Showing posts with label CHRISTINE BLASEY FORD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CHRISTINE BLASEY FORD. Show all posts

Sunday, May 7, 2023

FOCUS: Molly Jong-Fast | E. Jean Carroll’s Quest for Justice and the Carnage of Donald Trump's Misogyny

 

 

Reader Supported News
07 May 23

Live on the homepage now!
Reader Supported News

WHO WILL STEP UP FOR RSN? Who will be the ones that say, "I will support this project." These are the Reader Supporters, the stalwarts, the engine that drives this publication. It's not easy, but these are not easy times. Come on Reader Supporters! In gratitude.
Marc Ash • Founder, Reader Supported News

Sure, I'll make a donation!

 

E Jean Carroll is crushed by News photographers while arriving at the Southern District of New York Court on Pearl Street before start of her civil rape case against former US President Trump early Tuesday. (photo: Luiz C. Ribeiro/NY Daily News)
FOCUS: Molly Jong-Fast | E. Jean Carroll’s Quest for Justice and the Carnage of Donald Trump's Misogyny
Molly Jong-Fast, Vanity Fair
Jong-Fast writes: "The trial, which continues this week, is of course about Carroll, but it also speaks to the state of the feminist movement in America. Trump is no longer in the White House—for now—and for the first time we can look at the carnage of having a president who so openly embraced misogyny."


The 79-year-old writer’s rape case shows what happens to a country that elects a president who so openly embraces degrading women.


Last week, my friend, 79-year-old writer E. Jean Carrollbegan testifying in her civil case against the 45th president of the United States, Donald Trump. She was able to bring these accusations of rape to court because of a new New York state law, the Adult Survivors Act, which gave Carroll a yearlong window to sue despite her case being out of the statute of limitations. Governor Kathy Hochul signed the law in 2022; it’s hard to imagine that Trump’s political ascension and the #MeToo revelations that followed weren’t in some way responsible for this legal sea change. So perhaps it’s fitting that this same law is now being used to attempt to hold Trump accountable.

The trial, which continues this week, is of course about Carroll, but it also speaks to the state of the feminist movement in America. Trump is no longer in the White House—for now—and for the first time we can look at the carnage of having a president who so openly embraced misogyny. Misogyny, like racism, thrives when it has a cheerleader, when it has someone who gives his supporters permission to engage in it. With racism, we can measure an increase in race-related harassment and violence. For example, hate crimes rose the day after Trump was elected. Counties that held Trump rallies in 2016 saw a 226% increase in hate crimes, according to The Washington Post. But it’s profoundly hard to measure what an increase in misogyny looks like. We certainly saw profound backlash toward Christine Blasey Ford, who accused Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her when they were teenagers. (Kavanaugh has denied the allegations.) Blasey Ford had to effectively go into hiding after coming forward. But it’s important to recognize that unfettered sexism often results in silence—in women opting out of speaking up.

Carroll’s narration of her own experience after coming forward is a pretty good example of the kind of misogyny that Trumpism embraces, and the impact it can have on those brave enough to step up. “It hit me and it laid me low because I lost my reputation. Nobody looked at me the same. It was gone. Even people who knew me looked at me with pity in their eyes, and the people who had no opinion now thought I was a liar and hated me,” later she said, “The force of hatred coming at me was staggering.”

There have been many moments in Carroll’s trial that tangibly laid bare why women don’t report sexual assault. Trump’s attorney, Joe Tacopina, was profoundly aggressive with Carroll, a near octogenarian. “I’m telling you, he raped me whether I screamed or not. I don’t need an excuse for not screaming,” Carroll responded to Tacopina’s repetitive drumbeat of questioning, which the judge Lewis A. Kaplan called “argumentative” and “repetitive” last Thursday.

As if right on cue, Trump offered up the most misogynistic possible response to being accused of sexual misconduct. “And, while I am not supposed to say it, I will. This woman is not my type!” he wrote on Truth Social. It’s not the first time Trump has used this defense against allegations of sexual assault: the idea that a woman might not be attractive enough to rape. After all, Carroll is hardly Trump’s only accuser; at last count 26 women have made allegations of everything from groping to rape against the ex-president (Trump has repeatedly denied the allegations). Caroll’s aren’t an enormous shock to the system, either. Trump’s supporters, including evangelicals, have long reconciled with the idea that more than two dozen women have said their guy sexually assaulted them.

Some Trump supporters will say Carroll’s allegations are part of a larger anti-Trump conspiracy, as Tacopina hinted last week in trial when he pressed the writer on how she came to sue Trump. I’ve somehow been spun into this tale, which starts at a cocktail party I hosted at my apartment where I introduced Carroll to lawyer and Never Trump Republican activist George Conway, who, in turn, introduced her to Robbie Kaplan, the lawyer now representing her. Then there are the people who accuse Carroll of doing this as a cash grab. Former US attorney Joyce Vance made a good point regarding that theory: “Interesting consideration: Trump almost always settles cases when he can. If Carroll wasn’t being truthful & suing because she wanted her day in court, if she was really just after money, she would have settled, taken the cash & spared herself the court proceedings.”

It’s hard to listen to Carroll’s testimony and not be moved by just how lonely and painful it is to be a plaintiff in something like this. She is brave and almost quixotic in her quest for justice. But it’s even harder to watch Tacopina’s questioning and not wonder about all the women who will watch this testimony or read about this trial and decide not to come forward with their own stories. That Carroll is in a courtroom able to make these accusations in front of a jury shows we as a society have made progress around feminism. Yet knowing that Republicans, who are still showing their fealty to Trump, will almost certainly fail this “moral test” yet again, as The New Republic’s Michael Tomasky wrote, is a measure of the damage Trump has done to our culture.

I grew up with a feminist mother, Erica Jong. I always thought we’d eventually get the Equal Rights Amendment ratified. I always believed that progress was a straight line. Then the 2016 presidential election happened, becoming a demarcation line in my outlook about the country. The American people had a choice between the first woman president and a man who, one month before the election, they’d heard bragging on the Access Hollywood tape that he could “grab ’em by the pussy.” Yet, 62,979,879 people did not find boasting about sexual misconduct to be disqualifying. They elected him; there was even a woman who wore a “Trump Can Grab My” T-shirt.

Even if Trump is forced to pay Carroll great sums of money, she will spend the rest of her life afraid, looking over her shoulder, worried. The vitriol and misogyny and hatred that Trump gave permission to won’t ever be put back in Pandora’s box.


READ MORE

 

Contribute to RSN

Follow us on facebook and twitter!

Update My Monthly Donation

PO Box 2043 / Citrus Heights, CA 95611






Monday, February 17, 2020

FOCUS: Rosanna Arquette on the Weinstein Trial: 'We Are Never, Ever Going to Be Silent Again'










Reader Supported News
17 February 20

It's Live on the HomePage Now:
Reader Supported News





FOCUS: Rosanna Arquette on the Weinstein Trial: 'We Are Never, Ever Going to Be Silent Again'
Rosanna Arquette: 'Everyone forgets it's Harvey Weinstein on trial, not these women.' (photo: Matt Licari/Invision/AP)
Sam Levin, Guardian UK
Levin writes: "Rosanna Arquette, one of the first women to share details of Harvey Weinstein's abuse, has been closely following the New York trial that could send the disgraced Hollywood producer to prison for life."

One of the first women to describe abuse by the former film mogul salutes witnesses’ bravery amid backlash

osanna Arquette, one of the first women to share details of Harvey Weinstein’s abuse, has been closely following the New York trial that could send the disgraced Hollywood producer to prison for life.
The actor and advocate rallied at the courthouse at the start of the trial, which is now coming to a close after dramatic testimony by six women.
On break from shooting a new film in Los Angeles, Arquette talked to the Guardian about the second trial, slated for LA, how Weinstein’s attorneys have attacked the women in court, and what’s next in the movement against sexual violence.
The conversation has been condensed and edited for clarity.
What has been it like for you to watch the trial unfold in New York?
I’m invested and watching very closely, as all the survivors do. We’re very supportive of all the women who have testified. It really takes a lot of courage, and it’s painful to see. The lawyers’ disgusting tactics to discredit and humiliate or try to humiliate the women and make it so that we are not believed, it’s awful. It exposes the difficulties women face when they come forward and tell the truth about their abusers.
Everyone forgets it’s Harvey Weinstein on trial, not these women. But it’s as if they are the ones who committed these egregious crimes. All they have done is come forward and name their abuser. That’s the worst part, just watching how unfair this is.
What do you see as the significance of this trial in the broader fight against Weinstein?
A lot of women around the world are looking to this trial, as they did to Christine Blasey Ford. No matter what the outcome is, Harvey Weinstein committed these crimes, and it’s known around the world what he did. These are horrific and egregious crimes.
I remember when Annabella Sciorra [who testified in New York] called me years ago, when our stories came out. The difference in her voice then, and her voice now, just being able to tell this story, to get this out of her body – there is growth there, and healing. I’m sure she will move on to helping other women speak out.
Regardless of the verdict, what do you hope comes next?
No matter what happens, this is not marking the end of our fight. We broke our silence, and we are never, ever going to be silent again. We will continue to fight for truth and justice, and we are always going to be here supporting all women. He can go to jail, and it still won’t go away. Some guys are looking for when this is going to end. But this is never ending until sexual assault and violence against women ends.
And let’s not forget boys. We’re soon going to hear a lot more about [child sexual abuse in Hollywood]. It’ll be a tsunami what’s coming next.
Will you be at the trial in Los Angeles, and what do you think that case will mean for Weinstein?
I will be there as much as I can, especially for the women who have to testify. We’re all always there in spirit. I do feel a very strong bond with the women. We’re looking forward to the criminal case we have in LA. There will be different people testifying, different charges. The trials of Harvey Weinstein are in no way, shape or form ending. More than 100 women have come forward, and there are a lot more.
I believe there are some Oscar winners who are not able to come forward – women who don’t feel safe or don’t feel comfortable to go through this. And it isn’t easy. There are still people in the industry who feel sorry for Harvey.
What do you make of Harvey Weinstein’s lawyer and the narratives she has been presenting about victims and survivors?
I don’t know any women who have respect for her whatsoever. What she has done and tried to do is horrible. But at the end of the day, she as a human being will never, ever win this battle. The whole point of doing it is a scare tactic to shut women up, to stop further women from coming forward. They are trying to show women who will testify what it will be like. But we will always have the women’s backs, they know what to expect. It’s not going to work.
It’s always been part of the narrative. It’s not new. But we’re seeing it in our face, how they are actually attacking these women. It’s really brave to show his pattern, how he does it, how a victim falls into the trap of assault, and what happens after. People don’t realize the real process of PTSD … When someone has been raped and assaulted, yes, they do stay in touch with their rapists. It plays out in many ways.
You’ve been through so much since you first spoke out. What does this moment mean to you?
As Tarana Burke, the founder of MeToo, has said, this is about healing women, and hearing their voices and allowing them to speak. Now, it’s a worldwide movement, and we’re a part of that. I can’t think about what happened to me, it’s so depressing. But moving forward, how do we as a culture heal the sickness that is the root of this? It’s gotten so much worse, the normalization of rape. It’s a worldwide epidemic and sickness and it’s horrendous. The more we shed light on it, the more we can expose this horrendous darkness that has taken over. We have a man who was able to say those words [“grab them by the pussy”] and become the president of the United States. It’s way bigger than any of us ever imagined.
For me, I really want to celebrate and honor the good men that are out there. This is not a witch-hunt. There are incredible men who are feminists who stand beside us. There are great men who we invite to be our allies.















Top News | 'Totally Crazy': Trump Holds Housing Bill Hostage to Eviscerate Voting Rights

                 LOTS OF POSTS IGNORED BY BLOGGER..... OR REMOVED ON THEIR WHIM! ALL POSTS ARE AVAILABLE ON MIDDLEBORO REVIEW AND SO ON BLOG...