(CNN) -- Shameless. There's no other word to
describe Monica Lewinsky. Sixteen years after her affair with President
Bill Clinton became public knowledge, she's returned to the limelight with a campaign against cyberbullying -- of which she claims to have been "patient zero."
Ignore the fact that she
was patently not the primary victim in the Zippergate affair (poor
Hillary Clinton was) or that any comparison with someone suffering a disease, especially at a time when people are dropping dead from Ebola, is tasteless in the extreme.
What's most depressing is that when she rejoined the public stage, she said she was inspired to speak out
by the story of Tyler Clementi, a student who committed suicide after a
video of him kissing another boy went up online. Young Clementi was the
victim of societal homophobia as well as an invasion of his privacy, and his death makes any comparison with Lewinsky's self-imposed troubles ridiculous.
Moreover, Clementi died in 2010. Lewinsky has decided to revisit his
cause in 2014, suggesting that the timing may have less to do with him
than it does with Hillary Clinton.
And, of course, this will be embarrassing for Hillary Clinton. Lewinsky has joined Twitter,
which will allow her to make uncensored remarks in the course of the
2016 campaign. And Lewinsky has also lashed out at the way the White
House machine trashed her in its desire to protect Bill Clinton's
reputation (as it was paid to do -- she had an affair with the President
of the United States, not an anonymous bank manager no one gave a damn
about).
All of which will give
ammunition to Hillary Clinton's critics on both the right and left. The
right won't have to waste its own resources reminding people of the
seedier side of the Clinton years -- Lewinsky can do that now. And
Democratic opponents to the left of Hillary Clinton will rejoice that
someone is perpetuating the narrative that the Clintons are gangsters
who toy with the lives of others.
Lewinsky's new
cyberbullying angle is inspired: A significant number of Hollywood
liberals must live in terror of unflattering/undressed photos of them
getting out online.
But while Lewinsky grabs
some TV time talking about her own liberties, she forgets those of her
fellow sisters -- the mistreated wives. Imagine that your husband was
caught cheating and the contents of your marriage were discussed every
night on television. Would you feel happy about his mistress reappearing
16 years later to drag the whole thing up again, and even to play the
victim? Does Hillary Clinton not have a right to put this scandal behind
her and have a political identity separate from her husband's?
Lewinsky says that she wants to take on the "shame game." But what she did all those years ago and what she's doing now makes her a perfect candidate for a good, old-fashioned shaming.
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