Quote: sootyj @ 22nd January 2014, 10:47 AM GMTWell if it's someone doing it out of a sense of power and authority over someone else.
Then that's a whole other area of what frankly is assault.
Well yes, but there is power and there is abuse of power, and the lines are blurred. Many women are attracted to powerful men, and welcome advances from them. Doctors marry nurses, and bosses marry secretaries. You cannot legislate to criminalise sexual attraction in the work place. Should an unwelcome sexual advance from someone in a position of authority be in itself an offence?
Surely it should be necessary to be able to demonstrate either that a) the advances persisted beyond the point where it was made clear that they were unwelcome, and b) that the refusal of the advance resulted in negative consequences.
In some of the DLT incidents it does not seem that the women made clear that the advances were unwelcome, apparently because they were concerned, rightly or wrongly that this might result in negative consequences. That is where the world has moved on; if this happened to day the women would be far more comfortable standing up for themselves. But back then deluded old DLT may have been genuinely oblivious of the offence he was causing.
There are obvious wrong-uns, and I have no real view on which side of that line DLT stands, but I suspect the more prevalent issue is middle-aged manchildren refusing to grow up, and persisting in an outdated self-image that leads them into the delusional belief that they are still attractive to women half their age.