While using public transport earlier today on my way home, I stumbled upon a noteworthy article while browsing for the latest in news on my phone. It
came after I accidentally tapped an advert from another website, but it must have been my destiny to do that, because given many of my threads over
the last week, this one was gold. I noticed so many glaringly obvious logical fallacies and misrepresentions of issues, which is now — sadly for me
— normal when reading normal MSM articles.
CLICK HERE to
read the article in question and, if you feel you are a critical thinker, see how you feel while digging into this. Otherwise, please continue
as I perform my own analysis of the article down below.
I did a full commentary on the article, which was difficult to sit through — even though it did not take long to do. I will now present the
worst
of the worst section (the "Lisa Heap" one clearly being the most awful to read through) which includes Lisa Heap's response to a newspaper article
and her persistence in representing and helping "victims" (like those mentioned earlier in the original article) "achieve justice" for women
everywhere. The following extract is an exact copy from the original, the only changes are underlined key words and squared brackets to enclose MY
commentary:
Title: ‘My Boss Told Me To Dress Sluttily To Get A Client’
Date: April 11, 2017.
[My Article/Commentary Start]
'Women defined by the way they look'
Lisa Heap, the Women's Lead Organiser at the Victorian Trades Council Union says she hears stories like these almost every day. “We’re still
seeing women [and men] as being defined by the way they look at work,” she says. [You mean men
aren't judged on their appearance in the
workforce as well?] “And, as stupid as it sounds seeing as women make up half the workforce [which means your following conclusion doesn't seem
stupid, it actually is stupid], it’s because women are still seen as an
oddity in relation to work.”
In March, The Daily Mail took this
leering attitude to new heights when it published a shocking [for the content, or the issue?] front page
comparing British Prime Minister Teresa May’s perfectly uneventful outfit to that of her Scottish counterpart, Nicola Sturgeon, whose dress
choice [would she ware the same outfit at home or if she could choose what to wear?] was similar. The paper [as in the editor, opinion piece
writer or what?] treated them like
exotic birds in a zoo, [dehumanising them because their outfits are being critiqued?] critiquing every inch
of their appearance from the slimness of their legs to the fabric of their clothes. “So, is this proof the fashion world fails to cater for career
women and there really are so few options for a high-powered female that everyone ends up dressing the same?” [Is the newspaper aware that 99% of
men in similar positions of power choose to wear suits when out in public? Maybe they forgot that before you took the bait.]
The newspaper asked coyly.
Well no. It’s proof [its not even strong evidence at this stage] that
once again [we are reverting back to the past?] women aren’t taken
seriously in the workplace, and are looked at like they’re
freaks - even if they’re two of the most powerful humans on the planet. [Oh
dear, obvious hyperbole, so I'll let it slide.]
The law says 'no'
Australian law is supposed to protect
women [actually, it is supposed to protect people] from having to face the
perpetual barrier of
appearance in their workplaces and let them
get on with the job. But Heap says the law is largely toothless [not
yet, in your eyes] as
very few women ever speak up if they feel they’re being asked to change their clothes, hair or makeup in a discriminatory way, [why do we hear so
many cases of it happening? This would need to be happening the majority of workplaces to be true] for the very real fear of being
persecuted.
[Did you mean punished? It's a little different from persection, even if hyperbole is permitted.]
“I’ve represented women in these sorts of discrimination situations and the system does not work well for them at all,” Lisa Heap says. [The law
is now your primary target, isn't it?] “If you make a complaint you’re
potentially jeopardising your employment if you’re still working
there. [You cannot be fired for making a complaint due to request for you to change your dress code.] If you’re not there and you’ve left you’re
likely
only [I bet a law change would help that.] going to be looking for compensation or an apology. We know compensation amounts are very low
and it’s a very difficult process.” [almost as if you need it to
not be a delusion in order to win, right?] Plus, she says, you risk
getting the
reputation as ‘difficult’ with future employers. “It’s a damaging, difficult process,” Heap says. [Gee, I can think of
similar reputation damages to men that are far worse in accusation and in actual consequences, but I'll refrain, for now.]
In fact, when a woman does speak up it makes headline news around the world, because it’s so unusual. [You should tell the author of this thread
that, she used anecdotal accounts to show the same thing.] Last year UK receptionist Nicola Thorp was
fired for refusing to wear high heels at
PricewaterhouseCoopers. [She was not fired, she was sent home without pay. No mention of the "appearance guidelines" featured in her contract either.]
After collecting 150,000 petition signatures [what % of the population is that again?] she
forced the UK government to investigate the way
bosses [you mean female bosses too?] treated women at work in terms of their appearance. “It is fair to say that what we found shocked us,”
Labour MP Helen Jones
who headed the committee said. “We found
attitudes [not laws?] that belonged more, I was going to say in the
1950s but probably the 1850s might be more accurate [attitudes about dress code have changed dramatically since then, I'll concede that] than in the
21st century.“
[Continued: 1 of 2]
edit on 28/4/2017 by Dark Ghost because: (no reason given)