?:reviewBody
|
-
Ever since Melania Trump delivered an address at the 2016 Republican National Convention (a speech that was strikingly similar to the one given by Michelle Obama at the Democratic National Convention eight years earlier) the First Lady has been plagued with (mostly false) accusations of plagiarism. Fake news stories have been published alleging that Melania Trump stole a remark from Hillary Clinton to defend her husband after the Access Hollywood tape was made public, that she had plagiarized Michelle Obama for a speech at the United Nations, and that she again lifted a phrase from the former First Lady in her remarks about the violence in Charlottesville, Virginia. More dirt was headed to this pile of ongoing japes in January 2018 after Melania Trump posted a message on Twitter commemorating Martin Luther King, Jr. Day: The transcribed tweet from Melania Trump is indeed real. It was posted to the official @Flotus account on 15 January 2018: The purported 2016 message from Michelle Obama, on the other hand, appears to be a fabrication. We searched both Michelle Obama's personal account and the archived @Flotus44 account for these remarks and could not find them on the specified date or any other time. We also examined news articles from 2016 and could not find any record of Michelle Obama's uttering these words. This message is also missing from official releases from the White House pertaining to that year's Martin Luther King Day. The included image of Michelle Obama, however, was truly taken on Martin Luther King Day. Although there's no record of the former First Lady's using this specific phrase on that occasion, she did spend 18 January 2016 participating in a community service project at Leckie Elementary School in honor of the civil rights leader:
(en)
|