Glamour Places U2's Bono on 'Women of the Year' List
"I’m sure I don’t deserve it."
11.1.2016
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Leftists have moved beyond labeling transgender men as "women of the year" and now place regular men that don't even identify with the fairer sex. This time, Glamour has placed U2 lead singer Bono on their "Women of the Year" list.
The magazine recognized the iconic Bono for his One Foundation’s "Poverty is Sexist" campaign, "which aims to help the world’s poorest women by advocating for increased educational opportunities and access to better healthcare," reportsBreitbart.
"I’m sure I don’t deserve it. But I’m grateful for this award as a chance to say the battle for gender equality can’t be won unless men lead it along with women," Bono told the magazine. "We’re largely responsible for the problem, so we have to be involved in the solutions."
Bono felt that men "can do much more than we think we can" for gender equality. "Men can be a bit thick. And I include myself," he said. "Honestly, things that ought to be obvious sometimes are not."
Bono will share the "Women of the Year" title with Olympian Simone Biles, singer Gwen Stefani, actress Zendaya Coleman, IMF chief Christine Lagarde, ISIS kidnap survivor Nadia Murad, model Ashley Graham, and Black Lives Matter activist Alicia Garza.
Awards will be presented in Los Angeles at a ceremony on November 14.