"I can't stay quiet": Melinda French Gates backs Biden in first-ever POTUS endorsement

Rapidcreek@lemmy.world to politics @lemmy.world – 329 points –
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why is she Melinda French Gates now? it's not like anyone would suddenly not recognize the name Melinda Gates. Her name was on the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Going by Melinda French Gates seems like something one would do if there was already another Melinda Gates, and one needed to differentiate from them.

Maybe she just wants to user her previous surname more now that she's divorced?

Huh

Melinda French Gates[2] (born Melinda Ann French; August 15, 1964)

wouldn't that be Melinda French-Gates?

If she’s smart, she’ll leave the hyphen out. Anyone with a hyphenated name will tell you that’s it’s annoying as fuck. A lot of digital products and records don’t support hyphens and throw errors when they see the character.

No, the vast majority of people who change their last name to their partners' drop their middle name and replace it with their maiden last name. That's what my wife did, as well as 95% of the people I know who have done this. This is totally average and not actually the thing you're trying to make it out to be.

Not trying to be weird, but to understand - roughly what age range and location are you talking about?

I'm a divorced 52yo woman living in the Chicago suburbs and this is news to me.

I’ve never heard of it before either. It doesn’t seem weird to me. Just, the assertion that it’s overwhelmingly common does not sound right.

I don't think I've ever heard of anyone doing this, kind of an interesting idea.

What do people do where you're from if they change their name after marriage?

My frame of reference is 30-45 year olds in Texas, but also everyone's parents who are 70+ now. What do people do in Chicago?

It varies, but when I was younger I saw more women keeping their married names if they had very young children, but mostly just returning to their maiden names. Over the years I've noticed less women changing their names when they get married, or instead hyphenating their married name. But this is just observations from one socioeconomic viewpoint, so I can't make sweeping statements about the majority.

It's an old-fashioned thing to do. When my cousin got married, my aunt gave her a lot of shit for not doing it, so when I got married, I did it, but I don't know many people my age who have. I'm 39, also born and raised in Chicago (where my aunt and cousin still live), but I'm in California now. My family also has a bit of money (not a ton, but they've always had a decent living) and "family name" type pride, so I'm not sure if that's a factor.

i'm not "trying to make it out" to be anything. i was just curious.

Or if she wanted you to remember who she was (gates) and somehow start to separate herself and distance herself from her former husband.

Many divorced women choose to hyphenate to make a transition of sorts without losing a major part of their identity

as i said in another comment:

wouldn’t that be Melinda French-Gates?

in the article (and others about this), her name isn't hyphenated, and when only referred to by her last name, it's just "Gates"

Gates said that she has voted for both Republicans and Democrats in past elections.

Why does the dash matter so much?

Melinda French Gates[2] (born Melinda Ann French; August 15, 1964)

Probably to bring French to the forefront after divorcing Bill.

Better question would be why she kept Gates but that’s probably for recognition purposes, I’d guess.

That and changing your name is actually pretty annoying, and it only gets more annoying when you have a lot of assets with a particular legal name tied to them.

She has lawyers and accountants that will do a lot of the heavy lifting, but it’s still an obnoxious pain the butt.

It’s pretty common to see people change their name when they get married, but come divorce time say “nah, fuck that, I’m not doing that shit again.”

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