The image was impossible to ignore. A first lady, a green Zara jacket, and five words that detonated across
a country already on edge. In her recent sit-down with Anna Wintour,
Meryl Streep didn’t gossip—she dissected. What happens when fashion stops being fabric and becomes a weapon, a wound, a wa… Continues…
Meryl Streep’s reflection on Melania Trump’s “I Really Don’t Care, Do U?” jacket cuts to the heart of how power is seen, not just spoken.
In 2018, the words on that jacket collided with the trauma of migrant family separations, creating an image many experienced as chillingly
out of step with the suffering it framed. Melania later insisted the message targeted the media, not vulnerable families, b
ut by then the photograph had already hardened into a symbol.
What lingers is not the brand or the cut, but the dissonance. Streep’s point is that in an age where every public appearance is instantly
archived and dissected, clothing becomes a form of policy communication—whether intended or not.
The jacket now lives on as a kind of cultural shorthand:
for distance, for misread empathy, and for the dangerous illusion that image-making can be separated from moral responsibility.