This summer, the two of us simply could not remain silent when a newly viral podcast clip from 2020 appeared to show JD Vance agreeing with host Eric Weinstein’s assertion that “the whole purpose of the postmenopausal female” is to help raise children. Vance denied he was undermining the autonomy of older women and accused the media of “dishonestly putting words” in his mouth, but the GOPs rhetoric in the ensuing days and weeks has only gotten worse.
A lot of this misogyny has related to menstruation and menopause — health care topics that are still viewed as unserious or, worse, gross and unseemly. Ohio Republican Senate nominee Bernie Moreno remarked that it’s “a little crazy” that women past 50 would vote on the issue of reproductive rights. And puerile jokes denigrating Tim Walz’s push to provide free menstrual products in Minnesota public school restrooms resulted in chants of “Tampon Tim” filling Madison Square Garden at the Donald Trump rally on Sunday night.
Trump fans in Madison Square Garden break into a "Tampon Tim!" chant pic.twitter.com/e6IL2VQ6lw
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) October 27, 2024
The Harris campaign, for its part, has mostly steered clear of responding to the swipes and jibes, presumably deeming them a distraction or too low a bar to acknowledge. That’s an understandable instinct. But thankfully, Michelle Obama is more than willing to tackle this incredibly important subject head on — and right now. On Saturday night at a rally in Kalamazoo, Michigan, she gave the granular response we have been hoping for. In an impassioned speech that spent more than 15 minutes on reproductive health, she spoke candidly about parts of our bodies that too often get lost to shame or left to innuendo.
“A women’s body is complicated business, y’all,” she told the crowd. “It brings life — and that is a beautiful thing — but even when we are not bearing children there is so much that can go wrong at any moment.”
Obama also called out the struggles that too many suffer in silence, from menstrual pain to unexpected breast lumps, to the “other end of the reproductive timeline,” when many women “have no idea what is going on … as we battle through menopause.”
While some in the media have (correctly) characterized Obama’s remarks as a “searing appeal to men” — a plea for awareness of what the women in their lives regularly endure and take pains to keep private — we saw something even more strategic. Yes, she was directly addressing husbands, fathers and sons. But for the women in the crowd, there was cathartic value as well. Obama wasn’t just recognizing these women; she was also connecting the dots from periods to pregnancy to post-menopause.
Here, finally, is the ultimate rejection of everything the GOP’s “Tampon Tim” insult represents. Our periods are not fodder for Republican punchlines, nor is anything else about the complexity of our reproductive lives. We know that if men endured what women go through when it comes to health care, choices would likely be wide open — and care much more freely available.








