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My View: What I see as the Heart of the Matter
The last line on
drwex most excellent summation of his views is what I wonder any social community can come to some basic agreement of...
If we cannot find a way to work with each other - despite our different frameworks - to deal with an abuser and social gatherings then we have a pretty deep problem.
In my LiveJournal alone (and I certainly don't have the largest of friends list I know of...), my flist crosses the boundaries of PolyBoston, the local SpinJams, the Burner Crowd, the Kink Community, Community Theater and the MIT Suspects crowd. More than one of them has struggled with this issue and that is a lot of points of view, a lot of history and a lot of different lifestyles.*
So in an attempt to boil an extremely complex situation and discussion into it's simplest form, I am asking for ideas.
Putting aside recent events and escalating disagreements, how would you want to deal with an abuser and social gatherings within your social circle?
Guidelines to keep in mind:
*(ETA-Forgot to put this at the bottom) I am a historian at heart and have some very passionate ideas on personal history that I may expound upon in a separate post.
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If we cannot find a way to work with each other - despite our different frameworks - to deal with an abuser and social gatherings then we have a pretty deep problem.
In my LiveJournal alone (and I certainly don't have the largest of friends list I know of...), my flist crosses the boundaries of PolyBoston, the local SpinJams, the Burner Crowd, the Kink Community, Community Theater and the MIT Suspects crowd. More than one of them has struggled with this issue and that is a lot of points of view, a lot of history and a lot of different lifestyles.*
So in an attempt to boil an extremely complex situation and discussion into it's simplest form, I am asking for ideas.
Putting aside recent events and escalating disagreements, how would you want to deal with an abuser and social gatherings within your social circle?
Guidelines to keep in mind:
- Don't make specific references to people or history*.
- This is in regards to gatherings in private settings, ie a person's home.
- One person's friend could be another person's abuser.
*(ETA-Forgot to put this at the bottom) I am a historian at heart and have some very passionate ideas on personal history that I may expound upon in a separate post.
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Uh yeah
Yeah, once I figure this out I'll be sure to say something. Right now I'm trying to hold onto the idea that we are none of us saints, while respecting the views of people who want a hard line of the "no abuser should ever be given the chance to repeat their offense on the innocent".
This is the kind of thing I've been losing sleep over. Thanks for trying to help focus discussion on the important things.
Re: Uh yeah
Re: Uh yeah
(no subject)
Yes.
Re: Yes.
Re: Yes.
Re: Uh yeah
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I have stopped inviting, or declined to invite, to my home at least two people who have behaved violently or abusively to others in my circle.
I have also chosen to continue inviting someone who behaved violently toward someone of my acquaintance who does not come to my parties--in that case I discussed the incident (which did not involve the police or any legal action) with my friend and am reasonably confident that it was an isolated incident to which the other person's behavior contributed substantially, and that my friend has taken steps to address his behavior in that situation and its underlying causes with professionals.
As a host, I feel responsible for the behavior of my guests in my home and, to some degree, for essentially saying "these are cool people" about and to everyone who attends. Certainly in the particular case mentioned above I would feel responsible if my friend were to behave violently at the party and somewhat responsible if he were to, for example, establish a relationship based on acquaintance at my home that later became violent.
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As for smaller, specific-invite events, I will make sure that invitees are made aware of the proposed guest list and allow them to make their own decisions. In cases where potential conflicts or triggers arise, I'll be happy to act as intermediary to ensure that parties at odds won't coexist at my events.
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Private-space abusers feel a lot more complicated to manage in public space. At minimum, I feel there's a responsibility of a community to make sure that immediate potential victims are aware of relevant histories so that they can take measures to maintain their own safety, including avoiding entrusting their safety to the abuser in private space. It's also totally reasonable for individuals to approach community members and say that they will not attend events attended by *specific* known abusers and to say that they will not attend events to which those abusers are invited. This is appropriate ostracism in that those who feel the abusers should be ostracized can participate in ostracism while not forbidding others from forming friendships with abusers. Saying that you never want to attend an event to which *any* known abuser is invited seems less reasonable to me, especially since different people are going to have different thresholds for what constitutes known abuse (both what is abuse, and what level of evidence is required for it to be known), but ultimately that comes down to individual judgment. In a large community, universal mutual trust is impossible, and as you say one person's abuser will inevitably be other people's friend.
Things get messy when a potential victim has been warned of possible abuse and nevertheless decides to trust a known private-space abuser in private space. This starts to turn into more of a "closest friends" matter, where people who know the potential victim well might take them asside, but unless there is obvious and immediate physical danger I think there's a point where people need to be permitted to make their own mistakes. NB: this should not be taken in any way as excusing the known abuser if said person proceeds to violate the trust that's been given them, whether it was deserved or not. Ultimately, abuse is an action, not an identity, and even somebody with a known history of abusing should be held responsible for *every* instance of abuse. Similarly, no victim should be blamed for a lapse in judgment. Everyone makes mistakes.
Regardless of public of private space, any individual who feels immediately physically threatened should not be forbidden from taking whatever measures they need to take in order to feel safe. This would include leaving the space, seeking a chaperone/escort, physical self-defense, and/or calling the police. One such example is if someone departing space for their own safety fears being followed by the abuser.
(no subject)
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I'm going to assume the gatherings in this question are at my home, since that's the context I have some control over. Short form: There are people connected to the community whom I want nothing to do with, and whom I do not want in my personal space, who will probably try to come if there is an open-invite party. Therefore, I do not and probably never will hold open-invite parties in my home.
I do my best to not invite people to a gathering when I know they will have issues with each other. On the other hand, the invite list for my parties is generally known to the entire list, so if you're invited, and you have an issue with another possible attendee, then you can make your own decisions about whether you'd like to attend. (I'll make the subject of another rant entirely about those people who *don't* want me to reveal the fact that they're invited. Gah.)
I don't tolerate abuse. If I believe someone to have abused my friends, they lose all access to me & my home, and likely any good feeling I ever had about them. If some incident tries to get started under my roof, I have no compunction about calling people on their shit -- and evicting them from the event, if necessary. If someone tries something on *me* and I feel threatened and/or unable to remove myself from the situation, hell yeah I'm calling the police, and putting them in jail if possible.
from another comment thread entirely: personally i think there could be a little less tolerance of people's insane crap in the wider community and a little more calling to a standard of behavior without losing anything much in the doing of it.
(no subject)
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To me, the important thing is that directors of other games know this guy's name. "This is something you should know: this guy has been accused of serious transgressions at $game1. The directors at $game1 are $name1, $name2, and here are their email addresses if you have questions for them. The directors who resigned over the handling of this are blahblahblah. Now you know."
Sufficient? Not necessarily: some other games could have directors who don't give a damn, the guy goes there, history repeats itself. But I am unwilling to go to the effort to spread this guy's name to anyone who might be in or potentially join the larp community. But the minimal effort, definitely.
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I am unsympathetic to someone who says "give me a second chance". No. Ignominy is what happens to people who do bad things, and if you're looking for redemption, you'll bear the consequences of what you did without complaint. If I'm still willing to talk to you, you are currently experiencing a second chance: don't spoil it by whining. Too often, people say "aww c'mon, gimme a second chance" when they really mean, "aww c'mon, this change thing is hard, how about you stop asking me to act differently".
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In the past, I've been okay with cutting people off. What I've been trying to do in the present is to cut people off sans rancor. I don't need to get all excited, or angry, or anything. What I can actually do is rather limited, so only focus on that, and don't waste emotional energy on it. Do what I need to do, and move on.
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I'm giving it thought; in the meantime, I am reading and listening.
::and sending hugs, just cuz::
(no subject)
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I suspect you know where I stand on this, but in case it's not clear, I fall very firmly on the side of protecting the abused here. That means that the abuser shouldn't be welcome in my home, and shouldn't be welcome by anyone reasonably expecting or interested in my visiting their home.
I'm not opposed to the notion of contrition or rehabilitation, but those are very different concepts from just giving someone another chance. And while I do realize that this is something that by definition requires the abuser having friends and connections, I don't see the victim as someone who should have to shoulder this burden (nor do I take for granted than an abuser is inherently capable of contrition or of being rehabilitated or reformed).
(And as always, I'm a big advocate of awareness of Geek Social Fallacies and The Missing Stair when having these conversations.)
(Note: Will be at ReaderCon all day today and tomorrow, so my time on LJ is limited.)
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Honestly I'm kind of envious of people like
I might feel more confident in the forgive part if I had more faith in the accuracy of the evaluations for treatment programs for individuals such as these.
As it is, my experiences have told me it's pretty easy to "pass" these tests if you want to do so.
Of course, it's easy to be hardliner on a stranger rather than your best friend right?
That said, a general rule I have for people I'm close to is if you own your damage and are actively taking steps to work on it then you still get to be part of my life in some way. This might be phone and email conversations only or me going to their place alone. However, without clearing a much higher bar than that I would not feel comfortable giving them access to other people in my life or my communities and thus probably won't be allowed at my house.
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But I endorse a model where I can be understood to endorse, at least by default, the character of everyone I invite to, or decline to disinvite from, my parties.
Which I think requires that I either disinvite, or decline to invite, anyone whose character I have reason to endorse less-than-default.