Lem wrote: ↑Thu Apr 29, 2021 11:28 pm
There has been a bit of proof. In the text exchanges posted, a superior did seem to ask a woman who worked for him to leave her job because of their romantic entanglement. If that is an accurate reading, then regardless of any impropriety on the part of the woman, that would constitute sexual harassment on the part of the superior at my university.
If I understand the chain of events and your point above, then it was the asking to leave part where JD made a crucial error and potentially crossed the line into harassment. (??)
Prior to that, it appears to have been her chasing him. Would JD have had a legitimate harassment claim at that point, not the other way around? Would he would have been smarter, at that point, to confess everything to the board, claiming harassment first? I mean, assuming the consensual relationship up to that point was nothing more than bad judgment on both of their parts.
Or is it just reality that in his power position, any relationship constitutes harassment, regardless of who initiated and/or however consensual?