Meryl Streep didn’t hold back. In a tense new Vogue conversation, she revisited Melania Trump’s infamous “I Really Don’t Care, Do U?” jacket – and what it revealed about power, cruelty, and who pays the price for a First Lady’s image. Her words cut through the glamour, dragging an old wound back into the spotlight and forcing everyo…
Streep’s comments land differently now, years after that green Zara coat first flashed across screens as Melania Trump walked toward detained migrant children. By calling the jacket “the most powerful message” Melania ever sent, Streep reframed it not as a careless fashion choice, but as a chilling signal about distance and indifference from those in power. Clothing, she suggested, is never neutral when worn on a global stage; it either softens power or weaponizes it.
Linking the jacket to Donald Trump’s public mocking of a disabled reporter, Streep traced a straight line between image, behavior, and permission. When leaders normalize humiliation or apathy, she argued, it filters down, quietly authorizing everyday cruelty. Her reflection is less about one coat and more about a culture shaped by what powerful people choose to display: empathy, or its absence. In that light, a single sentence on a back becomes impossible to ignore.