It's interesting how you got to this conclusion baselessly, and I find interesting that you are free to insult and unload your rage as long as your opinion goes with the approved point of view. I never said anything of the sort, much less that women were "my fuck objects", that's insulting and is conversation in bad faith on your behalf.
My point of view is simple: no one is an automatic victim based solely on their gender, race or condition, since everyone has the potential to be a good or a bad person. This is what I meant by victim teams, given that the discourse I see in socially leftist sites like this where women, people of colour (I am a person of color, btw) and such are automatically given victim status and are happy to demonise "straight white men". This is not a useful narrative, it intends to separate and assign blame to a collective, when the responsibility of bad behaviours belongs to the person that commits the act. False accusations have existed, while some genuine ones have not been believed. They all require careful consideration.
The reason why is my second point: words are powerful and have consequences. They can destroy careers and even put people through the legal system, therefore it is my opinion that accusations need to be taken seriously, reasoned and analysed, instead of taken at face value. From what I could gather, the opinion of the french actress is exactly this, that taking all accusations at face value can have this effect. Nowhere have I seen in that paragraph that she's defending creeps like Harvey Weinstein and Kevin Spacey.
Third, I'm weary of social movements because they are always overly simplified and tend to be full of negative emotion (as you displayed above) rather than reasoning. I don't agree with all of her points, I personally don't think stealing a kiss is ok, but in the general sense, I don't think there is nothing wrong with flirting or trying to find if there's a romantic connection as long as there's respect and always observant of whether the other person is receptive, and if not, then respect their position and walk away. Of course that setting takes a role and the workplace is not the ideal one, and I have rarely if ever invited someone on a date at work, but on the other hand a lot of couples have met during work and families and relationships started that way. The problem with people like Weinstein and Spacey is that they abused their position within the industry, are incapable of taking no for an answer and lost the respect for people under them.
Now, if having the opinion above makes me a "monster" that "has his manly ego broken" because I can't "fuck my fuck objects", then so be it and I'll stop posting in this place.