50 Shades of Schneiderman?

 

Ronan Farrow, whose New Yorker article broke the Harvey Weinstein scandal, just published another explosive investigative piece with his co-author Jane Mayer. The target this time is a powerful New York Democrat, State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. Schneiderman, if guilty, was especially brazen in praising the earlier New Yorker article.


And look who called this one in 2013.

Here are highlighted excerpts of Schneiderman’s defense, from the New Yorker.

Let’s take his claims seriously to start.

In a statement, Schneiderman said, “In the privacy of intimate relationships, I have engaged in role-playing and other consensual sexual activity. I have not assaulted anyone. I have never engaged in nonconsensual sex, which is a line I would not cross.”

“[R]ole playing and other consensual sexual activity” like 50 Shades of Grey, the movie that grossed $571,006,128 on an estimated $40 million budget? The book that has sold over 100 million copies mainstreaming BDSM? Is it possible that the New York State Attorney General thought he could engage in unconventional, transgressive sexual relationships with elite sanction? Or is he a brute who saw an opportunity in elite culture?

Consider the intersection of the 50 Shades phenomenon with the Gwyneth Paltrow Goop online magazine endorsed elite Los Angeles sex party, Snctm, coming to New York in 2017. Bowker.com reported “[c]ompared to the typical adult fiction consumer, buyers of the Fifty Shades books are more likely to be women, live in the Northeast, and have a significantly higher household income.” Goop favorably reviewed Snctm:

The easy association is Eyes Wide Shut: A masqued black-tie dinner that evolves over the course of the night from amuse bouche to what founder, Damon Lawner, calls “erotic theater,” where female performers (all volunteers) set the tone for what unfolds […] Some guests engage, some engage only with each other (while women can buy a ticket, men cannot attend unless they’re members ($10,000-$50,000), part of a couple, or reserve dinner), and others choose not to touch at all.

The New York Post told a less benign story.

Men pay $1,500 to $1,875 (the discount rate applies when you bring a female partner) to attend each party, or buy an annual VIP membership for $75,000, which includes admission to all parties, access to private rooms, unlimited Cristal Champagne and a sterling silver pendant of a lion that shows they’re a top-of-the-food-chain kind of guy. Carefully vetted, beautiful women — who outnumber the guys by about three to one — pay zilch.

“We had close to 1,000 applications for this event and we’re letting in about 100,” explains Snctm founder Damon Lawner, a divorced father of two. “It’s a highly curated crowd.”

By the end of the story, a 22-year-old “Mormon [woman] raised in Utah” has “had sex with six people, including a threesome with a 50-something sugar daddy” who pays her “tuition for her third year of college and a round-trip flight to Los Angeles … [for] the next Snctm party in Hollywood….”

So it was supposedly all the rage for rich and powerful men to have cultural elite-sanctioned access to women in private BDSM and public ritualistic sex parties. What could possibly go wrong? Quite a bit, according to Mayer and Farrow.

As New York State’s highest-ranking law-enforcement officer, Schneiderman, who is sixty-three, has used his authority to take legal action against the disgraced film mogul Harvey Weinstein, and to demand greater compensation for the victims of Weinstein’s alleged sexual crimes.

Yet, “four women with whom he has had romantic relationships or encounters … accuse Schneiderman of having subjected them to nonconsensual physical violence.”

[T]wo of the women, Michelle Manning Barish and Tanya Selvaratnam, have talked to The New Yorker on the record, because they feel that doing so could protect other women. They allege that he repeatedly hit them, often after drinking, frequently in bed and never with their consent. Manning Barish and Selvaratnam categorize the abuse he inflicted on them as “assault.” They did not report their allegations to the police at the time, but both say that they eventually sought medical attention after having been slapped hard across the ear and face, and also choked.

The rest of the story is one of women being repeatedly smacked around by Schneiderman, confiding in friends, and yet not taking him down. The reason? “He’s a good attorney general, he’s doing good things. I didn’t want to jeopardize that.” What good things? Progressive things, according to The New Yorker.

Schneiderman’s activism on behalf of feminist causes has increasingly won him praise from women’s groups. On May 1st, the New York-based National Institute for Reproductive Health honored him as one of three “Champions of Choice” at its annual fund-raising luncheon.

It appears that Schneiderman’s prosecution of Harvey Weinstein finally drove the women he allegedly abused to break their silence to the same writer who had the tenacity to break the media wall of silence on Hollywood abusers of women. But how did this man think that his behavior would never come back to bite his career? Remember the decade-old example of Republican Jack Ryan’s Senate 2004 candidacy being sunk by sex club claims from his divorce? The salacious sex club tidbits were detailed by CNN, of course. Ah, but that was a Republican and Obama had to be elected to the Senate.

Unable to withstand pressure from media and politicians, Eric Schneiderman resigned his post within hours after allegations of his physical abuse against women were published.

Statement By Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman

“It’s been my great honor and privilege to serve as Attorney General for the people of the State of New York. In the last several hours, serious allegations, which I strongly contest, have been made against me. While these allegations are unrelated to my professional conduct or the operations of the office, they will effectively prevent me from leading the office’s work at this critical time. I therefore resign my office, effective at the close of business on May 8, 2018.”

The New York Times has already published a good summary of Schneiderman’s rise and fall. The Times wrote of his progressive credentials, also referred to in The New Yorker.

Mr. Schneiderman has long been regarded as one of the state’s most progressive politicians, even before his 2013 lawsuit against Trump University and his subsequent suits against the Trump administration made him the darling of the political left. Last fall, Mr. Schneiderman’s office proudly pointed to a segment on the late-night comedy show “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee,” in which the attorney general was described as “a hero who stood up to democracy’s nemesis,” a Superman-like character known as Schneider-man.

From #Resistance and #MeToo hero to retaining a criminal defense attorney against his own possible prosecution in less than a day.

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There are 37 comments.

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  1. BalticSnowTiger Member
    BalticSnowTiger
    @BalticSnowTiger

    Hoyacon (View Comment):

    I’m intrigued by the fact that Schneiderman–with these skeletons in his closet–can be so aggressive in terms of making enemies in his career. I haven’t read the article (I live in a Jane Mayer free zone), but I’m guessing there’s a degree of payback here from somebody.

    The presumed to be more capable and certainly more insidious Preet Bharara, friend of Comey, Mueller, Brennan and their ilk could be expected to wait in the wings.

    • #31
  2. Ontheleftcoast Inactive
    Ontheleftcoast
    @Ontheleftcoast

    Quake Voter (View Comment):
    Think you are overstating things a bit, but I always tell my single friends that if they want to find a marriage partner, join a dating service, but if you want ladies to propose to you become a notable serial killer.

    I think Ricochet needs to add a LOL button to Quote/Flag/Like

    • #32
  3. Fake John/Jane Galt Coolidge
    Fake John/Jane Galt
    @FakeJohnJaneGalt

    Quake Voter (View Comment):

    Fake John/Jane Galt (View Comment):

    EJHill (View Comment):

    AltarGirl: How much of this is borne from a fundamental misunderstanding of marital relations and rape brought to us by Feminism?

    Rape is not sex. Rape is violence and an assault.

    Many wives have acquiesced to their husband’s desires for sex even if they weren’t “in the mood.” While the extreme feminist calls that “rape,” few other women do. But if there’s physical assault, hitting, threats – even in marriage – that’s rape. We’ve come a long way since Rideout v Oregon.

    Why would anyone be drawn to someone who physically abused them? Why would anyone think that would be the basis for romance?

    I do not understand why but I do know womyn that want, crave the violence as part of the relationship / sex ritual. As I got older I have come to the conclusion that everybody has a kink. Some are just more acceptable than others.

    Think you are overstating things a bit, but I always tell my single friends that if they want to find a marriage partner, join a dating service, but if you want ladies to propose to you become a notable serial killer.

    How so?  Are you saying I do not know or have known womyn that seem to want / crave violence as part of their relationship / sex ritual?  Or are you doubting that everybody has a kink? 

    • #33
  4. Hoyacon Member
    Hoyacon
    @Hoyacon

    Clifford A. Brown (View Comment):

    Hoyacon (View Comment):

    I’m intrigued by the fact that Schneiderman–with these skeletons in his closet–can be so aggressive in terms of making enemies in his career. I haven’t read the article (I live in a Jane Mayer free zone), but I’m guessing there’s a degree of payback here from somebody.

    It appears that he believed his solid progressive credentials would insulate him. When he allegedly started, he could look back at Bill Clinton and have reason to believe there was a successful strategy for using women, so long as you were seen as important to advancing the correct progressive politics. And it worked, until it didn’t. From the New Yorker account, he build up a critical mass of victims, who were able to connect in the New York progressive sphere, and who finally agreed to act after he became the public face of the top #MeToo prosecution.

    Well put and I don’t disagree.  Still, this is a guy who made some serious enemies in the course of advancing his career.  My cynicism requires me to think it came back to haunt him.  Not that it wasn’t deserved.

    • #34
  5. TBA Coolidge
    TBA
    @RobtGilsdorf

    Quake Voter (View Comment):

    I don’t really want to think too closely about how Trump might have insight into the seamy sexual histories of prominent NYC power brokers.

    I can hear him now. “I am the only one who can fix this sexual swamp because I have …”

    “…dipped my alligator in the office swamp?” 

    • #35
  6. Mendel Inactive
    Mendel
    @Mendel

    Respectfully, this post is a jumbled mess.

    I wasn’t aware of most of the information in the post, so I read most of the links. Those links deal with BDSM, upscale Hollywood sex parties, and Schneiderman. But they show no evidence of

    • any BDSM at the sex parties
    • that Schneiderman visited these parties
    • that Schneiderman engaged in BDSM

    So what’s the point of muddying such a simple and powerful story (powerful pro-feminist liberal politician is himself an abuser of women)? The attempt to draw connections between semi-related-but-not-really-relevant threads just confuses everything and reminds me of late-night college dorm room banter after a few too many herbal remedies were consumed.

    I think the take home here is as (bitter)sweet as it is simple: powerful progressive men who are supposedly pro-womens’ rights almost always have a strongly misogynistic side: Clinton, Spitzer, Wiener, Weinstein, Franken, and now this guy. Maybe it’s time for progressives to reacquaint themselves with this little thing called human nature, and how it’s proven so hard for them to overcome.

    • #36
  7. Doctor Robert Member
    Doctor Robert
    @DoctorRobert

    Getting past the confusion, Mr District Attorney assaulted four women.  Will his successor press charges?

    • #37
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