A", "range": {"length":16, "start":371},"type":"link"}],"identifier":" anf-body- 4","inlineTextStyles": [{"range":{"length":619,"start":0},"textStyle":" anf-ts- 11"},{"range":{"length":3, "start ":173},"textStyle":" anf-ts- 10"}],"layout":"bodyContentLayout", "role":"body", "text":"That change is happening whether or not Republicans push Kavanaugh through, whether or not Democrats take the House or the Senate. The change is not simply (or perhaps, not yet) about outcomes, but rather about expectations and what ita€™s okay to talk about and when. Women 4€" 27 years after Anita Hill, 12 years after Tarana Burkead€™s Me Too, and one year into #MeToo a€" are refusing to stop speaking about their experiences, their perspectives, their memories. By doing so, theyd€™re expanding the boundaries of what kinds of stories must be taken seriously 4€" and bringing a much fuller picture of female humanity into view.", "type": "text"}, {"additions": [{"URL":"https://apple.news/A3a5du8CBSk- YrrB4dgycQw", "range": {"length":12,"start":87},"type™:"link"}, {"URL":"https://apple.news /AEoOAndznRQDi2nA0 rwpKTOA", "range": {"length":30,"start":747}, "type":"link"}],"identifier ":" anf-body- 5", "inlineTextStyles": [{"range":{"length":854,"start":0},"textStyle":" anf-ts- 11"},{"range":{"length":11,"start":51},"textStyle":" anf-ts- 10"}],"layout":"bodyContentLayout", "role":"body", "text":"I thought about this forced shift when I opened the New Yorker piece by Jane Mayer and Ronan Farrow on Sunday night, and read about the kind of encounter most women I know have always assumed theyae™d never be able to recount in public 4€" least of all in the midst of a highly scrutinized, high-stakes political battle a€" because it didnd€™t meet the impossibly high standards the world has set for women whod€™ve been abused or assaulted and want to be believed. The story was told by Deborah Ramirez, who told Mayer and Farrow that she almost didnd€™t come forward 4€" even with a lifetime appointment to th