It seems the flood of sexual harassment and assault allegations against U.S. Presidential candidate, Donald Trump, this week are making women and even parents of little girls re-think and re-calibrate exactly when a line has been crossed. In particular the line of consent. The line of harassment and of assault.
The allegations against Trump reflect a male privilege culture that says to women “your wishes don’t count, only what I want counts. Your body is not yours, it’s mine.”
Trump has given the world a very clear picture of what so many women face daily – at work, on buses, at home, in bars, just walking down the street. The remarks, the pushing and shoving, the power imbalance, the shame and fear and the silence that meets it all because what can you really do?
Today women are questioning so many interactions with men in so many places. That Christmas party where their boss put his hands up their shirt, the touching by a man in a bar that made them want to cry, the man on the crowded train who kept rubbing himself against their backside.
They want it to stop. They want it to stop with their daughters.
Do we start by teaching little girls that if they are uncomfortable touching anyone, or having anyone touch them including relatives their feelings should be acknowledged? That we should not as Laura June argues in New York Magazine’s The Cut ignore the needs and desires of little girls.
