Journalist Jill Filipovic observes that, as former President Donald Trump spends his days in a Manhattan court room, Melania is notably not in the audience. Melania is many things at once, argues Filipovic: An allegedly wronged wife who seems to be refusing to roleplay silent, present forgiveness, and a woman with the capacity to make her own choices about her marriage and her life.
Journalist Jill Filipovic observes that, as former President Donald Trump spends his days in a Manhattan court room, Melania is notably not in the audience. Melania is many things at once, argues Filipovic: An allegedly wronged wife who seems to be refusing to roleplay silent, present forgiveness, and a woman with the capacity to make her own choices about her marriage and her life.
Journalist Jill Filipovic observes that, as former President Donald Trump spends his days in a Manhattan court room, Melania is notably not in the audience. Melania is many things at once, argues Filipovic: An allegedly wronged wife who seems to be refusing to roleplay silent, present forgiveness, and a woman with the capacity to make her own choices about her marriage and her life.
In a revealing moment of MSM elitism, WaPo editorialist Ruth Marcus, discussing the decision of Silda Wall Spitzer to appear with her husband Eliot yesterday, wanted people to know Mrs. Spitzer is a Harvard law grad and a "serious" person, not a Tammy Wynette type.Marcus was interviewed by Contessa Brewer on MSNBC this afternoon, and the pair turned to the question of why political wives tend to appear with their husbands who have been caught up in sex scandals.RUTH MARCUS: I just don't think that we should also lump all these women together. And to use a line that got Hillary Clinton in some trouble back in the 1992 presidential campaign, Eliot Spitzer's wife is not some Tammy Wynette, stand-by-your-man kind of woman.She continued . . .