COMMENTARY | Sharon Bialek, a 50-year-old Chicago native, was the forth woman to accuse GOP presidential candidate Herman Cain.
"I'm just doing this because it's the right thing to do," Associated Press quoted Bialek on Tuesday.
But according to the opinion shared by a Chicago friend to the New York Post, with Bialek: "It's all about the money."
Bialek, who is now facing the feared "Anita Hill" media scrutiny that caused the mystery client of Joel Bennett to back down, is the first of Cain's accusers to put a name and face to her allegations. Revelations of the past 24 hours alone seem to validate the mystery client's concerns.
This woman has had nine different employers and was fired from most of them. She hasn't had a job in two years and spends more time standing in front of a judge than Lindsay Lohan.
The very fact that she is being represented by Gloria 'Get My Face in Front of a Camera' Allred qualifies as admissible evidence that something is seriously wrong here.
The giggly, school-girl script reading ceremony as she recounted the graphic details of her alleged encounter with Cain did not portray a woman who had been traumatized but rather it put on embarrassing display just how far someone is willing to go and how willing they are to destroy the life and career of another person to claim their proverbial 15-minutes of fame.
While Bialek claims she "did not share the graphic details with either man" because she was "embarrassed." But she felt disturbingly comfortable sharing the graphic details with her 13-year-old son.
Despite her insistence that she just "wanted to move on" and isn't seeking financial benefit by coming forward she seems strangely eager to keep booking appearances on the morning talk show circuit so she share the sordid details of the past with anyone who happens to tune in.
It was "on the advice of her "boyfriend,'" reported Andrea Peyser of the New York Post, that Bialek "proceeded to stalk Cain to Washington, ostensibly to hit him up for a job."
In an interview with Michael Snead of the Chicago Sun Times, WIND radio co-host Amy Jacobson said she witnessed an encounter between Bialek and Cain backstage at the AM 560 WIND sponsored TeaCon meeting in Schaumburg at the Renaissance Hotel and Convention Center a month ago.
"I recall Sharon was hell bent on going backstage" said Jacobson.
Once Bialek shoved her way backstage she cornered Cain, grabbed his arm and whispered in his ear.
This is the same reunion -- described by Jacobson as "flirtatious" -- that Bialek portrayed as her need to "face the demon" and see if Cain would be "man enough to own up to what he had done 14 years ago."
Call me crazy but if I found myself standing in front of a man who had "put his hand on my leg, under my skirt and reached for my genitals," I'd be screaming, not flirting.
"I didn't even recognize her," Cain told ABC News. "I am honestly telling you I can't even recall knowing her back then."
"I shook his hand, and he remembered me," AP quoted of Bialek's version of the moment.
"She may get a book deal down the road," Julie Driscoll opined wishfully in her uber feminist Cain hit-piece for the Chicago Liberal Examiner, "when Cain's presidential aspirations completely swirl down the drain."
But, "it's unlikely anyone's going to offer her a reality TV. show," Driscoll lamented bitterly, "based on her one encounter with this soon-to-be former presidential candidate.
Perhaps, one day, when Ms. Bialek realizes she needs professional help to deal with her fantasies of "factitious sexual harassment," Ms. Driscoll will recognize that it's time to seek some serious psychotherapy to confront her pair of emotionally crippling disorders called androphobia and misandry,
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