TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「At least four women have come forward with accounts of relatively chaste yet unwanted physical intimacy that mirrored a flood of images—unsolicited massages, too-close embraces—that spread on social media. It added up to a theme: Joe #Biden, the would-be Democratic front runner, was getting too close to too many women far too often. Unlike the many women who have accused President Trump of sexual assault—groping and kissing and hands up skirts—those who spoke out against Biden did not accuse him of sexual misconduct. Other women rushed to defend him, with one calling his kiss on her head “nurturing, supportive.” Even as Biden’s fate is litigated, the larger tests facing Democratic candidates come into focus, writes Nancy Gibbs. There is the challenge of the generational divide, in which a rising cohort, characterized by its diversity and tolerance, is intolerant of conduct that was long commonplace. Then there is the challenge of navigating norms in an era defined by the #MeToo movement. And then there is the challenge of whataboutism—that pervasive tactic in which you accuse your adversary of doing something worse than whatever you’ve been accused of. It’s a race to the bottom for the defensive and aggrieved, and it will be a defining feature of the 2020 campaign. So how should Democrats embrace this challenge? Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by Andreas Gebert—Picture Alliance/@gettyimages」4月4日 21時26分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 4月4日 21時26分


At least four women have come forward with accounts of relatively chaste yet unwanted physical intimacy that mirrored a flood of images—unsolicited massages, too-close embraces—that spread on social media. It added up to a theme: Joe #Biden, the would-be Democratic front runner, was getting too close to too many women far too often. Unlike the many women who have accused President Trump of sexual assault—groping and kissing and hands up skirts—those who spoke out against Biden did not accuse him of sexual misconduct. Other women rushed to defend him, with one calling his kiss on her head “nurturing, supportive.” Even as Biden’s fate is litigated, the larger tests facing Democratic candidates come into focus, writes Nancy Gibbs. There is the challenge of the generational divide, in which a rising cohort, characterized by its diversity and tolerance, is intolerant of conduct that was long commonplace. Then there is the challenge of navigating norms in an era defined by the #MeToo movement. And then there is the challenge of whataboutism—that pervasive tactic in which you accuse your adversary of doing something worse than whatever you’ve been accused of. It’s a race to the bottom for the defensive and aggrieved, and it will be a defining feature of the 2020 campaign. So how should Democrats embrace this challenge? Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by Andreas Gebert—Picture Alliance/@gettyimages


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