Saturday, 23 November 2024

The Viral Tweet That Created an UNPRECEDENTED MELTDOWN, News Stations Everywhere Covering It


This story was too funny to pass up.

And the response from the Left was quite disturbing, actually.

For ages we’ve heard the Left scream“My body, my choice!” (except for when they wanted us to wear masks. Make it make sense.)

And so, political pundit Nick Fuentes during his show on Election Night, invented a phrase and then tweeted it out.

Now, I don’t agree with everything he says, but his trolling game against liberals is second to none. And I like that his bio says “Christ is King.”

So, this phrase was to mock women voters that were so afraid of losing abortion access because of a Trump win.

And that phrase was, “Your body, my choice.”

Hoooo boy!

If there ever was a phrase that caused liberals to absolutely lose their ever-loving mind!!

And it even spread to Tik-Tok, where liberal women were just stunned and gobsmacked.

Something about this phrase REALLY hits at a core issue, at the root of the problem, because the reaction is, as the headline says, unprecedented.

It deals with the power shifting.

WATCH:

This saying isn’t going away anytime soon.

One woman posted a clip teaching other women how to murder men by poisoning their drinks, in response to that phrase.

This guy flat out says he will KILL anyone in a graphic manner that he hears saying it.

I don’t think there’s anything you could say to cause a bigger meltdown.

Naturally, this spread like wildfire, hitting the evening news, even the Mexican news.

And Professor Duncan, I mean, John Oliver also mentioned it. 

Even The View talked about it, saying how horrible and evil and Nazi and evil and isms and it is and you are and I am.

You know, the usual.

This lady gets the irony:

The New Yorker points out that it’s just a joke:

In 1970, a few years before Roe v. Wade, feminists agitating for abortion rights, at a Philadelphia protest, held up signs that said “My Body, My Decision”—a slogan that morphed, during the course of the next decade, into “My body, my choice.” This became the defining phrase of the pro-choice movement, a line toward which feminism moved aspirationally and asymptotically.

Sexual assault was the next issue to enter the framework: in two decades, the argument that a wife had the legal right to choose when to have sex with her husband went from laughable to binding. The first spousal-rape trial occurred in 1978, and spousal rape became illegal throughout the United States in 1993.

The sexual-assault reckoning of the twenty-tens attempted to give “My body, my choice” a ring of finality: it was a woman’s choice what to do with her body, even if she was drunk, even if the guy was famous, even if she’d acted as if she wanted him before. At the time, I had the naïve idea that something had permanently changed. I thought we had already seen the backlash—that it was represented by Donald Trump’s first electoral victory, and that the idea that women are full people was at enough of a consensus that seismic, if messy, progress could still happen, as it did in 2017, with #MeToo.

Now there is no more Roe and Trump is about to be President again, and it took less than twenty-four hours after his reëlection for young men to take up a slogan that could define the coming era of regression: “Your body, my choice.”

It’s a joke, first of all! Get a grip, you easily triggered libfems!

Everything started with a tweet from Nick Fuentes, a twenty-six-year-old streamer and self-described “proud incel”.

(Fuentes has been considered toxic enough that Trump was denounced by Republican Party members after having dinner with him in 2022; in this mask-off moment, such posturing seems likely enough to change.)

On Election Night, Fuentes tweeted, “Your body, my choice. Forever.” Young men began parroting him, commenting “Your body, my choice” on young women’s social-media accounts; the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a think tank focussed on extremism, found, within a twenty-four-hour period, a “4,600% increase in mentions of the terms ‘your body, my choice’ and ‘get back in the kitchen’ on X”—the platform itself, of course, being owned and controlled by a billionaire so obsessed with impregnating women that he tweeted, at Taylor Swift, “I will give you a child.” (X’s rightward shift under Elon Musk is visible in the replies to a post by Jake Paul, himself a Trump supporter, telling the “Your body, my choice” crowd to “Shut the fuck up with that shit”)

This was all online stuff, mostly—we could ignore the man holding up a “Women Are Property” sign at Texas State University if we wanted. But in a way, as Fuentes knows well, the fact that the phrase is a meme, and thus nominally a joke, makes it more alarming.

“How many TikToks have you seen in the last forty-eight hours of women crying and filming themselves crying?”

Male students are saying this phrase with reckless abandon on school campuses.

Even a campus near you!

Proceed with caution.

Someone, somewhere, may be saying that phrase at this very moment.

And here’s The View freaking out about it.

So, if they hate it, you know it’s good hahah!

Uh-oh. CNN is mega mad about it too!

And so how do liberal women respond?

By sharing information on HOW TO POISON/KILL MEN?!!

I thought they were the tolerant, loving side?

Where’s the CNN story about this?

I think MURDER threats is a little bit bigger than “mean” phrases.

At least this next woman won’t kill you, she’ll just use a taser on you if you tell that phrase.

I guess we could just wish them a better day.

This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport.

View the original article here.


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