the thing I question in it is perhaps with all the power play going on have the Austrian arm of RB tried to leverage a complaint to be more than it is and remove Horner after his apparent hostile take over attempt does not excuse what CH did (if confirmed) and may not mean a court:tribunal would find him In breach of workplace laws. But do we have a very selective leak against him the tail end of an office romance gone wrong. That she still has a role that very much involves interaction with CH - or maybe she simply enjoys he role overall and does not want to give that up. - or maybe even as I did post earlier she lodged the complaint but didn’t want Horner removed just acknowledgment something had to change if that happen she was happy to move on. I under though why she stays silent as too many internet warriors attack people like that these days for no reasonmyurr wrote: ↑05 Mar 2024, 16:58Thankfully the law already does that, and if the leaks are genuine then Horner broke the law, as have Red Bull in covering it up. It's amazing how misguided many posters' moral compass is proving to be.stonehenge wrote: ↑05 Mar 2024, 16:34The responses from some people in this thread highlight exactly why F1 needs to make it clear what is and what is not acceptable conduct for senior leaders of the sport.chrstphrln wrote: ↑05 Mar 2024, 16:30
No. Simply no.
That's the miserable excuse of those who don't want to change.
In the Middle Ages, there were public rapes that affected women who had little male protection. In India, rape is still a huge problem today.
"Man will always be Man"?
No. Socially accepted behaviour is changeable. And there are enough men who have made this change in their minds.
For a damn long time.