Getting Off Podcast book club discussion
A False Report
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suspicion of false reporting
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Rachel
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Feb 28, 2018 05:51PM

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I think anytime you have a group of lower status because of race/ class/ immigration status/ job/ family name/ ability/ mental illness or perceived mental illness, etc, making a claim against those viewed as higher status credibility is already a huge factor. About a year ago I listened to a Reveal (great podcast, by the way) episode about an undocumented young woman who worked as a marijuana farmer in California. The story explained that the woman had been sexually assaulted multiple times but didn't report because (a) she was worried that a report may tip off ICE to her whereabouts, causing her to get deported, and (2) that she would be indited in federal court for marijuana distribution if she contacted law enforcement.
Here's another example: I lived in Minneapolis when people shut down the fourth precinct in North Minneapolis in the wake of the Jamar Clark shooting. I brought people camping out sandwiches, clean water, sleeping bags, etc. So did a lot of other people. I met activists and people who were mad, yes, but also doctors, lawyers, teachers, business executives, and other people who deserved respect outside the fourth precinct. Now, here's where perception and the media plays a part in whether groups are viewed as legitimate and can be believed or not. If the Star Tribune (the Minneapolis Newspaper) ran a headline akin to "Doctors protest police use of force," I feel like people would be much more likely to believe that there's legitimate wrongdoing than the headline that ran "protesters camp outside Fourth Precinct." "protesters" makes it sound like there were only dirty hippies out there and "camp" implies that people were having a grand old time making smores. The moral of that story is that the language we use to describe people and their activities portrays their claims as legitimate or not and can twist legitimate claims into seemingly nonlegitamate ones.

By the way, this book was an excellent first choice! I had it read in a week. Or, rather, listened to on Audible. I found it immensely fascinating!