose literally being able to feed your family over being subjected
to traumatic and degrading conditions at work. Sorry. That's amazing. That's terrible.
So basically, there's these legal cases that are like making the conditions better. Like we finally
have the hostile work environment standard. We finally have companies can be held liable. We
finally have quid pro quo harassment. But the law that all of these are being tried under like just
sucks. It's like super deficient. So after the creation of the hostile work environment standard
in 1986, the national organization of women, all these other feminist groups do like a five year
campaign to lawmakers to be like, guys, we need an actual law on this. Like the 1964 Civil Rights
Act was not designed for sexual harassment. It wasn't even designed for sex discrimination.
It was primarily a racial redress law. And sex got literally thrown into it in the middle of
the night basically, like right before it was passed. So the law isn't fit for purpose. So there's
this five year campaign by feminists to actually create a law that would allow women to get jury
trials, allow women to get punitive damages. They hold congressional hearings. They do all
these they do these letter writing campaigns where like, you write a letter to your congressman
and you write a letter to two of your friends, telling them to write to their congressman.
There's all this like pressure super behind the scenes. Like there's not like public billboards
and stuff. It's like all this like, using the levers of Washington to try to get this stuff
passed. So in 1990, there's an update of the Civil Rights Act, which has all this stuff in it.
It has punitive damages. It has jury trials. It's a huge improvement. And it passes the
House, it passes the Senate, George H.W. Bush vetoes it. Because sexual harassment isn't really
on the agenda. Like he can quietly veto this law. And like no one cares because nobody really knows
what sexual harassment is. It's this like weird fake thing. And he's just like, no, no, no,
we're not going to do it. Like no, there's no headlines. Like no one really notices that this
law dies. So he's just passing legislation on something nobody actually cares about that much.
Exactly. So they're not under any pressure. They can do this quietly. It's not a big deal.
Then Anita Hill happens. So what's really interesting is this law gets written and negotiated, passed,
then it dies. It's kind of bouncing back and forth. And like they try renaming it and like passing it
again and like nothing works. And then Anita Hill comes forward. And then all of a sudden the whole
country is talking about sexual harassment. All of a sudden sexual harassment is a thing.
They're getting like thousands of calls from female voters. All of a sudden they're all under
all this political pressure. So a month after the Anita Hill hearing, they passed the law.
Wow. And so starting in this Anita Hill was October of 91. The law passes November of 91.
And starting with the passage of that law, women can now bring suits and have them heard by juries
and they can receive punitive and compensatory damages for the first time. So this is my thing
with the slightly more complicated version of the Anita Hill story is that it is clearly true
that women were inspired by Anita Hill. How could you not be? The society is finally admitting
that what Clarence Thomas was doing, the kind of behavior that women had to experience in the
workplace was wrong. But without all of these supporting institutions and procedures behind it,
all of those cases would have just been thrown out or they wouldn't have gotten any compensation.
They wouldn't have been heard by juries. None of those cases would have gone forward
without the laws that supported the cultural shift. For any social change to happen, you can't
have these like turning points. You need to have turning points backed up by actual laws,
especially procedural things that make it easier. And it feels like an Anita Hill figure is someone
who maybe comes in at a moment when there's all of this momentum and all of this accrued change
over legally taking place over decades at this point. And we're right on the cusp of another
significant push and we need someone to galvanize the public and make us be like, okay,
like one last step, we're doing some horrible crossfit thing. And it's like one more for Anita
because I actually remember Sarah Weddington talking in her memoir. She has this very charming
little description talking about watching those hearings and how to her like Anita Hill looked
alone and without a champion. And it seems like that's the impression that she made on people.
And it seems like that's another thing we took away from it. And that's in keeping with the fact
that she didn't go up there on purpose, that this is what sexual harassment does to women,
like not only do you have to have a hostile work environment, but then there's that spectacle
that I can imagine galvanized American women of, you know, being questioned by a panel
of old white men who just literally do not understand what you're talking about because
they've never been in a coercive, well, they've been in coercive work environments, but they
haven't been the one who's being coerced all the time. I mean, to me, I always think of,
you know, watching that footage, how power is always invisible to the people who have it.
You never think maybe the reasons why my former colleague is picking me up at the airport are
complex. Maybe it isn't that she loves me unconditionally. Maybe it isn't that she thinks
I'm charming and witty. It's difficult for people, especially in power, to admit that or
to come to grips with that and really internalize it where you're realizing that maybe people aren't
nice to you because you're so charming. Maybe they're not laughing at your jokes because they're
hilarious. It's stressful to admit that and your entire psychology is set up to prevent you from
realizing that. Yeah, and that need to believe that you're just random whims and the things
that it occurs to you to say to a subordinate, you know, the ways that you make a pass at a woman.
I mean, of course your psyche would protect itself from realizing that that can be an
absolutely terrorizing force in someone's life. And it's weird because I feel like a lot of the
rhetoric around workplace sexual harassment and sort of abuse of these power dynamics is this idea
that the abuser loves to use their power over the victim. And it's like, you know, sometimes they do,
but I think sometimes people just abuse their power without seeing themselves as being particularly
powerful. It's like people that flirt with waitresses. It is like that. You know those,
you know, those goobers that are like, oh, she likes me, man. And you're like, do you really
not understand that she's obligated to be nice to you? Like, is that really not something that you
perceive? Those people baffle me. Isn't it? It's again, a very straight male thing. And this is true
just of what America is, that if you're a straight white man in America, you can live your entire
life with only one persona. Because if you're anybody else, I think that you have to kind of
dabble in persona a little bit and constantly aware of how you're being perceived by others. I feel
like as a gay guy, I think about that constantly and much more than my straight friends do of kind
of how am I seeming right now? Am I dressed appropriately? Am I acting appropriately? You're
always kind of watching yourself from outside. One of the really sad legacies of the Anita Hill
hearing, and this isn't obviously her fault, but the way that she was framed as a kind of he said,
she said situation, is this idea, this extremely pernicious idea that, you know, you can't even
tell a female colleague that she looks nice anymore, or you can't even hug a female colleague
if she's having a bad day because she's then gonna sue you for sexual harassment. When you look at
the sexual harassment laws, it's really depressing. So I was saying before Anita Hill,
there were about 7,000 cases filed a year. And then after Anita Hill, it went up to around 18,000.
You know how many cases are filed now? 7,000. Wow. So do we just have a temporary balance
and then it went back to pre-anita numbers? So what happened, basically we had this huge spike
for Anita, and then every year since I think it's like 2001, fewer and fewer and fewer cases. Just
like drip, drip, drip, fewer cases. And part of it is arbitration clauses, where more and more
companies are putting these clauses into contracts, where they say if you want to take your boss to
court for sexual harassment for whatever, you have to go through the company's system. So if you
work at Disney World, you have to go through Disney Justice to take this if your boss harasses you
in your goofy costume or whatever. Disney Justice coming soon on Hulu. Yeah. And then as part of
going through Disney Justice, you're signing away your rights to ever go to Justice Justice.
Right. Companies get nervous about these punitive damages. But it's like, oh,
shit, these women could get some money. Maybe we got to rein this in. Exactly. So that's what
starts happening. Another big thing is that way more cases settle out of court now. That is
complicated. I don't understand all the reasons why, but it's like 2% of cases go to trial now.
It's like a vanishingly small number. One of the really pernicious aspects of this for sexual
harassment specifically is that most of these settlements are done with nondisclosure agreements.
So as we've seen with Donald Trump, with Harvey, with all these other cases, is that part of the
consequence of these settlements is that women can't talk about it because they're legally bound from
doing so. And men get to keep doing it. So structurally, when you have all these settlements
coming out that we don't know what the amounts are, we don't know what really happened, it's not
technically an admission of guilt. So we don't really know what the extent of the behavior is.
We never learn. And so these guys get to establish this pattern and get to continue this pattern.
That is how you maintain a system, right? If so many of the people who are being held up
by societal power are abusing that power and you don't want to take apart the entire infrastructure,
you just quiet a lot of it right down. So another, just to get really depressing.
Yeah, let's just twist the knife. Let's just get in there.
Another reason why this has kind of disappeared off the radar is that all this stuff about punitive
damages. So obviously, it was a huge decade-long fight to finally get punitive damages for sexual
harassment. No one ever tells you that punitive damages are capped. There is a limit to how much
you can actually get for a sexual harassment claim. The federal limit is $300,000 if you're a large
employer. So McDonald's, any company with more than 500 employees, the most they can pay out in
punitive damages is $300,000. So there's this cap on punitive damages, but this was so insane
that I had to actually call lawyers to check it. They don't tell juries what the cap is.
So if you're on a jury for a sexual harassment case, you can award the plaintiff $10 million,
but she's only going to get $300,000. Oh, for Pete's sake. This is, I was like, this can't
possibly be true, can it? And this lawyer that I interviewed in Massachusetts was like, yeah,
no, that's how it works. What is the purpose of this charade? Exactly. Why wouldn't they just
tell them? It's like, not that big of a deal. Just tell the juries. To me, this is the heart of
this ridiculous thing that like men can't even say somebody looks nice in the workplace anymore,
is whenever there's a large sexual harassment settlement, we read about it, right? $100 million
here, $55 million there, whatever. Right. You never read about the fact that the majority of
those over half of awards of punitive damages and sexual harassment cases are significantly
reduced or thrown out on appeal. So one of the largest ones ever. So this is a guy called Richard
Moore, who sexually harassed a woman called Ashley Alfred. He was a manager at like this,
like retail store that she worked at. So he kind of groped her, then he yanked up her shirt,
he masturbated and ejaculated on her. This was the incident. Nice. So she sues him,
she originally gets a $95 million federal court verdict, $95 million. Then it's reduced
to $41 million. Then they come to an agreement with the company for $6 million. So this is what
often happens in these cases is that the $95 million settlement makes headlines like, oh,
another woman who experiences something bad and then she got super rich. But then this kind of
TikTok, nickel and dime, reducing the award or throwing it out altogether, never gets reported.
No. So $6 million is still a lot of money. And I don't know, maybe there are people that think
that $6 million is too much. I don't fuck those people. I don't care. But like, we don't hear
about all of the cases that get thrown out and all the cases where the damages are reduced. So
this idea of like getting rich through sexual harassment cases just isn't a very good strategy.
Like, it doesn't really happen to the extent that men basically want you to think that it does.
Speaking of one of the refrains that we've returned to this idea of people revealing the way that
they think, you know, people who assume that you would only report sexual harassment to get some
kind of bonanza settlement are saying, essentially, obviously, we all want to tell an elaborate
series of lies in order to bilk blameless people out of money for personal gain. Or, you know,
or people who don't say that these women are making anything up but are just like,
you can only get $200 to be masturbated on, you know, this idea of, look, sometimes in America,
everyone gets abused at work. And the funny thing is that I kind of, I do understand that argument
because the whole American way is like, go get abused at work. And then if you do it long enough
and hard enough, maybe you'll be able to abuse others at work. So this idea of women joining
the workforce and being like, I would not like to be abused at work. Thank you. Like I can understand
how that seems fundamentally un-American. So one of these statistics here is that
the median award settlement for sexual harassment cases is $250,000. These women are not getting
huge, I struck it rich, I won the lottery type payouts. And $250,000 for a very large company
is not actually that much to pay. And so it's not all that punitive.
For McDonald's, it's probably like, oh, well, you know, we duked it out in court and we finally
had to pay the equivalent of all our hot coffee sales for a day in Cleveland. Still cheaper than
training people not to harass anyone. The case that I always think of the case that like was the most
chilling to me was earlier this year, Garrison Keeler, you know, the guy radio host. Oh, yes,
I was raised by boomers. Yes, exactly. I know. We listened to those on all of our road trips
growing up. When he got me toed, he was like, let go from Minnesota Public Radio. They do it
quietly. They're like, due to a complaint against Mr. Keeler, we've asked him to leave.
Sincerely yours, Minnesota Public Radio. I mean, literally, it was like very
classy. It was like, we're going to keep all this private, whatever. So then he issues a statement
a couple days later where he's like, look, you can't even do anything in America anymore.
What really happened was I was with a female colleague. I considered her a friend. We worked
together for ages. I went in for a hug. While we were hugging, my hand accidentally slipped
down her. She was wearing some sort of backless shirt. My hand accidentally slipped down the shirt.
Immediately I said, oh my God, I'm so sorry. That's really inappropriate. She said,
hey, it's not that big of a deal. Next thing you know, I hear from her lawyer.
His statement is the perfect like there's a witch hunt for men.
Yeah. And poor old Garrison Keeler has fallen under the witch hunt and no, no.
Yeah. It's like the day the witch hunt came for Garrison Keeler. And I love the detail that
she was wearing a backless shirt. Yeah. Right. Because then immediately you're like,
why was she wearing a backless shirt at work? Like that seems a little inappropriate. Wasn't
she a little bit? Don't stand so close to me, young backless shirt woman. Yeah.
He of course looks like the saint in this situation because the only person we're hearing
from is him. We haven't heard anything from the company. She is not named. We do not know anything
about her. Then like a month later, because Minnesota, poor Minnesota public radio is getting so many
comments on our Facebook page and nasty emails and whatever about firing him over this, over the
switch hunt, they release the information that actually there was a female colleague of his.
She filed a complaint against him. They hired an independent legal team to investigate the claim.
There was due process. This is not like they heard a complaint and reacted. There was a three-month
independent investigation that found an 18-month campaign of harassment. I'm going to get the
details wrong, but it was like he showed up at her house. He was writing her disgusting emails.
He was fucking with her boyfriend. This entire narrative of it's all just a big misunderstanding
and I was doing my best, but she overreacted. It feels to me like this is something that is
made up by men who get caught. Yeah. The first thing you do when you get caught is you make it
seem like a big misunderstanding, right? You're like, oh, I wasn't shoplifting. I had something in
my hand and then somebody called and I had to run outside. You strategically admit to something
smaller because then it seems like you're being honest because you're like, look, I'm admitting
to this thing I did. It's quite embarrassing. Don't I have egg on my face? Again, I think it's
really important to understand that the only two forms of sexual harassment that are illegal
are quid pro quo harassment, have sex with me or else you're fired, and hostile work environment
standard. And hostile work environment is very difficult to prove. It basically means that there
is something happening at work that is so bad that it interferes with you doing your job and it makes
you as a woman wildly uncomfortable. And to prove a hostile work environment standard, you have to
show that you've made the complaint to the higher ups at management and nothing was done. So there
is no way that the scenario that Garrison Keeler describes could ever have been a legal case,
right? I don't know how lawyers work, but if a woman came to a lawyer and said a guy accidentally
put his hand down my shirt, then apologized, I don't think very many lawyers would actually
take that case because that's not a hostile work environment. I didn't know that. And I think that
that's something that it's a very basic point that a lot of Americans don't know where it's
just you're not going to destroy someone's career over, you know, an allegation that they did a
single thing. That's who they are. There's been cases where isolated incidents have gone to trial
and they've been struck down. So more than half of the cases of sexual harassment filed
every year are thrown out. And of course, we never hear about those cases. You know, this is an
obvious point. But what courts have said is quote, the conduct complained of must illegally poison
the atmosphere from the viewpoint of a reasonable victim. A reasonable victim. This is a controversial
thing. There's something called the reasonable woman standard. Wow. This is how you define the
hostile work environment standard. And this is actually useful in that if there's one person
who's super, super, super sensitive and was like, you wearing your perfume today is sexual
harassment to me, that's not reasonable. So again, this, this stereotype of somebody who's
being hyper sensitive at the workplace courts have already ruled that if it's a specious claim,
then it's a specious claim. It has to be a reasonable person would consider this to be
something that's poisoning the environment. Like the evidence that there's a witch hunt against
men, there just isn't any. I am sure that on planet earth, someone has brought specious claims
of sexual harassment. I'm sure that on planet earth companies have fired people kind of preemptively
to try to avoid a specious lawsuit. The culture has shifted. The needle has become slightly more
sensitive to sexual harassment. I don't think it's anywhere near being over sensitive to sexual
harassment. No, isn't it just the best way to try and preemptively and a culture becoming
more receptive to something by saying, we are too receptive already. Like we, it's, we're already
witch hunting and having all this PC stuff and it's too much backlash.
Yeah, exactly. I mean, yeah. And it's just, it's, it's also funny to think about men
saying like, won't it be terrible if we're living in an America where men have to be
incredibly careful all the time about everything they do at work because, you know, their least
behavior or statement could be misconstrued in a way that would ruin their career and discredit
them in the eyes of their colleagues. And it's like, yeah, what does that sound like?
Like, are you just afraid of working as women? Like I said with Anita Hill, you've got this
cultural shift leads to all these policy changes underneath it. And right now we've got all of
this me too stuff happening against high profile, very, very visible men. But I don't know if we
muster policies behind that anymore. You know, it's great that there's so much press attention
on this. It's great that this has become such a giant scandal, but we can't rely on press
attention to change our laws in the same way we can't rely on court cases to change our laws.
And if your boss is just as monstrous as Harvey Weinstein, but he's not a movie mogul, he's like
an insurance adjuster, this me too moment isn't really helping you. And I know other people
have pointed this out, but we need to get these policy changes behind these cultural shifts or
else there's no point in having them. Do you feel as if we're also living in a time where
we have the power to generate great momentum in terms of cultural conversation? And I think
we're still extremely prone to this sort of cycle of catharsis and burnout around our big issues.
And I don't know if we're less prone to that than we were say in the 90s, but we're capable of
generating a lot of force, you know, with the media, with the press culturally, with social media.
But we're so divorced from government. That's why watching the Ruth Bader Ginsburg documentary is
weird because you have the sense of nostalgia of like looking back at a time when, you know,
just there was a little bit of give or when Orrin Hatch said positive things about Ruth
Bader Ginsburg and you're like, wow, there's nothing to be nostalgic for. But it's like,
you know, being in the Donner party thinking about a really nice piece of toast you had once.
I read this fascinating description of the debate over the 1991 Civil Rights Act,
and it was fascinating to me how civilized it all was that like Republicans wanted a lower
cap on punitive damages and they wanted it to apply to companies with like more than 250 employees
and the Democrats wanted to be more companies of more than 100 employees. And that was the
level that they were debating on that they weren't debating on first principles. It wasn't like
harassment exists. No, it doesn't. Like that's what we debate now. It was like everyone agreed
that sexual harassment was bad. Everyone agreed the law needed to be better. But there were like
these details and some of them were ideological and it was positions that I don't necessarily agree
with. But well, we need to do something like let's agree about the conversation we are having.
So what did you learn?
Well, I learned there's just really not very much money in the sexual harassment accusation
game, although that was never my plan. But I mean $250,000, right? 40% goes to a lawyer,
say 25% for taxes. You'll end up with a little over $100,000. The worst part of that is that I
think of $100,000 as like pin money in America that you keep around so that you don't die of
you know, some form of cancer that your insurance is like sorry, Butterfingers, you know, like that's
not money that I would even think to do something fun with. It's like, okay, now we can all go to
the doctor, you know. That's like pay off your student debt and go to the doctor twice money.
Right. And then you like get a smoothie. So I'm not doing that. What did you learn?
I learned that David Brock is a huge asshole. And I did too.
So why don't you go like egg his house or something? Like go egg his Anita house.
I hope Anita Hill has done that just thrown eggs at his house.
And you know that she would never ever do that. She's probably sitting somewhere
in a nice suit, you know, reading a nice book. And if it's a library book, she would never dog
gear a page even briefly. Like she's just that kind of woman.