Other than that, "Guys, don't do that" was offensive unless she just meant, don't do it to her.
You said it is a myth that “People think RW didn't have a right to her reaction to elevator guy” but here you are saying that her reaction was actually
offensive if she was indeed pushing for a general norm against that particular sort of boorish behavior.
From the video alone, I can see the possibility that she was talking specifically to her fanboys, essentially asking them to stop sexualizing her at cons. In the associated blogpost, though, she takes a more general moralistic approach, saying that “…people need to be aware of how their comments might make someone feel extraordinarily uncomfortable and even feel as though they are in danger.”
It is entirely possible, of course, that she made the leap from addressing her specific situation to talking about broader social norms once people started arguing about what those norms should be. That would be fairly ordinary conversational transition, in my experience.
Are you talking now about the whole vlog or just the elevator segment?
Just that last bit.
I find her rambling vlogs and frequent condescension toward people who don't share her view of the supposed rampant sexist behavior at atheist and skeptic events boring.
Agreed. Then again, I find most of YouTube skepticism boring.
And the idea of being upset because a guy made a pass, seriously, getting groped is bad, a guy politely hitting on you, not so much.
She has argued that it should not be considered polite or considerate to hit on someone in that particular way. Like her, I see it as rude to ask someone back to one's room upon finding them in an enclosed space, late at night, without having spoken to them previously or established any flirtatious rapport. You are free to disagree, of course, and I assume that you do.
However, I'm fine that lots of woman would be upset about a similar situation. A lot of women are shy, and not as assertive and adventurous as I am. I think they could have handled the situation because nothing happened, but if some timid gal said it bothered her, I would believe her and there would be nothing wrong with that.
The claim that one must be especially timid and shy in order to find sexual advances from total strangers off-putting is an interesting one. I wonder whether any social surveys have come close to addressing this question. If so, I bet the answers are significantly different by sex of respondent.
I don't think the whole male population has to adjust to accommodate every shy woman out there, but telling others it bothered her? Not a problem.
This is where we disagree. I think that both males and females should actively avoid making people uncomfortable by propositioning them prior to receiving any flirtatious signals, especially if the one being propositioned has just been talking in public about how they don’t want to be sexualized, and most especially if you have to corner them in a lift to get your first words in.
I don’t even think this is a close call, really, in terms of crafting social norms which will maximize human flourishing. It is not particularly hard to flirt with someone in public, readily escapable venues, prior to inviting them back to the private room with the expensive bed and the fancy coffeemaker.
But then I knew RW (not well, but well enough) before she had her feminism revelation. I don't believe she was honestly discomforted.
You think she was just manufacturing this controversy for the sake of stirring the pot? That is pretty devious, especially how she snuck it in the end of a video mostly about other stuff.
I have, OTOH, spent a fair amount of time debating the claims about all the sexist men in the atheist and skeptical communities.
I don’t know if elevatorgate can be taken as an example of sexism. Boorish tactlessness, sure. Drunken tomfoolery, okay. But to call it sexism implies that it somehow lessens the agency or status of women as a group, which is an argument I’d have to see spelled out.
As to how this blue dress / white dress awkward elevator moment eventually led to the Great Atheist Rifts, well, that’s a
whole other story. And one that I'd be happy to get into, once I understand where Rebecca Watson first went wrong.