In Full Damage-Control Mode, CBC Urges: It’s Not Jian
Ghomeshi’s Problem—it’s Yours
One of the most shameful things about the Ghomeshi situation
is that the CBC, in full damage-control mode, is trying to pretend the story is
not really about one of its pampered and lucubrated longtime employees, but
rather that Jian, poor Jian, is just a symptom of a much wider societal
crisis. In other words—no-one at CBC is
or was responsible for Ghomeshi—he’s just a guy who represents 10s of thousands
across the country today.
All this may be.
#beenraped/neverreported is worthwhile looking at—when would it not
be? But conflating it with Ghomeshi to
get CBC off the hook for not dealing with a known predator in its midst for
years and years is, if anything, reflective of Ghomeshi himself, who conflated
in his Facebook post his healthy kink life with vengeful prudes out to get him.
This is craven in the extreme. If the CBC really wanted to address issues of
sexual violence, or non-reporting of assaults, or how the legal and judicial
systems prevent abused women from coming forward, then it has tremendous
resources at its disposal to do just that.
It could get The Passionate Eye
onto it. It could hire a
documentarian/commission a documentary.
It could put together an Ideas
series. If CBC hasn’t done such things
already, yet is now treating the Ghomeshi story as simply one troubling little
symptom of a massive mud-spectred (I draw on Jian’s Facebook page for that one)
national malaise, then it obviously wasn’t doing much at all in the past to fulfill
its journalistic mandates.
For shame.
I can’t speak for Mansbridge or Mesley or Tremonti or
whoever at the CBC, but as they all dutifully led their panels about non-reporting,
I really kind of felt that their hearts weren’t in it and that they’d been
ordered by their bosses to do this
panel now! I just said I could be wrong. Maybe Mesley wrote all her own
questions. Who knows? But there was no
urgency in any of the panelistic/CBC interviewing responses—this was Operation
Ghomeshi Coverup in full flight.
This story isn’t
about the broader story of violence towards women in society. It is about Ghomeshi. As I have already said, any statistics aside,
if an average guy serially lured women to his home so as to assault them and
secretly videotape them, then that guy would
do time. If he wouldn’t, then perhaps any lawyer or judge or cop or academic or
actual offender or, fine, talk-show host, could write in to say just how and
why not. This story is about over 9 women who have now come forward about *1* guy, and to pretend there aren't more is Pollyannaish. Further, to pretend that this egregious case can simply be blended into some sort of general "violence against women" theme can only militate against ameliorating situations for the general populace. Ghomeshi won't do time. But his story, and the way CBC has handled it, will make it seem like "oh, yeah, that violence against women stuff--I hear Ghomeshi was into it; worked for him. His bosses protected him. No probs." The Pollyannaish theory ought to be that not 1 case of assault is ok, but the CBC is saying that, since it's at least 9 so far, we might as well call it general and not specific and blame "society" instead of an offender. In this way, the CBC is working against women coming forward.
And yes, I know, any and everything is just “alleged.” Nothing is proven. Just alleged.
Got it. That’s all it is—alleged.
Very, very, very few people go through life and can look
back on it and say that they never experienced any unpleasant sexual or
sexually exploitative situations. But
Ghomeshi’s case isn’t everyone’s case—it’s a serial case that was enabled and
enabled by the CBC; as the Q
executive producer who fielded a harassment complaint from a young female
member of Ghomeshi’s “team” aptly said, there was no way to pursue anything
against Ghomeshi because Ghomeshi’s show was “a f—-ing juggernaut” (http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/10/30/q-journalist-who-alleges-ghomeshi-threatened-to-hate-f-her-says-she-complained-to-boss-in-2010/). In other words, Ghomeshi was too big to fire,
and that gave him carte blanche with
young women and made him untouchable by CBC brass. He knew it, they knew it, and now he’s trying
to say he did nothing wrong, and CBC is trying to say it’s everyone’s problem,
not theirs. For shame.
Take the case of
Reva Seth, one of Ghomeshi’s late accusers.
She is, or became, a lawyer. Not a talk-show host, a lawyer. You might think that
someone such as her, a member in good standing in the legal profession, would
have a very clear and active desire to support her profession and try to
prevent or prosecute the kinds of behaviours of which Ghomeshi now stands
accused, and of which she now accuses him.
But she didn’t. Ghomeshi was too
much of a celebrity, one that CBC carefully groomed and nurtured. If a female
lawyer was unwilling to pursue action against him, then who
would? No, this story isn’t about some
general societal problem, though if it makes us think about and confront one,
good. If Reva Seth were assaulted by any
old Joe Who, I suspect Joe Who wouldn’t have kept seeing his star rise, as
Jian’s did.
An awful lot of CBC people must have held their noses around
Jian, and one understands that the public broadcaster was desperate to have a
popular show of any kind, even if that never really was its chief mandate. But an awful lot of people at CBC have an
awful lot to answer for, and as a supporter of public broadcasting, I am
disgusted and ashamed by CBC’s attempts to pretend the Ghomeshi story was a
national societal one, and not one that involved one of its most attentively
preened employees.
Or, put another way, if the CBC really wants to get to the
bottom of why women don’t report assaults, then the first place it could start
interviewing would be in its own boardrooms and executive suites. Then it could “Go Public” or “Go (and talk to
the) Public” and do the kind of journalism for which it has historically been
honoured.
--zr
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