Are men as bad as they say in your country?

Northampton, England
November 3, 2024 5:27am CST
Channel 4, the UK's main left- leaning free to air national TV station, did a couple of documentaries about sexual harassment of young women on a night out, one in .Liverpool, and the other one in Malaga, Spain. Two pretty female middle-class journalists went undercover as drunk women walking alone at night around the nightlife. The results were not what the left want to see. C4 must have been expecting a load of drunk Englishmen hitting on them alone and try and take advantage of them. Not so, the British men and women protective of their own. The men who hit on them in Liverpool were mostly Uber drivers, foreign men from South East Asia. Some worked in teams to try and pick the drunk girls up whilst others followed them around, one to her hotel room. The journalists had a back-up team to protect the ladies. In Malaga it was mostly Black African men that bothered them , migrants from a far. The journalist simply couldn't procure enough menace from British lads in Spain to include in their film. Considering the results of the show Channel 4 still broadcast them , not really the results they wanted., I guess. Now, I want to ask women here have you ever been harassed by men out and about and does it make a difference if they are good looking if they do make casual conversation in the street?. Are you more threatened by men you dont find attractive? Be brave and answer.
6 people like this
4 responses
@LadyDuck (472087)
• Switzerland
3 Nov
I do not consider "being harassed" if I received a compliment while I was walking in the street, no matter if it was an attractive man or not. I have been harassed by someone while I was working in a financial office and it has been a very bad experience. I am glad I could hit with my knee exactly where I wanted to hit.
3 people like this
• Northampton, England
3 Nov
Thanks baby
3 people like this
@LadyDuck (472087)
• Switzerland
3 Nov
3 people like this
@marguicha (223850)
• Chile
3 Nov
The most flattering comments I´ve heard in my life have been from workers in buildings. Now they don´t dare. I´m sorry for the young women. Still the amount of femicides are the same. It seems that the bad people, the evil and the sick ones do not diminish. There must be another way to stop them.
3 people like this
• Northampton, England
3 Nov
Thanks for answering
2 people like this
@celticeagle (168420)
• Boise, Idaho
3 Nov
If men are working for these companies and doing abusive things this should be brought to the attention of the authorities. I think, at least here in the US there are some good and some bad. Right now MAGA seems to be okay with violence and such so we have that. I hope that the election comes out in a way that we will have people in power who won't let this sort of thing become normal and let it get any worse. I think a man with manners and one who has been taught to be respectful and have manners is handsome to me regardless of physical attributes. The ugliness comes from the men who think they are good-looking and expect women to fall all over themselves to be in their company whether they are rude, crude or whatever. But, I am an old traditionalist that was brought up to respect others and to be respected in kind.
2 people like this
@Fleura (30541)
• United Kingdom
3 Nov
On the whole I'm an optimist and I expect the best from people I meet. I try not to be overly trusting of course, but I'm not fearful either. I've had all sorts of experiences, some distinctly weird, but none really bad.
1 person likes this