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politics and politicians Title: Bill Clinton: Norms have really changed in terms of what you can do to somebody against their will You think Im exaggerating what he actually said in the headline but Im not. Direct quote, bro. The inspiration for this sentiment is Al Franken, one of the most minor celebrity offenders of the #MeToo era. What Clinton has in mind when he mentions doing things to women against their will is, presumably, what Franken was accused of a butt-squeeze here, a too-friendly friendly kiss there, the sort of Mad Men behavior that might have been seen as a bit fresh in the workplace in years past but certainly not something thatd cost you a job or a U.S. Senate seat. Norms have changed, its true. And if its alarming to hear it described in terms of being allowed to do things to women against their will, well, thats the whole point from the #MeToo perspective. You really could do certain things to them against their will in the past and pay no legal or professional consequences. Frankens toppling was a sort of ritual sacrifice aimed at drawing a new red line: Henceforth, theres no such thing as too minor when it comes to touching a woman without her consent. All well and good. Except that, coming from this guy, who stands credibly accused of rape by Juanita Broaddrick, hearing him chatter about an era in which it was fine to do certain things to women against their will makes you want to lie down on the floor in the fetal position until the shock from his obliviousness subsides. And not just Broaddrick, of course: Theres also the small matter of what he allegedly did to Paula Jones and Kathleen Willey. Youre left wondering whether he is oblivious or if this is him slyly but deliberately offering his own Weinstein-esque defense to the multitude of sex-related offenses hes been accused of. Times were different. Just as were asked to judge the behavior of other great men of the past by the standards of their times, we must judge the Clenis by the archaic standards of, ah, the 1980s and 90s. He tosses this into his answer too: No doubt scores of women who worked for Bill Clinton over decades had nothing but professional interactions with him. So what? What does it prove? The idea that unless youve harassed everyone you cant be plausibly believed to have harassed anyone was strange when Franken tried it and its strange when Clintons trying it by associating himself with the idea. Exit question: Who thought this book tour with James Patterson was a good idea? Every time you change the channel over the past week, some reporters giving Clinton a furrowed brow and asking him about Monica Lewinsky and #MeToo. (Broaddrick remains an Unperson to the media.) Surely Clinton and Patterson have enough celebrity juice between them that they could have moved sales without needing to go on TV to hawk their work. Lord knows neither one needs the money. If need be, Patterson could have done the tour solo and handled a slew of requisite dopey What was it like to work with Bill Clinton? questions. Its inexplicable that Clinton would submit himself to this unless hes worried that Democrats and the media are about to turn him into an Unperson too, as hes extremely unhelpful to their #MeToo politics, and is forcing himself back into the public eye to remind Americans that hes still around and relevant. If that was the point of the tour, to try to will himself back to respectability, I think its already failed. Poster Comment: The Xlinton interview is excruciating, embarrassing to even hear him offer his opinions on men assaulting women in the workplace.
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#22. To: Tooconservative (#0)
I'm surprised Patterson stooped that low to write a book with Clinton.
It's all about the money for Patterson. And Xlinton. Benefits them both. They're doing a very successful book tour, despite some of these uncomfortable interviews with the First Rapist.
Considering he is worth 10 times what Bubba is he didn't need the money. Makes you wonder how much his book sales are going to suffer in the future?
He seems pretty savvy. I don't think this is going to hurt what remains of his career at all. Anyway, the only venom you see right now is toward Xlinton, not his co-author.
The reason I say that is people/businesses that come out in support of the Leftard ideology don't seem to do near as well after their announcement, at least that's been the trend for the last 8 years or so.
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