I know and have read accounts of legitimate rape victims. Years afterwards, they remember even the most minute details of their rape. It's an experience they would love to be able to forget, but they cannot.
Rape victims report their rapes as soon as possible while everything is "fresh" (for lack of a better term). They DO NOT wait DECADES to report a rape.
E. Jean Carroll cannot remember these details. She doesn't remember the EXACT DATE, only that it happened in the 90's. Over 24 years ago with a 10 year window.
In a 1994 Esquire interview, Carroll asked Lyle Lovett about the size of his penis. Carroll told the Hartford Courant about the interview saying that Lovett had “ripped off my clothes – journalistically speaking, of course, at every turn in this story.” The article was titled, “How to Be a Man.” Carroll noted in the article that Lovett had been a journalism major in college.
Some E. Jean Carroll Tweets:
"Sex Tip I Learned From My Dog: When in heat, chase the male until he collapses with Exhaustion...then jump him!"
"How do you know your 'unwanted sexual advance' is unwanted, until you advance it?"
"Would men have invented chastity belts, veils, and croks if women weren't just unbelievably HOT?---Honey, you were BORN to seduce!"
"There is no such thing as a slut. Only sexual geniuses."
"What CAN be done about the penis? It gets large when you want it small, and stays small when you want it large."
"It's not the most beautiful woman, No. No, It's the woman who makes the least mistakes, who seduces the most men."
Trump lawyer, Joe Tacopina repeatedly asked Ms Carroll why she did not shout when the alleged assault occurred.
"I'm not a screamer," she told Mr Tacopina, adding that some women do not come forward about sexual assaults because they are asked why they did not scream.
"I'm telling you he raped me whether I screamed or not," she told Mr Tacopina at one point.
The Trump lawyer also pressed Ms Carroll on why she did not report the assault at first to the police.
The former Elle magazine columnist replied that she was a member of the "silent generation", saying women her age were taught to keep quiet.
Mr Tacopina also questioned Ms Carroll on why she could not recall the specific date of the assault. The writer later conceded that certain parts of her story were "difficult to conceive of".
No comments:
Post a Comment