I know the internet is probably over this, but since I'm stubborn, have a bad-temper, and don't easily let go of grudges, here is flaming self-expression of my pent-up rage, accumulated from years of being gas-lighted in Silicon Valley:
This tweet-pic is almost laughable really. Should dorky, feckless, unkempt, smelly men-children who don't know how to converse or interact with females, haven't advanced much socially beyond the mentality of 15-year-old boys, and are sexually desperate, even warrant this much attention or sympathy? I understand that immaturity is prevalent in the Valley, but men should really learn to keep this shit to themselves and stay professional. In fact, I applaud Adria Richards for her courage. And perhaps for her patience. She did what she did because she was tired.
In my opinion, this was a measured response. These men were being rude and destroying her experience of the conference by expressing their juvenile, dudely privilege. Richards blogged, "Have you ever had a group of men sitting right behind you making a joke that caused you to feel uncomfortable? Well, that just happened this week but instead of shrinking down in my seat, I did something about it." She was spurred to action in part by a photo of a young girl on the stage at the time and thought the men behind her would make it impossible for this hypothetical girl to learn programming. How sad.
If this kind of behavior (which does persist in start-up culture) was truly eroding her professional experience and her ability to do her work, causing psychological distress, and even inciting anxiety and concern for other females entering the tech space, then her reaction was a relatively tame response to persistent egregiousness. She was doing all of us a favor by making an observation. But this observation led to a misogynist flame war where she was called practically every racial, sexist slur name under the sun, had her personal information released, and received threats of violence such as a photo of a bloody, beheaded woman, bound and stripped with the caption "When I am done." She was also fired.
In this blog post I would like to call upon women everywhere to recognize sexism while it is happening and to resist gas-lighting as much as possible. For people who don't know what gas-lighting is, it is a psychological technique employed to make a victim doubt her own memory, perception, and sanity.
The term is a reference to the 1944
MGM film, Gaslight, starring Ingrid Bergman, in which a husband attempts to convince his wife and others that she is crazy. He does so by setting the gaslights in their home to flicker off and on and insisting that Bergman is imagining things every time she reacts to it. Men will often "gaslight" women after making sexist remarks, presenting false information that invalidates her natural instincts in order to alter the female's perception of herself and deflect blame. For a deeper dive, read
A Message to Women from a Man: You Are Not Crazy.
I know that resistance is hard to do, especially in a climate where the majority culture is instructed by a cavalier, hacker mentality that encourages men (who wouldn't otherwise be able) to express their latent masculinity. But you should never decry your own valid feelings or allow men to twist legitimate expression of your discomfort into an opportunity to make you feel crazy.
Most of the time, it has nothing to do with you, really. Sexism and gas-lighting is a projection of the quintessentially insecure man and his own reality. The easiest way for a man to artificially inflate his own sense of power is to make you feel inferior. It's like how small dogs tend to bark the most. Most of the time, it has little to do with you and more to do with them. Small men love power and any opportunity to make you feel worse is a win. So don't let them.
Examples of sexism and/or gas-lighting (since life is a cliche, this happens more often than we think):
1. "You're fat! Just kidding!"
2. "You're sexy." If you aren't my boyfriend or you work with me, what the fuck.
3. Ass grabbing. This just shouldn't happen. Especially if it is at a company holiday party.
4. Uncomfortable questions about dating history and relationships.
5. Attempts to be a life counselor (best achieved by probing for self-deprecating fodder).
6. Being asked out or receiving unsolicited gifts in a professional relationship.
Men need to grow the fuck up. Please do us all a favor and speak up the next time you experience or recognize sexism and resultant gas-lighting behavior. It's our responsibility to speak up.