Actress and left-wing activist Alyssa Milano was so very close to
successfully flexing her feminist bona fides with a cute RBG Halloween
post on Saturday night.
Instead, however, Milano first captioned a photo of herself dressed as
the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg with the wrong initials.
"Happy Halloween," the actresses posted. "RGB Forever."
Notably, Milano disabled replies to her tweet, a common Twitter move by
the celebrity. Still, the onslaught of corrections was apparently too
much for the insulated actress to bear.
So, Milano deleted the post hours later and offered a second try.
Unfortunately for the "Charmed" actress, this, too, was a failure.
"Happy Halloween. Ruth Bader Ginsberg [sic]," she wrote, misspelling
"Ginsburg."
She did, however, get those initials right the second time:
"#NotoriousRBG."
Again, Milano was hit with a wave of criticism and helpful alerts for
the second error. She later deleted the post.
.@Alyssa_Milano misspelled RBG's initials, deleted it, then
misspelled Ruth Bader Ginsburg's name.
pic.twitter.com/7uqni22luX
- JERRY DUNLEAVY (@JerryDunleavy) November 1, 2020
Milano's RBG outfit falls in line with the actress' feminist leanings,
which are at times confusing and inconsistent.
Back in 2018, Milano, noting that she is a survivor of sexual assault,
opposed the confirmation of now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh,
over an unsubstantiated decades-old accusation of attempted sexual
misconduct.
Here's the actress in an op-ed from September 2018:
So let me be as clear as possible: I believe Christine Blasey
Ford and I demand that our Senators vote to reject Brett
Kavanaugh as the next Justice on the Supreme Court. Every
person who refuses to loudly and openly reject Brett
Kavanaugh's nomination is telling every generation of
Americans that an alleged abuser's career is more valuable
than a survivor's humanity. And the highest court in our land
is no place for an alleged sexual offender to sit.
"I'm in D.C. because I don't believe any man's misogyny should take
precedent over a survivor's humanity," Milano tweeted days later,
opposing Kavanaugh.
However, the actress is a strong supporter of Democratic presidential
nominee Joe Biden, who is accused of sexual assault by Tara Reade, a
former staff assistant to the former vice president.
Milano rationalized her apparent flip-flop on the whole "believe women"
stance by explaining that the "world is gray":
"The world is gray. And as uncomfortable as that makes people,
gray is where the real change happens. Black and white is easy.
Gray is the place women can come together out of the glare of
the election and speak our truths, our doubts, our hopes, our
convictions and test them against the light and the dark."
"Gray is where the conversations which continue to swirl around
powerful men get started. And it's really almost always men,
isn't it? As women, we've been gaslit, we've been blamed.
We're too shrill or too quiet. We're weak or we're
insufferable. We're whores or ice queens. We're baby killers
or welfare queens. Women are not afforded the gray. We are not
allowed anything but the binary extremes. And then, we are
pressured to turn on one another for making impossible
choices."
--
Democrats and the liberal media hate President Trump more than they
love this country.