Photo by: Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images (left); Photographer: Leigh Vogel/Polaris/Bloomberg via Getty Images (right) Far-left actress Debra Messing — who doubles as a card-carrying enemy of President Donald Trump — is setting her sights on one of Trump‘s closest confidants: White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany.
Well, at least news networks that hire McEnany or put her on screen as a panelist: If I ever see @kayleighmcenany on a panel on a news show or hired by a network, I am immediately ceasing to support… https://t.co/nK84s5QvD2 — Debra Messing✍� (@Debra Messing✍�) 1610981452.0 “If I ever see @kayleighmcenany on a panel on a news show or hired by a network, I am immediately ceasing to support every single advertiser on that network,” Messing tweeted Monday, asking her 684,000 followers to retweet if they agree. She added a ‘Deplatform Hate’ hashtag to boot.
Indeed, cancel culture has been in overdrive following U.S. Capitol rioting earlier this month, with left-wing politicians, journalists, and CEOs of social media sites and Internet empires circling the wagons around conservatives and threatening to obliterate them into oblivion unless they speak the right way. How did folks react to Messing’s latest Twitter barrage?
Of course, Messing has fans who couldn’t agree more with her threat against news networks, but others called out the former “Will & Grace” star for her own hatred: “Debra now acting like the Nazi Party…incredible,” one commenter noted .
“So much for wanting unity and tolerance, right Deb?” another user quipped .
“Like really, because you‘re ‘Hollywood’ you think you’re special or superior. You’re a second rate actress and sad you don’t yet realize America is done with Hollywood and ‘stars’ thinking they are so much smarter than them,” another user wrote . “You’re going to jail with the rest.”
“So, you would […]
U.S. Jobs Report Miss, Economic Turmoil, and Political Headlines | Daily Show Prep: Friday, Nov. 1
Discover the latest on October’s disappointing jobs report, revised employment numbers, and what’s behind the U.S. Jobs Report Miss. Join us as we explore the economic headlines impacting American jobs, manufacturing, and more.
0 Comments