US Harvey Weinstein and the Death Rattle of #MeToo - (((Bari Weiss)))'s 'anti-woke right' publication boasts about their support for their coreligionists Weinstein and Gaiman

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Harvey Weinstein is back in court, the right are protesting his innocence, and maybe the left have only themselves to blame. (Photo by MICHAEL M. SANTIAGO/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
If ever you need an example of how backlash politics makes for strange bedfellows, look no further than the unholy alliance between the MAGA Sphere and Hollywood’s most notorious Democratic sex offender.

Harvey Weinstein is back in court this month for a retrial, after his 2020 conviction for rape was overturned by New York’s Court of Appeals. And chief among those advocating not just for his acquittal but his innocence on all charges is none other than Candace Owens—as in, the same Candace Owens who was ousted from The Daily Wire for such scintillating social insights as “If Hitler just wanted to make Germany great and have things run well, okay, fine,” and “Hollywood is run by sinister Jewish gangs.”

Owens might seem like an unlikely champion for Weinstein, who in addition to being Jewish was once one of Hollywood’s most prominent and generous Democratic Party supporters. And Weinstein, though he’s hardly in a position to be picky, might once have balked at having someone as kooky as Owens in his corner. But that was the old world, where the vibe had not yet shifted and things still mostly made sense. In our current, bizarro cultural moment, led by a newly anointed political class hell-bent on undoing the excesses of the woke era, the extremely online right has apparently determined that Weinstein is the enemy of their enemy, and hence their friend.

Her account of a series of jailhouse interviews she conducted with Weinstein, titled Harvey Speaks, is fueling a growing sense that he was railroaded or maybe even falsely accused. Joe Rogan, after listening to her take on the case, announced to his podcast audience that he’d found it persuasive: “I can’t believe I’m on Harvey Weinstein’s side. I thought he was guilty of, like, heinous crimes, and then you listen to it, and you’re like, ‘Wait, what? What is going on?’ ”

The political and cultural environment surrounding Weinstein’s original conviction has been a major point of focus for Owens, who suggested on her podcast that Weinstein was an easy target for #MeToo at a moment when it was desperate to collect scalps. “Movements get really big, and they find someone to hang,” she said on the Keeping It Real podcast. “Weinstein was an easy person to hang because he was immoral.”

I for one will leave the question of Weinstein's innocence to the jury (though I feel compelled to note that, if it’s easy to hang an immoral person, it is surely even easier to hang a convicted sex offender, as Weinstein still is in California). But it’s hardly surprising that Owens has chosen to go down this particular road. Because, as Rogan put it: What is going on?

It’s complicated. Weinstein’s retrial is a do-over of legal proceedings that were originally marred by judicial error, and that raised questions even at the time about whether prosecutors were cutting corners in their eagerness to topple one of the #MeToo movement’s biggest bad guys. New York’s highest court found that the judge in his first trial improperly allowed testimony from accusers not named in the official charges. (A similar technicality—this one a more serious case of judicial error—triggered Bill Cosby’s release from prison in 2021.) Weinstein’s lawyers are now arguing that he didn’t get a fair trial in California, either—and are appealing his conviction of rape there, too.

These ambiguities may spell an acquittal for Weinstein; they also provide an opening for someone like Owens to claim the entire case was corrupt. But the architects of #MeToo also bear a certain amount of responsibility for the shape of this conversation. Because while the original purpose of the movement might have been to protect women from sexual predation, what it became—and what it will likely be remembered as—is a machine that wrecked the lives of men by labeling them sex offenders, without due process, and often without even the most perfunctory concern for whether the allegations were true.

That #MeToo so quickly became a tool for destroying reputations and dispensing vigilante justice is only surprising if you don't recognize the movement’s true ideological origins—which had absolutely nothing to do with Harvey Weinstein or Hollywood sexism, and everything to do with the election of one Donald J. Trump.

Ah, Trump: the living embodiment of gross sexual entitlement, a multiply-accused alleged frotteur who bragged about grabbing women by the you-know-what. The subtext of #MeToo, which broke into the mainstream almost exactly one year after the release of that infamous Access Hollywood tape, was that Trump’s election to the presidency despite all these things revealed something deeply rotten in the culture—and that while we’d missed our chance to punish him for his misdeeds, it was not too late to build a movement that would punish men like him. Not just accused rapists like Bill Cosby or R. Kelly, but every man who crossed lines, took liberties, and failed to treat women with the respect they deserved. The boors, the bastards, the gropers and grabbers; men who flirted with their coworkers or cheated on their wives or committed the vaguely sexual-sounding offense of sliding into a woman’s DMs—which seemed a lot more scandalous before I realized that it just meant sending any kind of message on social media, including professional correspondence.

I suspect that Weinstein’s convictions, one of the movement’s few legal wins, were such a big deal—symbolic, even—because it felt a bit like taking down Trump by proxy. Here was a man of a certain age, a certain type, who had a certain way of throwing his weight around to extract what he wanted from unwilling women. And for those who had long been agitating for a more victim-friendly criminal justice system and more dedicated prosecution of sex crimes, his first conviction, which was in New York, was groundbreaking. Not just a rare win, but perhaps even the start of something transformative.

But looking back, Weinstein was an outlier. Mostly, MeTooings were a wild extralegal west of unfalsifiable accusations, social media innuendo, or allegations via anonymous spreadsheet laundered into the news cycle by enthusiastic journalists. The men who suffered the worst consequences were rarely the most credibly accused, and the lack of both process and restraint emboldened both the press and ordinary people alike to go to extremes.

This latter phenomenon is starkly illustrated by the case of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who outside of Weinstein is probably the movement’s most memorable target. As a nominee, Kavanaugh was not only recklessly accused by the media of being part of a teen rape gang, and put through a surreal Congressional struggle session over the contents of his high school yearbook, but was later subject to an assassination attempt by a disgruntled liberal: His would-be murderer pled guilty last month.

This is not to say that no truly bad men were taken down by #MeToo, or that its adherents accomplished nothing. Some important conversations were had; some serial predators got their comeuppance; and a whole lot of corporate anti-sexual harassment training modules tripled in size. But considered in its totality, #MeToo looks mostly like a Salem-style moral panic whose casualties included dozens of innocent—or at least noncriminal—people and, generously, maybe five actual witches. Of course its opponents were eventually going to anoint even those men in the latter category as heroes.

Meanwhile, the tepid legacy of what was supposed to be an era-defining feminist movement is a bit of an elephant in the room for the left. It doesn’t help that some of its most embarrassing and egregious missteps keep resurfacing in new and horrible ways—like the cancellation of author Junot Díaz, accused in 2018 of forcibly kissing a grad student and also of “verbal sexual assault” for arguing with a woman at a dinner party, and who was revealed last month to have been removed from the Norton literary anthology despite having been cleared of wrongdoing multiple times over.

But it also feels, sometimes, like the moment has passed. It’s not just that Weinstein, whose convictions were the biggest and most sparkling jewel in the #MeToo crown, might now be acquitted of some of the most heinous charges against him. It’s that the thrilling momentum of the movement has vanished, leaving its participants both too jaded and too tired to resume the business of witch-finding.

The shift in mood is most palpable when it comes to the most recent spate of scandals, which have failed to generate even a fraction of the energy that accompanied such things at the movement’s peak. Take the host of salacious and horrifying allegations against author Neil Gaiman, which were the subject of a six-part podcast series in the UK last summer, as well as a massive cover story in New York magazine in January. These dominated the discourse for an intense week or two only to fade from consciousness entirely—and the recently announced return of Gaiman’s TV series Good Omens, on which he was the showrunner for two seasons before stepping back earlier this year, has been met with virtually no outrage.

And then there’s the biggest #MeToo story currently going in Hollywood, about the ongoing beef between A-list star Blake Lively and her obscure-by-comparison costar Justin Baldoni. Once, the allegations of harassment alone would have been a career-ending scandal for Baldoni. Today, the public is more skeptical, less credulous—unafraid to note that this story seems complicated, in ways that simply don’t align with the movement’s simplistic narrative of Innocent Helpless Woman Terrorized by Powerful Evil Man.

And of course, there’s Donald Trump—not just a confessed pussy-grabber but also, now, a convicted felon for falsifying business records in the Stormy Daniels case. (He was also found liable by a New York jury in a civil trial for sexual abuse.) And now he’s back in the White House. Again.

What’s sad about this state of affairs isn’t that we’re struggling to find new men to feed into the barely-functional woodchipper that is the #MeToo movement in 2025. It’s that we spent six years thumping our chests and vowing to make the world a better place for women, and all we got is the lousy woodchipper. The specter of sexuality hasn’t stopped looming over women’s professional lives; the criminal justice system is no better at handling cases of sexual assault; and terrorizing normal men with the threat of professional ruination for daring to DM us has curbed the behavior of actual predators not at all.

But perhaps this was inevitable. Creating better ways of being is hard, and thankless, and not much fun. Hunting witches, on the other hand? All you need is a little fuel for the fire, and a love of watching them burn.
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Don’t miss Kat’s piece about Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni, in which she argued: “If this is a story about men behaving badly, it’s also a story about the women who make their living in the attention economy, where gossip is a weapon.”
 
In most of the #MeToo cases, those women were treated EXACTLY with the respect they deserved.
Yup. This is probably pretty close to how these interactions went:
> Harvey: If you want the part, you'll gargle my balls *unzips pants*
> Hollywood Starlet Whore: ok. *gargling noises*
> 20 Years Later...
> Burnt Out Hollywood Starlet Whore: Harvey Raped me!

How a normal person would react:

> Harvey: If you want the part, you'll gargle my balls *unzips pants*
> Normal Woman: What the fuck? Hell no! Cops!

The fact that it took 30+ years for this to actually blow back on him is an illustration that the entertainment industry is completely made of whores.
 
Marilyn Manson is another victim of a MeToo hoax which is kind of beyond belief in terms of how far they went to try to destroy him. Creating fake FBI documents, forging the name of a real FBI agent on said documents, using passwords from one of his fired assistants (who also joined in and claimed to be one of his "victims") to hack into all his accounts, registering an e-mail address in his legal name and sending it CSAM to try to get him in trouble, trying to convince a judge so that he can't appear or speak in his defense at his own trial because the "victim" would be too "traumatized" to participate in the proceedings, It's absolutely bonkers.

The shift in mood is most palpable when it comes to the most recent spate of scandals, which have failed to generate even a fraction of the energy that accompanied such things at the movement’s peak. Take the host of salacious and horrifying allegations against author Neil Gaiman, which were the subject of a six-part podcast series in the UK last summer, as well as a massive cover story in New York magazine in January. These dominated the discourse for an intense week or two only to fade from consciousness entirely—and the recently announced return of Gaiman’s TV series Good Omens, on which he was the showrunner for two seasons before stepping back earlier this year, has been met with virtually no outrage.
Can't speak for all Gaiman fans and where they stand on it but the Marilyn Manson thing is exactly why I don't trust these cases anymore. It all sounds credible when these women are being coached by journoscum looking to collect another scalp, and when they pretend to be traumatized on cushy podcasts where no one is challenging them, but the second it gets to courts and actual evidence they get shown to be liars and fraudsters.
 
Harvey Weinstein is back in court, the right are protesting his innocence, and maybe the left have only themselves to blame.
After defending Karmelo and getting him out of prison, you fucks have no right to say anything.
And chief among those advocating not just for his acquittal but his innocence on all charges is none other than Candace Owens
Oh no1
Not the successful black woman who hates us!
Owens might seem like an unlikely champion for Weinstein, who in addition to being Jewish
I'm glad that we're focusing on his biggest crime first.
having someone as kooky as Owens in his corner
I've seen lefties use this particular word about Owens many times, must be some meme they're trying to force.
The political and cultural environment surrounding Weinstein’s original conviction has been a major point of focus for Owens, who suggested on her podcast that Weinstein was an easy target for #MeToo at a moment when it was desperate to collect scalps. “Movements get really big, and they find someone to hang,” she said on the Keeping It Real podcast. “Weinstein was an easy person to hang because he was immoral.”
Is she wrong?
It’s complicated. Weinstein’s retrial is a do-over of legal proceedings that were originally marred by judicial error
So basically, you're mad that due process is happening.
These ambiguities may spell an acquittal for Weinstein
Good, bring him back to Hollywood so we can have good movies again.
Ever since he's been kicked out, Hollywood products suck.
Ah, Trump: the living embodiment of gross sexual entitlement
Oh boy...
I suspect that Weinstein’s convictions, one of the movement’s few legal wins, were such a big deal—symbolic, even—because it felt a bit like taking down Trump by proxy.
These people are so captured.
Everything always has to go back to Trump somehow.
And then there’s the biggest #MeToo story currently going in Hollywood, about the ongoing beef between A-list star Blake Lively and her obscure-by-comparison costar Justin Baldoni. Once, the allegations of harassment alone would have been a career-ending scandal for Baldoni. Today, the public is more skeptical, less credulous—unafraid to note that this story seems complicated, in ways that simply don’t align with the movement’s simplistic narrative of Innocent Helpless Woman Terrorized by Powerful Evil Man.
Ok but... it's not a powerful man, the woman is the powerful one here who can get him fired and blacklisted instantly.
If anything, this guy can claim #MeToo and it will be way more believable.
 
Yup. This is probably pretty close to how these interactions went:
> Harvey: If you want the part, you'll gargle my balls *unzips pants*
> Hollywood Starlet Whore: ok. *gargling noises*
> 20 Years Later...
> Burnt Out Hollywood Starlet Whore: Harvey Raped me!

How a normal person would react:

> Harvey: If you want the part, you'll gargle my balls *unzips pants*
> Normal Woman: What the fuck? Hell no! Cops!

The fact that it took 30+ years for this to actually blow back on him is an illustration that the entertainment industry is completely made of whores.
I doubt he even needed to ask them for it. Whores will be whores and only idiots verbally ask for them to open their legs for promotion (if they even need to and it isn't the women's initiative).

#MeToo has achieved that the mere act of a male boss and his female worker being in the same room is reason enough to ruin the man's life, even if he did nothing.
 
Oh no1
Not the successful black woman who hates us!
They are never forgiving Candace for not feeling right to cheer for the slaughtering of kids. She's an idiot, but she's not a cruel one.

These people are so captured.
Everything always has to go back to Trump somehow.
I don't disagree though. I think they truly felt Weinstein was a victory after they couldn't get Trump, who they consider even a worse sexual predator.

I doubt he even needed to ask them for it. Whores will be whores and only idiots verbally ask for them to open their legs for promotion (if they even need to and it isn't the women's initiative).
There is an audio though. But it's weird because the victim in question, a model, is never really forced. HW is just too uncomfortably pushy in his demands to make her go with him to his room. The most we get is a quasi confession of previous groping, but that's quite ambiguous. At the end, the woman says 'i wanna go" and he says "well, bye".
 
Marilyn Manson is another victim of a MeToo hoax which is kind of beyond belief in terms of how far they went to try to destroy him. Creating fake FBI documents, forging the name of a real FBI agent on said documents, using passwords from one of his fired assistants (who also joined in and claimed to be one of his "victims") to hack into all his accounts, registering an e-mail address in his legal name and sending it CSAM to try to get him in trouble, trying to convince a judge so that he can't appear or speak in his defense at his own trial because the "victim" would be too "traumatized" to participate in the proceedings, It's absolutely bonkers.
Just like with the original OJ Simpson trial, they pushed it too far poisoning the well, and what should have been a slam-dunk case was thrown out due to reasonable doubt due to prosecutorial shenanigans.

Based and possibly schizophrenic Candoxx Owens is quickly becoming one of my favorite semi-lolcows. Aside from the Ye support and naming the Jew, she likes to ruffle the feathers of untouchable people for ostensibly no reason, and likes constantly shitposting online. Honestly I hope her push gets Harvey acquitted on retrial. If only to see the liberals go apoplectic, and hopefully see Rose McGowan off herself in seething rage, preferably livestreamed for the entire world to see.

That might seem a bit harsh but as others have said, most of these women knew exactly what they were doing. The "casting couch" has been a trope ever since the first stage play was performed, and some young whore wanted to further their own career. Only now in the cancel culture era, does it seem reasonable to go back decades and air your grievances to the world at large.

Lest we forget, this whole #metoo movement was founded by this eldritch horror. And no, I'm not deliberately choosing a bad photo. This is the leading profile picture from this abominable sheboon's Wikipedia page.
Tarana_Burke_2018_Disobedience_Awards_at_the_MIT_Media_Lab_(cropped).webp

Another thought too. Everything is focused on the aggrieved women, yet nobody ever brings up the guys who were victims too. People like Trump and Weinstein are criminally charged for alleged decades old crimes. Yet Asia Argento was fucking a 16 year old while posting about it on Instagram,
And managed to get off with a civil settlement. Worst of all, the dirty cunt caused Anthony Bourdain to neck himself.
 
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Yup. This is probably pretty close to how these interactions went:
> Harvey: If you want the part, you'll gargle my balls *unzips pants*
> Hollywood Starlet Whore: ok. *gargling noises*
> 20 Years Later...
> Burnt Out Hollywood Starlet Whore: Harvey Raped me!

How a normal person would react:

> Harvey: If you want the part, you'll gargle my balls *unzips pants*
> Normal Woman: What the fuck? Hell no! Cops!

The fact that it took 30+ years for this to actually blow back on him is an illustration that the entertainment industry is completely made of whores.

But what happens when the Police are working with a sex pest?

https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/...oonves-sexual-assault-settlement-cbs/3024035/
 
It all sounds credible when these women are being coached by journoscum looking to collect another scalp, and when they pretend to be traumatized on cushy podcasts where no one is challenging them, but the second it gets to courts and actual evidence they get shown to be liars and fraudsters.
The Jian Ghomeshi Trial was when everyone should have woken up to this tactic. His accusers sent 5,000 messages to each other coordinating their allegations, used the same journos and lawyers, etc.
 
Just like with the original OJ Simpson trial, they pushed it too far poisoning the well, and what should have been a slam-dunk case was thrown out due to reasonable doubt due to prosecutorial shenanigans.
It's kind of a similar thing here because Manson was a drug addict and abusive to his partners - emotionally abusive. But he was accused of being this monster serial rapist and physical abuser who locked women in cages which he wasn't. Ironically it was the voracity of their claims that would ultimately exonerate him in the public eye, I think if they had been more honest about their relationships he would have had to publicly atone for that behavior. But because his accusers were all liars the focus became him overcoming the bullshit rather than needing to atone for what he was really guilty of. Which he has been trying to do anyway, mending burned bridges and taking accountability for your behavior because that's what you do in AA, but the media refuse to admit they were wrong about trying to cancel him so now they try to avoid talking about the cases at all outside of the very far left rags that whine that he's allowed to tour.

The Jian Ghomeshi Trial was when everyone should have woken up to this tactic. His accusers sent 5,000 messages to each other coordinating their allegations, used the same journos and lawyers, etc.
Similar story here. Evan Rachel Wood's girlfriend at the time Ashley Ilma Gore (a notorious con artist who has done this kind of stuff before, she's lied about being "kidnapped" by a pro-Trump uber driver which the media breathlessly reported without doing any kind of fact checking) coordinated a lot of this stuff by contacting basically every woman who had ever been in the same room as Manson before. She coached them into making sure all their stories lined up - incredulously, they all claim that the reason they only came forward recently was they all had "repressed memories of abuse", which is another fishy head scratcher the media never reported on when it was covering the Manson stuff.

Probably one of the more amusing outcomes of this is that Wood eventually found herself fighting alongside a rather infamous stalker who has been harassing Manson since the 90s, claiming that he puts hidden messages aimed at her in his music and videos.

Unfortunately he was forced to settle with a lot of these women even though they were falsely accusing him, in cases like these the insurance companies that represent celebrities get involved because they want to avoid these things going to court to avoid heavy payouts. Manson sued Wood but the case wound up in the courtroom of an activist roastie judge who basically did everything she could to railroad the case in Wood's favor, even going so far as to deny Manson's team the ability to submit the fraudulent FBI letter into evidence even though it was the smoking gun which proved her criminal conspiracy against him. (The judge said it was "protected speech" and not admissible in court.) But at least he has his career back and is back in the music industry. Wood hasn't been in a movie or TV show in years, so there's speculation that she's more or less blacklisted from the entertainment industry as it's an open secret she tried to destroy Manson's life so no male co-star wants to star in anything with her to avoid meeting the same fate.


Sorry if my Manson sperging is a little too far from the topic of Weinstein, but I just find the case endlessly fascinating and probably one of the most egregious examples of a MeToo hoax. I really hope some legal podcast takes a crack at unwinding the entire thing because it's fascinating series of cases, but it's really messy and difficult to explain off the cuff. A massive conspiracy and a lot of them got a nice payday out of it because it just wasn't feasible for Manson to fight them all in court.
 
Sorry if my Manson sperging is a little too far from the topic of Weinstein, but I just find the case endlessly fascinating and probably one of the most egregious examples of a MeToo hoax.
Manson is one of those fascinating cases that the media is too cowardly to take on.

He sucks, and he should join Weinstein in a woodchipper. But he was (mostly) falsely accused by really malicious women. He sought out evil BPD whores for thrills, and they did what they do. Many were professional actresses who can put on a great show.

The other major case which will never be explored is the #MeToo of porn star James Deen. He got accused of raping porn stars on set, on film, but the videos themselves exonerate him. But the media refuses to admit the actual videos show it was all consensual.

Like Weinstein, Deen is a creepy jew who should die in a fire. But he's factually honest in this situation. Interestingly, he was the only male porn star who was close to breaking into mainstream movies. He also had a big straight-female fanbase.
in cases like these the insurance companies that represent celebrities get involved
I had no idea. Interesting.
 
How a normal person would react:

> Harvey: If you want the part, you'll gargle my balls *unzips pants*
> Normal Woman: What the fuck? Hell no! Cops!
This means normal people won't get work and whore culture dominates. I have no sympathy for whores, but if these laws put whore filters in prison, good. It's like if a jogger shoots and kills another jogger, you'd want the first jogger to go to prison.
 
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