Categories
Health

Kim Kardashian Faces Backlash After Claiming She Has 'Nothing Bad to Say' About Donald Trump


Kim Kardashian West turned heads when it was announced she would be meeting with Donald Trump in May to advocate for the release of Alice Marie Johnson, a 63-year-old great-grandmother who had been serving life in prison for a non-violent drug charge. Her efforts worked—Trump commuted Johnson’s sentence, but that hasn’t stopped people from calling out his other policies and the West family’s alignment with the administration.

The backlash continued to pile up on Monday, after Kardashian went on Jimmy Kimmel Live, telling the host she had “nothing bad to say about the president.”

On the show, Kardashian explained she wanted to discuss Johnson’s case with Trump because she “knew there was only one person in power that could make this change and get this woman out of prison.” She added that she has a list of people in prison that she wants to take to Trump, and said she is “very grateful and very hopeful that more good things are going to come out of our conversations.”

She also tried to explain her husband Kanye West’s controversial endorsements of the president. On social media, West has gone on several rants supporting Trump, and his inflammatory tweets have included everything from calling Trump “his brother” to posting pictures of a Make America Great Again hat.

“To make it clear, we’d talk about it and his policies, and he doesn’t necessarily agree with his policies. He likes his personality…and how he made it to be president when everybody really underestimated him,” she said, adding, “He’s not political so he doesn’t dig deep into what’s going on.”

Following the Kimmel interview, Twitter quickly took Kardashian to task, calling her uninformed and pointing out policies the Trump administration has initiated that deserve scrutiny, including the separation of children at the border. Critics also took offense to the tone of the interview—Kardashian laughed and joked that she had been naked when Trump called to tell her he had commuted Johnson’s sentence.

Kardashian’s comments don’t address insults Trump has made about her in the past. In a 2013 interview with Howard Stern, Trump made crude remarks about her physical appearance, saying, “Does she have a good body? No. Does she have a fat ass? Absolutely.”

Others have questioned how committed Kardashian is to prison reform. On social media, many dismissed her initial meeting with Trump as a publicity stunt that benefits both reality show stars.

Related Stories:

Alice Johnson Is Free, But Is the Trump Administration Actually Committed to Criminal Justice Reform?

President Trump Commutes Alice Johnson’s Sentence a Week After Meeting With Kim Kardashian





Source link

Categories
Health

Six Women File Lawsuits Against USC Claiming the Campus Gynecologist Sexually Abused Them


Six women filed lawsuits against the University of Southern California on Monday, alleging that Dr. George Tyndall—who worked as the campus health clinic’s full-time gynecologist for almost 30 years—”sexually victimized them under the pretext of medical care” with USC’s knowledge, the LA Times reports.

The Times first broke the story last week after a lengthy investigation revealed alleged abuse dating back to the 1990s, when co-workers said he was improperly photographing students’ genitals. There were also complaints alleging the doctor was inserting his fingers into patients’ vaginas improperly and not in the manner typical to a gynecological exam.

More recently, according to the paper, Tyndall’s colleagues feared he was targeting Chinese students less familiar with American medical practices. Tyndall was suspended in 2016, and was allowed to resign with a financial payout last summer, even though an internal USC investigation showed that his “behavior during pelvic exams was outside the scope of current medical practice and amounted to sexual harassment of students.” Patients were not informed and he was not reported to the Medical Board of California.

Tyndall has denied any wrongdoing, telling The Times in interviews that his exams were appropriate. “I’m there to protect the health of Trojan women,” he reportedly said. In January, Tyndall renewed his California medical license.

The university told the Times that “in hindsight,” USC should have reported him. The university did finally file a complaint with the medical board on March 9 after a request by Tyndall to be reinstated.

John Manly, an Orange County lawyer who is representing four of the former patients told the Times, “It doesn’t matter how many people get hurt. It is all about protecting USC’s reputation.” Manly also worked on the case that ended with a $500 million settlement from Michigan State University for former patients of Larry Nassar.

Lucy Chi filed a federal class action suit alleging she was violated in 2012 when Tyndall inserted his fingers into her vagina. Another woman says he also inserted his fingers at the beginning of a pelvic exam and remarked on the tightness of her vaginal muscles. Chi says she realized the behavior was improper after reading the Times’ investigation.

USC Provost Michael Quick issued a letter Monday that apologized to patients, but maintained that the university did not ignore complaints.

“It is true that our system failed, but it is important that you know that this claim of a cover-up is patently false,” Quick wrote. “We would never knowingly put students in harm’s way.”

He says the school’s senior leadership did not learn of complaints against Tyndall until 2017.



Source link