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Kate Moses, co-founder of Salon.com's daily column Mothers Who Think, interprets the conspicuous consumption in Sex and the City as little more than a modern retelling of a classic fairytale.
It's in the "DNA of little girls," Moses says, to want to find their Prince Charming -- or, in Carrie's case, her Mr. Big.
Kate Moses vents her frustration over the Hillary Clinton campaign which she blames for pandering to political establishment norms of masculinity.
Clinton, Moses says, overcompensated for sexism and became the "biggest man in the room" which undermined her nuanced political refinement. Moses remembers the pivotal moment of Clinton's tearful show of emotion, situating it beginning from the Lewinsky scandal within the Clinton legacy.
Kate Moses explains her philosophy that it is never possible to love children equally, only uniquely.
Moses learned this lesson following the birth of her second child as she felt her all-consuming love for her first born "receding like a ship on the horizon."