I'm going to speak to how he's being perceived professionally since that's been the bulk of my interactions with him.
Professionally, he's already beginning to suffer consequences—he had a successful female author who was mentoring him during his novel-writing process who has disavowed him and distanced herself from him publicly. And the writing community, as evidenced just by Twitter is talking. They were talking this summer at various events where it started to become clear that he had a reputation and that it wasn't a good one.
I have no fear of him professionally because I've never been of any use to him professionally, so I simply have never mattered—besides, when you've had someone try to sue you for use of your own name, you get to a certain point of having zero anything left to give.
What I can say with certainty is that I saw shades of the behavior so many describe--not enough to make me intervene but when put in context of repeated reports, it becomes more evident. Thing is, I don't think it's always conscious-- he becomes aware of it after the fact, which is problematic in and of itself, since it seems to speak to a deeper rooted issue that needs to be addressed.
Admittedly, I haven't been as active on the board in recent years, so obviously, take what I say with a grain of salt, but much in the same way I don't want him working through his issues within the writing community I don't think this is the place he needs to be for support.
Thanks for the information, Barb.
About the situation on Twitter, most of the details are not being discussed publicly. For every angry, hurt vaguebook post you can see, please believe there is a MOUNTAIN of backchannel behind it where women are sharing their stories in safer spaces than the open Twitterverse.
I understand that, but it is difficult to take action on backchannel you are not a part of. I wasn't looking for proof, I just needed to know (some of) what he was being accused of. Jess's story was enough for me. I would support a ban.
Also, even if he is sincerely remorseful and eventually succeeds in his attempts to do better doesn't mean he doesn't have to suffer the consequences of his actions. The consequence being he is no longer welcome in this space.
Yeah, this is where I'm at, too. The other reason I support banning him is that to do less, now that we know how his actions have hurt people in our community, seems like a slap in the face to those he has hurt, pissed off, or driven away. And I would much rather support them than keep enabling him.
For these reasons, I too support the ban.
What Barb said (thank you, Barb!) is true to my experience of him in regard to his writing career, i.e. I was under the impression that a lot of the contacts he made (and close friendships he claimed) were efforts to get himself published and well-reviewed. I'm really disgusted that it was apparently something a lot uglier.
I was already supportive of a ban based on Jess's story alone, but just *knowing* that there's been extensive backchannel is more than enough to push me way over 100%. I don't need to know the details; just knowing that multiple people have compared notes and affirmed each other's accounts is more than enough.
I just remembered we used to call it bullshit consensus, when it was informal. Man, remember when we voted on things?
Anyway, do people want me to revise the proposal for a formal voting process? I don't think it's necessary, but I'm happy to do it.
I'm fine with a bullshit consensus in this case, and someone should probably also remove him from the facebook group if that hasn't already been done.
If the call is made either by consensus or vote then I can take him out of the FB group.
I'm in favor of the ban, so consider me bullshit consensed. I'm sorry that people have not felt safe here. Even though I'm not here much anymore, I love y'all like family. I hope PC gets his act together, but that sounds like a personal problem, not our problem.