That's actually organic to my point -- people in society are taking speculation and accusation as the same thing as proof.
The question I also think about is what happens in the cases were you don't have any hard evidence to prove or disaprove a accusation?
The problem with using accusation as proof is now the burden is on the accused to provide evidence he or she didn't do it. In the meantime, they may be punished anyway by the mob or those succumbing to the pressures from it.
I'm not talking about speculation though. I'm talking about the words that came out of his own mouth. When someone says they did something, it's not speculation or an accusation, it's an admission. Whether he assaulted the one specific person who is accusing him is actually irrelevant to what he already admitted to.
If there isn't enough evidence to a legal case then nothing happens legally. I'm just glad the Stern interview is out there so people can at least make up their own minds based on his own words even if he never has any legal consequences.
Addressed in the previous 2 points.
I'm saying his making those statements on The Howard Stern Show doesn't strike me by themselves as an admission of anything.
and it's also possible that his interpretation of consent is different than yours or the legal interpretation of consent. The more serious allegation is that he drugged the accuser and took advantage of him. That sounds more serious but there's no prior history of him saying he's ever done that before.There are 2 ways your statement can be taken. One is that you think non consensual groping is not a big deal, because that is what he described doing. The other is that you think what he described was just a joke. I'm hoping the later, but feel free to clarify.
The problem though is this: IF he was in fact joking when he described non consensual groping, HE should be telling us it was a joke. But he ISN'T saying that, which is why your position blows my mind. He SAID he did something. It's obviously been taken by many to support recent allegations, which he denies. But he ISN'T addressing what he said he did on Stern. Why would you assume someone is joking when they aren't even saying so themselves?
Just to make sure we're on the same page:
I am *NOT* saying George is guilty of the specific alleged assault currently in the news.
I *AM* saying George is guilty of the assaults he admitted to himself.
If you want to believe he was switching between telling the truth in his opinions about Weinstein/Trump to suddenly joking about himself assaulting people, that's fine.
But honestly, if he was joking about sexually assaulting people HE is the one that should be telling us it was a joke and not real. Unfortunately he isn't saying that.
There are 2 ways your statement can be taken. One is that you think non consensual groping is not a big deal, because that is what he described doing. The other is that you think what he described was just a joke. I'm hoping the later, but feel free to clarify.
The problem though is this: IF he was in fact joking when he described non consensual groping, HE should be telling us it was a joke. But he ISN'T saying that, which is why your position blows my mind. He SAID he did something. It's obviously been taken by many to support recent allegations, which he denies. But he ISN'T addressing what he said he did on Stern. Why would you assume someone is joking when they aren't even saying so themselves?
and it's also possible that his interpretation of consent is different than yours or the legal interpretation of consent.
The more serious allegation is that he drugged the accuser and took advantage of him. That sounds more serious but there's no prior history of him saying he's ever done that before.
But in the event that Takei did commit the acts, why was he being so judgemental of the other people doing it? Others like Donald Trump have been known to be overly judgemental too. Does being overly judgemental about someone else's conduct a signal that they are harboring guilt of their own?
He most likely has a lawyer telling him what to say and not say at this point. It could just be a matter of time.
Been over this already, I mean when he says he grabbed someone against their will he may mean explicit consent but was with an intimate partner in his home who he knew wouldn't mind and would probably approve of it. LIke I said before, you may be reading too much into his statements on the stern show. He didn't go into great detail and it sounds like you're filling in the blanks here and thereFortunately his interpretation doesn't matter. If I walk into a store and steal something, my interpretation of stealing won't save me. Plus, he himself said if someone was afraid he would grope them to try to persuade them. He damned himself with his own statements implying he knew how the person felt and still acted anyway.
okay so you don't know how Takei's psychology works and are speculating a bit on what he meant on the stern showIt's an interesting question to be sure, but I have no idea how someone else's psychology works.
Fortunately his interpretation doesn't matter. If I walk into a store and steal something, my interpretation of stealing won't save me. Plus, he himself said if someone was afraid he would grope them to try to persuade them. He damned himself with his own statements implying he knew how the person felt and still acted anyway.
Yeah, I don't know anything about that, so I'm sticking to what I heard him say for myself.
It's an interesting question to be sure, but I have no idea how someone else's psychology works.
Most likely. Either way, let me use an illustration. We all remember Trump's infamous tape about "grabbing". And we all remember his excuses about locker room talk, meaning some sick combination of joking/boasting/exaggerating/whatever. Now, imagine for a moment that Trump didn't even offer an excuse or rebuttal to the tape at all. Would you honestly be trying to defend his comments as a joke, when he himself wasn't even saying so? Because that is exactly what you are doing for Takei. He admitted to behavior that is sexual assault on Stern. HE hasn't even said he was joking, yet for some reason you are saying he was. Do you at least see my point?
okay so you don't know how Takei's psychology works and are speculating a bit on what he meant on the stern show
I think the difference is we all knew before that video that Trump was a terrible person.
Nope. I'm not speculating what he "meant", I'm discussing the words he actually said. He actually described groping people who were afraid. That in itself is sexual assault regardless of his own personal views on consent or assault.
Valid reasoning. But personally, I can't assume someone is joking when they describe groping people who are afraid. If Takei wants to speak up and make the argument it was all a joke, I'll consider that reasoning when he gives it. Until then I can only take him at his word.
He mentioned fear or skittishness so we can think about what causes fear. Maybe he was with a dude that never been with another dude before and that dude was naturally afraid of the unknown so Takei took initiative. Something happened in his home sometime in his life that involved him grabbing someone's balls during foreplay. Maybe it ended good for them both, maybe not.The clip starts off with Howard Stern talking to Takei about the Harvey Weinstein scandal and pointing out the irony that we have a president in the White House (aka Donald Trump) who “bragged about grabbing pussies.”
“Did you ever grab anyone by the cock against their will?” Stern asked Takei.
Takei remained silent.
“Uh oh,” Stern reacted to the non-answer. “You’ve never sexually harassed anyone, have you?”
The Star Trek star began awkwardly laughing.
“Some people are kind of… umm… skittish,” Takei responded. “Oh maybe… um… afraid and you’re trying to persuade.”
“Do we need to call the police?!?” Stern exclaimed. “What are you saying, George? You’ve never held a job over someone if they didn’t touch your cock.”
“No, I never did that,” Takei answered. In regards to Weinstein, he added, “It’s not about sex, it’s about power.”
“But you didn’t do this grabbing at work,” Stern’s co-host Robin Quivers asked.
“No, it wasn’t at work,” he clarified. “It was either in my home- he came to my home.”
“So what do you mean?” Stern asked. “You mean some guy who was hesitating to have sex with you and then you gave him a gentle squeeze on the balls or something?”
“More than a gentle…” Takei laughed. “But it didn’t involve power over the other.”
milking his sentences in that clip aren't you?
Here's the conversation:
He mentioned fear or skittishness so we can think about what causes fear. Maybe he was with a dude that never been with another dude before and that dude was naturally afraid of the unknown so Takei took initiative. Something happened in his home sometime in his life that involved him grabbing someone's balls during foreplay. Maybe it ended good for them both, maybe not.Or you can just assume the worst but it's all just speculation over what his words mean.
Someone can be nervous about something and still want to do that same something at the same time. People need more imagination rather than have me spell it out for them to conger up hypotheticals of non-criminal activity. Or just take my word for it that there exists non-criminal scenarios that can justify those sentences as non-criminal acts.I still have to agree with JackSparrowJive that it is not a good thing to sexually touch someone if they are nervous or "skittish". George probably didn't mean anything by it but that does sound like sexual assault and really he should have known better even thirty six years ago. I hate to say it but the accusation is sounding more and more credible to me.![]()
Someone can be nervous about something and still want to do that same something at the same time. People need more imagination rather than have me spell it out for them to conger up hypotheticals of non-criminal activity. Or just take my word for it that there exists non-criminal scenarios that can justify those sentences as non-criminal acts.
Someone can be nervous about something and still want to do that same something at the same time. People need more imagination rather than have me spell it out for them to conger up hypotheticals of non-criminal activity. Or just take my word for it that there exists non-criminal scenarios that can justify those sentences as non-criminal acts.
That's because you're having trouble imagining scenarios where it's not criminal. The whole point was that he didn't go into specifics. So why assume the worst? There's not enough information within those few sentences to come to any conclusions unless you want to fill in the blanks with your own conceptions of what he meant.I just can't get past how horrible what you are saying sounds applied to a man/woman situation. If any man said he groped women who were afraid to try to persuade them it would make him a predator. But because Takei is talking about other men you are trying to justify what he said. There is no way in the world you would be doing the same thing in the context of a man bragging about doing that to women. Your double standard is truly horrible.
That's because you're having trouble imagining scenarios where it's not criminal. The whole point was that he didn't go into specifics. So why assume the worst? There's not enough information within those few sentences to come to any conclusions unless you want to fill in the blanks with your own conceptions of what he meant.
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