Mukherjee sees it as her jobβand the job of the brands she leadsβto help people understand the truth: that perpetrators are the ones responsible for sex crimes. After she was attacked as a child, she told no one what happened. βLike with any victim, youβre so scared,β she says. Then, when she was a young teenager, her mother diedβshe was hit by a drunk driver. As an adult Mukherjee was in an abusive relationship in which alcohol, she thinks, had a part. After she broke it off, she started volunteering with other survivors and saw that her experience wasnβt unusual. βSeeing the role of alcohol play into the abuse of other women and other victims as well, itβs just unacceptable,β she says. βAnd so for me to have this opportunity as a CEO to be able to start this conversation, thatβs my responsibility as a leader.β
The company developed their ads with RAINN (Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network) and will partner with the organization throughout the campaign and onwards. On Valentineβs Day, Absolut will donate $1 to RAINN for every share and retweet their campaign gets. Mukherjee has also signed on to join RAINNβs national board. She plans to continue working with RAINN and campaigning for consent long beyond the initial ad rollout.
βPerpetrators out there are abusing alcohol and using it as a weapon, and it needs to stop,β she says. βThatβs the dialogue we want to create. Everyoneβs been talking about βdrinking responsiblyβ forever. But now letβs put our money where our mouth is.β
βThis is the first time thereβs been a real partnership that involves a lot of public messaging and working together over the long term,β says Scott Berkowitz, founder and CEO of RAINN. βTheyβve made clear that they want this to be a long-term relationship. Our mission is very straightforward: Itβs to reduce the numbers of sexual assaults in the country. And I think their involvement is going to help us in that work.β
For some the partnership might come as a surprise. But for Mukherjee itβs just the natural, more ambitious expression of her values. Mukherjee spent years working with Chetna, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping South Asian women who experience domestic violence, as well as volunteering with other nonprofits that support survivors of abuse and violence. In separate conversations, she and Berkowitz used almost identical language to explain that drinkers should be held accountable for their behavior: Responsible drinking means βdrinking in a way that allows you to make decisions rationally, like knowing that you should not get behind the wheel of a car,β they both say. In other words: Drinking isnβt an excuse for crime. And sex crimes arenβt an exception.
Thatβs not a message thatβs come from an alcohol company before. Itβs not even a message thatβs come from mainstream culture.
βThere is less moral culpability attached to the defendant who is legally intoxicated,β wrote Judge Aaron Persky, in his decision to sentence Brock Turner to just six months in county jail, though Turner had been found guilty of sexually assaulting an unconscious woman, Chanel Miller.
βCollege Women: Stop Getting Drunk,β read the headline of a Slate article by Emily Yoffe in 2013. βWhen [women] render themselves defenseless, terrible things can be done to them,β she wrote.
Perhaps Jed Rubenfeld, a professor at Yale University, put it the most clearly, in the Yale Law Journal in 2013. βIs it so clear unconscious sex should be criminal?β he asked.
These comments crystalized a belief most people have heard from college administrations, respected newspaper columnists, and parents and authority figuresβthat drinking makes you vulnerable to sexual assault. If you drink, especially if youβre a woman who drinks, youβre at least partially responsible for your assault.