xjx388
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2010
- Messages
- 11,392
Not necessarily. We will almost never have direct evidence as you describe; but, we can often have corroborating/circumstantial evidence. With Reade (and Ford) we can't even have much of that. They told people contemporaneously, that's not nothing, but it's also not much. It happened decades ago. Given the lack of evidence and the remoteness of the alleged incident, it's the kind of accusation that each person either has to decide to give some weight to, or they don't. I don't blame people if they reject it out of hand. I don't fault people for thinking, given Biden's creepy behaviour with women, "yeah, that could have happened."By your standard, if there is no supporting evidence -- and what would you need? witnesses? video? -- then the woman's complaint would have to be rejected out of hand.
What I have a problem with is dismissing the claim because you found out that the accuser has some issues with her "credibility." I mean, it's like you didn't even read the part you snipped out. Do you not see the problems with such an approach?
"Word alone" is never enough to take an allegation too seriously. "Bob embezzles from his company!" is an allegation for which there is no evidence for. It's just an allegation. Why should anyone give it much weight at all? Let's say the person making the allegation has an impeccable reputation -no black marks, no history of lies, manipulation or theft. Does this make the allegation more likely to be true? Even if no evidence can be found? I don't think it does. There is either evidence or there isn't.Alternatively, you could look at whether she has a history of telling the truth -- or not -- about important matters. One thing we know about people is that they generally do what has worked for them in the past. If someone has an extensive, proven pattern of lying and fraud, that makes it harder to take her word alone about an explosive allegation for which there is no evidence.
If a prostitute alleges rape, does her illegal activity make her accusation less likely to be true? No it does not.
It's a fault in human nature that women who have "shady" pasts are less likely to believed. Why advocate a strategy that perpetuates this injustice?