Women Empowerment in the Age of the #MeToo Movement When the #MeToo Movement arrived following accusations made against Hollywood Mogul Harvey Weinstein, an avalanche of accusations fell down upon the heads of male celebrities, CEOs, and executives who occupied positions of power and used those positions to either ask for sexual favors from women subordinates or pushed themselves onto unsuspecting or unwilling participants for sexual favor. Women across the Internet began to hashtag their Twitter responses with #MeToo to show their solidarity with other women who had been made the victims of sexual assault. It was widely viewed as a movement towards the empowerment of women, as they were using their voices to be heard and to challenge a system in which men used their power to subordinate women in a demeaning and non-consensual manner (Ralph). However, as the Movement has picked up steam, many voices have criticized it. Roseanne Barr, for instance, recently called a woman who exchanged sexual favors to advance her career a “ho” and fixed the label to women like the politician and presidential candidate Kamala Harris (Henderson). When Christine Blasey Ford and Democrats mounted an unverifiable attack on the character of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, many saw it is the left using the movement or rather exploiting the movement for purely political purposes. Thus, the impact of the movement has been two-pronged: on the one hand it has brought more attention to women’s predicament in society and in the workplace and provided them with a platform to voice their concerns. On the other hand, it has provided a culture of accusation in which people’s lives and careers can be derailed even though there is no evidence that what the person is accused of actually transpired. On the one hand, many people were of the opinion that all women should be heard and believed—and...
This paper will look at both sides of the #MeToo Movement and show how it has had both good and bad effects so far.Works Cited
Elsesser, Kim. “Googlers To Walk Out Over Sexual Harassment: Here Are The Lessons For Google.” Forbes, 2018. https://www.forbes.com/sites/kimelsesser/2018/10/31/googlers-walk-out-over-sexual-harassment-here-are-the-lessons-for-google/#2c0deb477cdb
Henderson, Cydney. “Roseanne Barr calls #MeToo accusers 'hoes,' slams Sen. Kamala
Harris, Christine Blasey Ford.” USAToday, 2019. https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/people/2019/03/03/roseanne-barr-calls-metoo-accusers-hoes-slams-sen-kamala-harris/3048973002/
O'Neil, Adrienne, et al. "The# MeToo movement: an opportunity in public health?." The Lancet 391.10140 (2018): 2587-2589.
Ralph, Sarah. "# MeToo and# TimesUp-what now for employers?." Governance Directions 70.3 (2018): 140.
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