What is the worth of a woman? What is the worth of her body, her safety, her heart, her career? And once you determine it, how does it hold up to the worth of a man, a business, a conglomeration? Or does it not hold up at all?
On February 19, a New York Supreme Court judge ruled that the musician Kesha must remain contractually bound to Sony and Kemosabe, the record label created and run by Dr. Luke (real name Lukasz Sebastian Gottwald), the producer who she claims drugged and raped her when she was 18 and continued to abuse her throughout their creative partnership.
Judge Shirley Kornreich heard Keshaâs request for an injunction that would allow her to record outside Dr. Lukeâs reach as a request not for physical, psychological and sexual safety but a request to âdecimate a contract that was heavily negotiated and typical for the industry,â as Kornreich put it.
Keshaâs injunction request read, in part, âI know I cannot work with Dr. Luke. I physically cannot. I donât feel safe in any way.â But that plain statement of absolute need doesnât matter. Legally, in the moral eyes of the court, itâs the contractâthe corporationâthat comes first.
This is appalling, but itâs no break from tradition. The U.S. Supreme Court has already determined that corporations have similar rights to people, though if you look closely, youâll find that theirs are far more enviableâespecially compared to those of us whoâve been legally cursed with female bodies and female voices, which are meant to be soft and agreeable. Money speaks louder than you or I ever could in a courtroom, even if we were pop stars whose fans waited outside for hours to support us; corporate interests are louder than ethics and empathy, louder than autonomy, or self-determination, or basic rights to safety.
Kesha, a 28-year-old woman whoâs been working in the music industry for a full decade, might think she knows whatâs best for her. She might think itâs in her best interest to sever all ties with the man who allegedly raped and continually hurt her, butâreallyâwhat does she know? Sonyâs invested $60 million in her career, their attorneys reminded the judgeâwhatâs an emotional and physical violation compared to that?
âOur interest is in her success,â claimed a Sony lawyer. âOur interest is in Dr. Lukeâs success. They are not in the least bit mutually exclusive.â In other words, we know whatâs good for her. And whatâs good for her is recording six more albums with a company that heard her claims of abuse and said, âYour story means nothing.â
That Sony would take this line of argument is gross enough, but far grosser is the fact that the court agrees.
âMy instinct is to do the commercially reasonable thing,â ruled Shirley Kornreich as Kesha sobbed openly in the back of the room.
Commercially reasonable, yes. Contracts were signed. Kesha entered into a legal agreement with Sony and Kemosabe. But then again, Dr. Luke has a legal obligation to not rape or hurt anyone, even when itâs a young woman whoâs been put under his creative and legal control.
When a contractual violation and a human violation are put head-to-head in court, an idealist would think that a human beingâs safety takes precedence. A realist, however, would know better. The music industry, like many industries, is predisposed to favor its own safety: whatâs âcommercially reasonableâ for Sony can frequently be at oddsâin more cases than just Keshaâsâto the well-being of the women it signs.
Part of Judge Kornreichâs reasoning, in denying the injunction, was that Sony has agreed to keep Keshaâs work separate from Dr. Lukeâs. But sheâs still signed to his label, and her work still belongs to him. She remains the creative property of the man she says raped her. The ruling is so cruel as to seem almost mythologicalâPersephone stuck in hell as the result of a bad contractâbut itâs not; the ruling is real.
Itâs likely that âcommercially reasonableâ will almost always beat or âethically reasonableâ and is certain to beat âmorally reasonable.â Our courts and culture have a hard enough time believing womenâs accusations of sexual assault in the most clear-cut of circumstances, so what chance do we have at legal, emotional, and physical protection when details are contested and a corporation stands to lose millions? When a woman as powerful and high status as Kesha canât win, the rest of us stand even less of a chance.
Remember: They know whatâs best for us.
This piece has been updated to correct that the ruling occurred in the New York Supreme Court, not the U.S. Supreme Court.
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