1) Is risk taking endemic to men? The way to answer it would be to look at studies (or data as proxy) that look at this across countries. I am sceptical of her favored methodological venue (let's ask questions) - instead if she were genuinely interested in the truth, she'd look at hard data. Things like incidence of unprotected sex among men vs women - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21281095.
2) Is risk taking more common for white men vs nonwhites (or in a less racist angle - by comparing countries instead of races)? Again hard data - prison populations, incidence of sports injuries, etc.
Science is actually about finding ways to measure things that you can't simply ask people and expect to get honest answers.
She's a reporter and the guy is a VC. There is no business relationship between them. They were walking down the street with friends after having drinks, he grabbed her hand and she refused his advances. Everybody went home.
This is what the story is about? Is this some sort of parallel universe where people claim sexual assault over anything these days?
Ie I can see how he could have let go of her hand sooner but calling this sexual assault sort of does disservice to the people who actually experience sexual assault.