Dude, I already answered this. You talk as if a harassed person can just walk away and get a new job like it's nobody's business. Truth is, it isn't always that simple. Sometimes, it's nearly impossible.
Plus, this just maintains an environment where the innocent suffer and the guilty get away with it.
This (and all the other folks who said similar).
Look, no one is more supportive and insistent that I am that there is ALWAYS a way to change your life.
But for many people, that will not be a short or easy transition. For some, it may take years of work. For some, it will require significant sacrifice, and you simply have to decide how poor you're willing to be. The way may not be acceptable in its sacrifice for some people, at some points in time (which is perfectly valid).
I am always a proponent of the idea that we own ourselves absolutely and have only the obligations we accept. But changing your course in a major way is not always easy. I have had it lead to me getting fired for whistle blowing, which culminated in me leaving the state entirely because the economy was just so horrible that I couldn't even find a burger flipping job. I have friends who were looking for a job for over a year, and every opening they went for, there were 100 other people there too, just that day alone. It was bad.
Worth it to me? Yes. I'm proud of what I did.
But it's a different set of circumstances for someone who has kids, or who's in debt, or doesn't have a place to go back to with a great economy, family, and comparatively decent in-state tuition. I could afford to look for months, find nothing, and move across the country with enough money for first couple month's rent. Not everyone can.
There's ways out of that exact same awful job even for people with those considerations. My manager, who was a single mother, found a way. But it took her longer, and her sacrifices were very different from mine. She probably wouldn't have done it if it hadn't been also impacting her daughter (who was employed there as well).
It certainly isn't as simple as "just leave." If we want people to be SUCCESSFUL in re-claiming their lives (and I don't know about PirateMk1, but personally, I do), then we have to be realistic about how we advise or help them to achieve that, rather than just saying it's all rainbows and unicorn farts. It's not. It's really ****ing hard work a lot of the time. And for some people, it's harder than for others.