Harlem subway oppression: ‘You are disgusting’: Women face the subway harassment in Harlem, which has created porn gestures

A woman who sexually assaulted the Harlem Subway Station changed her to her addicts, expressing displeasure and calling her for action on social media by filming her.
According to the New York Post, Juliet Scott, a research advisor and affected, recorded the man’s obscene gestures at the 125th Street 3 train station in late February and posted the video to Tiktok. The footage, which shows the man vigorously to his hips and making clear movements with his mouth and hands, quickly went viral.
“You are disgusting … you are bad!” Scott is heard saying in the video, as the man taunted him from across the stage, even mimicking kisses gestures and stressed again, “This way, too … look, look.” Scott later wrote on the video, “He chased around me for a minute before, and kept showing me his share.” He said that the harassment station took place in a full scene of children and police officers.
As reported by The New York Post, the video was later resumed from an account only in New York and viewed about 200,000 times on Tiktok and Instagram. Public reaction was sharp and harmful.
More than 900 people participated in an Instagram pole, asking if they recognize the man, 14%, with around 128 users, claiming that they had seen him earlier.
The other women said with the testimony of disturbing Scott’s post, he said that they had experienced a similar run-in with the same man. “It’s ideal,” a user commented. “This is what we deal with the daily,” another wrote. A separate woman posted, “I sometimes hate this city. Tired of this type of men.”
Despite the flood of support, some online users criticized Scott’s decision to face, suggesting that he should ignore and leave. However, Scott stood up with his actions and urged the public that if the spot was done, he urged him to report. “Another day in Harlem,” he told the post, blindly disappointed.
Scott, originally from Sierra Leone, said that she was forced to speak not only for herself but for others, who face such harassment daily in the transit system of New York.