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I know there is a catagory for this but Exposure might be limited 'North Country

Started by brina, November 19, 2006, 07:37:39 PM

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brina

Hiee,

  I don't know how many of you who are currently in RLE have seen this movie but it is quite good and fairly accurately shows what Natal Woman have had to go thru and continue to in the blue collar world. Being TS one might expect it to be worse by a factor of 10, but that has not really been my personal experience to date. Although earlier this year on the day I was leaving the construcion camp I was in I did see that fearful hate in the eyes of several of the guys passing me on the way to board their buses to the job site :(.

( Oops the movie is called 'North Country' and taken from a true story in USA. )

Byee,
  Brina
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tinkerbell

Are you talking about NORTH COUNTY where Charlize Theron plays an activist miner?

Great movie, I don't know how anyone could stand most of the sexual harassment she had to endure! ....but what a wonderful actress Charlize is!  Personally I think that she is one of the best actresses that Hollywood has at the moment.

tinkerbell :icon_chick:
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brina

Hiee Tink,

  Yes I think that is the same movie also starring Sissy Spacek(sp) and Woody Harrelson(sp). I don't know if I'd say she was an activist per se, rather someone simply saying 'Don't Tread On Me Because I'm Female'. I found it interesting that it took place in Minesotta, traditionally a Democratic and Union stronghold go figure.

Byee,
  Brina
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melissa90299

Wel, it took place in 1975, happily, that type of harassment rarely  happens to GGs anymore. Ironically, I could see that kind of harassment happening today against a transgendered person.

wikipedia:

Quoteenson v. Eveleth Taconite Co.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Lois E. Jenson v. Eveleth Taconite Co. was the first class-action sexual harassment lawsuit in the United States, filed in 1988 on behalf of Lois Jenson and other female workers at the EVTAC mine in Eveleth, Minnesota on the state's northern Mesabi Range, which is part of the Iron Range. The case was documented in the 2002 book Class Action and a 2005 fictionalized film version, North Country.
Contents
[hide]

    * 1 Facts of the case
    * 2 References
    * 3 See also
    * 4 External links

[edit] Facts of the case

Jenson first began working at the site in 1975 and, along with other women, endured a continuous stream of abhorrent behavior from male employees, including sexual harassment and stalking. In October 1984, she mailed a complaint to the Minnesota Department of Human Rights [1] outlining the problems she experienced. In retaliation, her car tires were slashed a week later. The state requested that Ogelbay Norton Co.[2], a Cleveland, Ohio-based part-owner of the mine, pay US$ 11,000 to Jenson in damages, but the company refused.

The next year, the case was filed in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis. Class-action status was requested at the time, and granted three years later in late 1991 by Judge James Rosenbaum. Jenson quit working at the mine about a month afterward, in January 1992. She was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder a short time later.

A liability trial began in December 1992 in front of Judge Richard Kyle in St. Paul, Minnesota, and six months later, he ruled that the company should have prevented the misconduct. The company was ordered to educate all employees about sexual harassment.

Patrick McNulty of Duluth was named special master a few months later to oversee a trial that would determine the amount of money owed to the women in damages. The retired federal magistrate permitted lawyers from the mine company to obtain medical records of all of the women for their entire lifetimes. Ahead of the trial, which took place in Duluth in mid-1995, the plaintiffs endured long depositions that explored their personal lives in great detail.

McNulty expressed a great deal of skepticism in delivering his report in 1996, going so far as to call the women "histrionic." After revealing various personal details about the plaintiffs, he awarded each of them an average of $10,000. However, the judgement was appealed, reversed in December 1997 by the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals. A new jury trial was ordered.

On December 30, 1998, just before the trial was set to begin, fifteen women settled with Eveleth Mines for a total of $3.5 million. One of the original plaintiffs, Pat Kosmach, died partway through the case on November 7, 1994.

[edit] References

    * Class Action: The Story of Lois Jenson and the Landmark Case That Changed Sexual Harassment Law (2003) ISBN 0-385-49613-3
    * North Country at the Internet Movie Database

[edit] See also

    * North Country (A movie based on the case, starring Charlize Theron)
    * Sexual harassment
    * Stalking
    * Hostile environment sexual harassment
    * Hostile Advances: The Kerry Ellison Story movie about Ellison v. Brady which set the "reasonable woman" precedent in sexual harassment law.
    * Michelle Vinson v. Merit One Savings Bank
    * Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services
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brina

Hiee,
  I see this stuff on a daily basis;however, toned down, but it is still there. The other natal woman on the crew has to live with it to one degree or another. I seem to experience it from the pre-concieved notion of my being a 'She-Male' grrrrrrrrrrrr. I think that transwoman will have to perhaps re-fight this whole issue when our time arrives :(.
Byee,
  Brina
PS Perhaps some day woman will wrestle the Total power away from men and the playing field will become level for ALL :).
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