Difference between revisions of "MeToo movement"

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(Ronan Farrow and Mia Farrow)
(Ronan Farrow and Mia Farrow)
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==Ronan Farrow and Mia Farrow==
 
==Ronan Farrow and Mia Farrow==
Investigative journalist Ronan Farrow, son of [[Woody Allen]] and [[Mia Farrow]], won the 2018 [[Pulitzer Prize]] for Public Service based on his #MeToo Reporting.<ref>https://www.billboard.com/amp/articles/news/8343763/ronan-farrow-2018-pulitzer-prize-me-too</ref> With a Pulitzer in his pocket, Farrow tried to re-ingratiate himself to [[Hollywood values|Hollywood left]] by piling on the [[Kavanaugh smear]] by lending his name to [[fake news]] and false allegations.<ref>http://thefederalist.com/2018/09/24/ronan-farrow-hurts-me-too-movement-with-his-anti-kavanaugh-smear/</ref>
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Investigative journalist Ronan Farrow, son of [[Woody Allen]] and [[Mia Farrow]], won the 2018 [[Pulitzer Prize]] for Public Service based on his #MeToo Reporting.<ref>https://www.billboard.com/amp/articles/news/8343763/ronan-farrow-2018-pulitzer-prize-me-too</ref> With a Pulitzer in his pocket, Farrow tried to re-ingratiate himself to [[Hollywood values|Hollywood left]] by piling on the [[Kavanaugh smear]] and lending his name to [[fake news]] and false allegations.<ref>http://thefederalist.com/2018/09/24/ronan-farrow-hurts-me-too-movement-with-his-anti-kavanaugh-smear/</ref><ref>https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/when-it-comes-to-fighting-fake-news-the-brett-kavanaugh-battle-showed-major-newsrooms-are-all-talk?_amp=true</ref>
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Farrow's mother, Mia Farrow told ''[[Time magazine]]'', {{quotebox|"I’ve spent my whole life, you know, confronting the issues that so many women are standing up for now and we need this to go around the world and also not just celebrities, but people in every…hotel workers and people who work in restaurants and all those people where it’s harder to come forward because you might lose your job. But I’m an optimist anyway. I feel things will get better globally.”<ref>http://amp.timeinc.net/time/5254516/mia-farrow-on-me-too</ref>}} Two months later, Farrow lent her name to the [[Democratic party]] [[warmonger]] movement: {{quotebox|": “As Trump pulls troops out of Syria, we must acknowledge the enormity of the world’s failure to halt a humanitarian catastrophe. US exit benefits Russia, ISIS—still active—Iran & Assad.” She added, “General Mattis was our last source of comfort that there was one ethical person in the Trump administration.”<ref>https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2018/12/22/pers-d22.html</ref>}}
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==

Revision as of 09:38, December 26, 2018

The Me Too movement (or #MeToo movement) is a hashtag movement spread virally on social media in October 2017. The movement took off after the sexual misconduct allegations against Hollywood mogul and Democrat Party mega-donor Harvey Weinstein became public by Ronan Farrow.[1] Weinstein, a charter member of the Clinton Legal Defense Fund organized to fight claims of sexual harassment and abuse by former Democratic President Bill Clinton, has been accused by no less than 97 women of assault and rape since Clinton's aquittal. The movement attempts to draw attention to the widespread prevalence of sexual assault and harassment by predominantly liberal media personalities, executives, public officials and celebrities.

With the Kavanaugh smear, Democrats attempted to reverse the movement and weaponize it to smear conservatives.[2][3]

Attempted hijacking by Democrats for identity politics

The cynical exploitation of real sex abuse victims by Democrats for political purposes became apparent when Democrat Senator Heidi Heitkamp, who voted against Justice Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation, in turn published the names of real abuse victims without their consent, thus victimizing them all over again, alleging real victims "supported" her re-election. Heitkamp was defeated days later in the 2018 Midterm elections and faced potential lawsuits from real victims.[4]

Alyssa Milano

Actress Alyssa Milano who is considered a high-profile spokesperson for the MeToo movement, has refused to participate in any further Soros-funded Women's March[5] protests until it condemns "bigotry and anti-Semitism." Linda Sarsour, a key Women's March organizer, is an outspoken supporter of Louis Farrakhan.[6]

Ronan Farrow and Mia Farrow

Investigative journalist Ronan Farrow, son of Woody Allen and Mia Farrow, won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service based on his #MeToo Reporting.[7] With a Pulitzer in his pocket, Farrow tried to re-ingratiate himself to Hollywood left by piling on the Kavanaugh smear and lending his name to fake news and false allegations.[8][9]

Farrow's mother, Mia Farrow told Time magazine,
"I’ve spent my whole life, you know, confronting the issues that so many women are standing up for now and we need this to go around the world and also not just celebrities, but people in every…hotel workers and people who work in restaurants and all those people where it’s harder to come forward because you might lose your job. But I’m an optimist anyway. I feel things will get better globally.”[10]
Two months later, Farrow lent her name to the Democratic party warmonger movement:
": “As Trump pulls troops out of Syria, we must acknowledge the enormity of the world’s failure to halt a humanitarian catastrophe. US exit benefits Russia, ISIS—still active—Iran & Assad.” She added, “General Mattis was our last source of comfort that there was one ethical person in the Trump administration.”[11]

See also

External links

References