The ugly truth behind Saudi Arabia's love for Melania Trump
Donald
 Trump's first major trip overseas may be fraught with diplomatic land 
mines for the President, but the Trump administration can at least 
comfort itself with the clear hit that Melania Trump has been with the Saudi press.The
 fact that Melania is communicating with the media and the public in 
Saudi Arabia -- mainly through what Saudi news reports have deemed her "classy and conservative"
 fashion choices -- works well in the notoriously anti-woman kingdom. 
Her intense appeal makes sense, considering the first lady represents so
 much that Saudi citizens find familiar and can relate to, especially 
visually. Melania walks behind her husband, is quiet and reserved, does 
not make obvious demands (at least not ones we can hear), and most 
importantly, she looks beautiful and polished.All
 of that should come as no surprise, given whom Melania is married to. 
After all, how the Saudi government likes women to behave is similar to 
how Donald Trump has said he likes women to behave. And they both prefer women to look pretty in pictures, rather than hold actual positions of power. Melania's
 husband and the Saudi government also both know and understand the 
power and value of a good photo opportunity. In fact, fantastic photo 
opportunities are something the kingdom values and is hypersensitive about, especially ones that are going to be seen around the world. For
 them, Melania Trump was perfectly poised in her black Stella McCartney 
jumpsuit and gilded gold belt. Melania projected a glamorous image for a
 country where women live under male guardianship, cannot drive, still 
do not have the full vote, and cannot travel or seek medical attention 
without male permission.
                                                       Melania Trump gets rave reviews in Saudi press The
 Saudi press also appreciated Melania and first daughter Ivanka Trump's 
championing of the kingdom's feminism light, also known by some as "fake
 feminism" -- the same brand of women's rights Donald Trump likes to promote --
 which the two did by visiting companies run by women entrepreneurs. 
Those visits, which Ivanka and Melania made separately, project a false 
narrative of a government committed to advancing women's rights. Although much has been made about the first lady and first daughter not donning the headscarf,
 that choice really is not as big of a deal as people are making it out 
to be. Angela Merkel, Theresa May and Michelle Obama all skipped out on 
the headscarf while visiting Saudi Arabia, and Donald Trump even 
famously attacked Michelle Obama for insulting "Saudi culture" by 
showing her hair, something his wife and daughter both just did. Even
 though a much stricter version of the Islamic covering is required by 
law for Saudi women, wives and female family members of foreign 
dignitaries do not have to abide by it.
 That was true when Donald Trump criticized Michelle Obama for not 
wearing one, and it is still true now that Melania and Ivanka have 
followed suit. The
 headscarf should be the least of the Trump family's worries, because 
the Saudi press have embraced Melania (and to a related but lesser 
extent, Ivanka) for basically doing for the kingdom what they do for 
Donald Trump: Provide the perfect cover for misogyny and tyranny by 
being beautiful, poised and often silent. In
 Melania, the Saudi press and the Saudi government found the perfect 
spokeswoman, who projects a glamorous image that glosses over one of 
world's most autocratic and oppressive regimes.
                                                       Melania Trump gets rave reviews in Saudi press The
 Saudi press also appreciated Melania and first daughter Ivanka Trump's 
championing of the kingdom's feminism light, also known by some as "fake
 feminism" -- the same brand of women's rights Donald Trump likes to promote --
 which the two did by visiting companies run by women entrepreneurs. 
Those visits, which Ivanka and Melania made separately, project a false 
narrative of a government committed to advancing women's rights. Although much has been made about the first lady and first daughter not donning the headscarf,
 that choice really is not as big of a deal as people are making it out 
to be. Angela Merkel, Theresa May and Michelle Obama all skipped out on 
the headscarf while visiting Saudi Arabia, and Donald Trump even 
famously attacked Michelle Obama for insulting "Saudi culture" by 
showing her hair, something his wife and daughter both just did. Even
 though a much stricter version of the Islamic covering is required by 
law for Saudi women, wives and female family members of foreign 
dignitaries do not have to abide by it.
 That was true when Donald Trump criticized Michelle Obama for not 
wearing one, and it is still true now that Melania and Ivanka have 
followed suit. The
 headscarf should be the least of the Trump family's worries, because 
the Saudi press have embraced Melania (and to a related but lesser 
extent, Ivanka) for basically doing for the kingdom what they do for 
Donald Trump: Provide the perfect cover for misogyny and tyranny by 
being beautiful, poised and often silent. In
 Melania, the Saudi press and the Saudi government found the perfect 
spokeswoman, who projects a glamorous image that glosses over one of 
world's most autocratic and oppressive regimes.
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