How much did #MeToo change for women? Let’s ask Harvey Weinstein today –or Donald Trump | Marina Hyde
Both were pilloried, but that was then. Today, one has beaten a rape conviction, the other may return as president
According to his representatives, former Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein is still digesting the overturning of his rape conviction by a New York court, but they did come out to say he was cautiously excited". Cautiously excited? I'm not sure these are the words I'd alight on to paint a word-picture of a rapist. You might as well say tentatively aroused". Then again, as we're about to discuss, quite a lot of guys don't particularly have to worry about what they say or do, or how they say or do it. It's only natural that Harvey should very much want to be one of them again.
Speaking of word-pictures, though, how's this for a vignette of our times? When they heard the news that Weinstein's conviction had been overturned on Thursday, a whole host of reporters happened to be looking at the exact spot in the exact New York courtroom that he'd sat in when that original judgment had been handed down. This was because they were waiting for Donald Trump to sit in it for Thursday's proceedings in his hush money trial. Mr Trump, you might recall, is in such a lot of trouble that he is the presumptive Republican nominee and current bookies' favourite to win the US presidency again, though admittedly he lags behind Weinstein on the sexual assault and misconduct front, given that only 26 women have accused him of it. Ultimately, though, I guess the question is: if #MeToo went too far", what would going just far enough" have looked like?
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