FRANK BRUNI
In 1998, the professional moral scold William Bennett
published a book titled “The Death of Outrage: Bill Clinton and the Assault on
American Ideals.” In it, Bennett described blasé attitudes toward presidential
adultery as corrosive. Clinton’s promiscuity, he argued, implicated his fitness
for governing: “Chronic indiscipline, compulsion, exploitation, the easy
betrayal of vows, all suggest something wrong at a deep level — something
habitual and beyond control,” he wrote.
I was reminded of Bennett’s words by David Friend’s
fascinating recent book, “The Naughty Nineties: The Triumph of the American
Libido,” about the sexual scandals and cultural upheavals of that decade. In
retrospect, the dynamics of the Clinton-era culture wars seem blissfully
simple, pitting a sexually libertarian left against an aggressively prudish
right. It is a cosmic irony that, 20 years later, it is conservatives who’ve
finally killed off the last remaining unspoken rules about presidential sexual ethics.
On Friday, The Wall
Street Journal reported that, a month before the 2016 election, Donald
Trump’s lawyer Michael Cohen arranged a $130,000 payout to the porn star
Stephanie Clifford, known by the stage name Stormy Daniels, to stop her from
discussing a 2006 dalliance with Trump. The New York Times added
new details. The Daily Beast then reported that another
porn actress, Jessica Drake, who had accused Trump of offering her $10,000
for sex, signed a nondisclosure agreement barring her from talking about the
president.
In any other administration, evidence that the president
paid hush money to the star of “Good Will Humping” during the election would be
a scandal. In this one it has, so far, elicited a collective shrug.
Liberals, in general, can’t work up much outrage, because
the encounter between Trump and Daniels was by all accounts consensual. And few
social conservatives are interested in criticizing the president, since they’ve
talked themselves into a posture of hardheaded moral realism in order to
justify their support for him. In 2016, for example, Bennett himself condemned
“Never Trump” conservatives for their “terrible
case of moral superiority.”
If there’s a significant scandal, it will lie in the origins
of the $130,000, or in other encounters Trump has covered up. There’s a
sentence in Michael Wolff’s book “Fire and Fury” that hasn’t gotten the
attention it deserves. It comes toward the end, when Steve Bannon is praising
Trump’s lawyer Marc Kasowitz: “Kasowitz on the campaign — what did we have, a
hundred women? Kasowitz took care of all of them.”
If it turns out there were payoffs to hide non-consensual
behavior, there may be an uproar. But sleeping with a porn star while your wife
has a new baby, then paying the porn star to be quiet? That’s what everyone
expects of this president.
I don’t think it’s a coincidence that the right’s tacit
embrace of a laissez faire approach to sexuality — at least male, heterosexual
sexuality — coincides with attempts on the left to erect new ethical guardrails
around sex.
In the 1990s, many feminists defended untrammeled eros
because they feared a conservative sexual inquisition. Elements of that
inquisition remain; attacks on reproductive rights have grown only more
intense. Still, Trump has reconciled reactionary politics with male sexual
license. In doing so, he’s made such license easier for feminists to criticize.
This weekend, the sex scandal that captivated people I know
involved not Trump but the comedian Aziz Ansari. On Saturday, an online publication
called Babe published allegations from a young photographer,
pseudonymously called Grace, about a date with Ansari gone wrong.
Speaking to the writer Katie Way, Grace describes
halfhearted — at least on her part — oral sex and Ansari’s insistent push for
intercourse. Grace seemed to be disappointed that Ansari didn’t live up to his
nice-guy feminist persona. “You ignored clear non-verbal cues; you kept going
with advances,” she texted him.
Among feminists, reaction to the piece broke down roughly generationally.
Grace interpreted her experience as sexual assault, but several older writers
saw it as a story about caddishness and bad sex, neither of which justified the
invasion of Ansari’s privacy. In The Atlantic, Caitlin Flanagan described it as
“3,000
words of revenge porn” inspired by romantic disappointment.
I agree with Flanagan that the bad behavior Grace described
doesn’t rise to the level of assault or harassment, and I don’t think Babe
should have published the story. Still, I can sympathize with the younger
feminists who are pushing the limits of the #MeToo movement. They are, it seems
to me, trying to impose new norms of consideration on a brutal sexual culture,
without appealing to religious sanction or patriarchal chivalry.
“A lot of men will read that post about Aziz Ansari and see
an everyday, reasonable sexual interaction,” tweeted the
feminist writer Jessica Valenti. “But part of what women are saying right
now is that what the culture considers ‘normal’ sexual encounters are not
working for us, and oftentimes harmful.”
Maybe feminists feel free to express their fury about the
path sexual liberation has taken because they no longer need to defend sexual
liberation itself from conservatives. In the 1990s, porn culture seemed
subversive and chic. Now it’s become repulsively presidential.
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De THE NEW YORK TIMES, 15/01/2018
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