Link of the day: MeToo heroines about how their lives have changed
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Some time later, several former colleagues appealed to me, but even so, there was a feeling that every heterosexual man with whom I worked in Vice was afraid that maybe he, too, was harassing me at some stage, and therefore it’s better not to say anything at all, it’s better not to apologize so that it doesn’t look like a confession of guilt. I think men are so accustomed to the current alignment of forces in the working environment that they do not understand that what they are doing irreversibly harms women.
Now I don’t start even close relations with my colleagues. I go to work, perform my tasks and return home. At that time, when work became my home, and colleagues — family, I lost everything. And I lost myself. More of this will not happen. "(Journalist and former Vice employee Helen Donahue)
"How Saying #MeToo changed their lives", The New York Times
The New York Times is one of the publications that caused the rise of the #MeToo movement: in October last year, they published the first investigation of the harassment by Harvey Weinstein. A few months later, they decided to return to the topic and talk to those who publicly opposed Weinstein and other activists and activists of #MeToo about what happened during that time and how their lives had changed. Twenty women and men took part in the material, including actresses Ashley Judd and Gwyneth Paltrow, businesswoman Lindsey Meyer, singer Vanessa Carlton, model Kenny Sale, classical musician Chris Brown and many others.
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