Cause you don't understand what it is like to be a public pariah, cause it's not happened to you. You don't understand what it's like to have people in the street yell things …
But he chose to be a public person, and then he chose to take advantage of that.
Also, I don't think you know the full story … and nobody talks onstage in their stand-up more than him [about] everything he's ever done throughout that whole time. I don't want to get caught up in this, because clearly you take a strong position on this, and it doesn't win me any friends. This is like talking about Israel. But I do believe when you're a friend with someone, and if you think that they have suffered — I don't believe in kicking a person when they're down.
I mean, you can still be friends with someone but you can also still acknowledge what they did.
It's not mutually exclusive. Did I say I didn't acknowledge what they did? I'm just saying — and also, are there no other issues?
We can multitask…
But the thing is, why? Why? What is your stake in it that people wanna keep going back?
To let people know they can't just rip their dick out in front of people because they can! That is the stake. When I …[crosstalk] …in a room and you have a bigger position than me, you don't just get to wag your dick at me because you can.
Okay, first of all, that's not what he did. And also, you weren't there … This is so unfair, because it's another thing where people get bullied. I feel progress is thwarted when anyone says what I — because believe me, the pushback I get when I've discussed this before, when people ask me about it, feels so unjust to me, when there are so many issues we could be talking about. And I do think there is a point where somebody stops kicking people when they're down. It doesn't matter what the gender is. It doesn't. This isn't about male or female.