The self-immolation, the most non-violent form of protest, no longer works. After Aaron Bushnell that I have heard about, there ware two more attempts that I didn’t. (Matt Nelson and Samuel Mena Jr)

Recent events have shown us that violent protest still works, but it got me thinking; When was the last time someone resigned from position of power due to social pressure?

I have this hunch that shame worked in the past, but now PR departments and relentless pursuit of money has removed social acceptance from an equation.

  • snooggums@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Al Franken was pressured out of congress for a bunch of spurious ‘sexual’ allegations before he had a chance to defend himself. Mostly 'holding a waist wrong during a photo op or accusations of unwanted kissing, but with scant details and mostly presented as misunderstandings. Hell, most of them sounded like someone considering regular photo op posing to be scandalous as none of the allegations included someone saying he was being coy or hinting that it was intentional, just 'bumped a body part that is common during a photo op and that he held still while the photo was being taken…

    Yes, we should trust accusers long enough to look into issues, but that doesn’t mean someone shouldn’t be able to defend themselves against the allegations. Franken was railroaded out of congress by Dems before he had a chance to defend himself.

    • 4am@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      well, there was this.

      Still not as bad as some others have done who are still in office.

      • snooggums@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Like the sex offenders on SCOTUS, who actually physically molested or raped women instead of a little off color humor that would be fine between good friends but could be crossing boundaries.