Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Tomi Lahren Slammed For Comparing Social Distancing Measures To 'Willful Slavery' In Now-Deleted Tweet

Tomi Lahren Slammed For Comparing Social Distancing Measures To 'Willful Slavery' In Now-Deleted Tweet
Michael Tullberg/Getty Images

Right wing conspiracy theorist and Fox Nation contributor Tomi Lahren drew new criticism after her latest outrageous Twitter post.

Lahren quickly deleted the tweet, but not before people got screenshots.


She tweeted:

"Compliance starting to look a whole lot like willful slavery. #ReopenAmerica"

After deleting the post, Lahren replaced it with:

"The same people who said it was acceptable and valiant to jump turnstiles and riot in the streets over paying a subway fare are now shaming and demonizing Americans who simply want to reopen their businesses and get back to work."
"The mental gymnastics is impressive."

The posts were seen as particularly tone deaf, even for Lahren.



People asked where Lahren's prior post went.


Not even her fellow conservatives had Lahren's back on this one.





Some cited some distinct double standards.

Why can't the social distancing protestors and Lahren just follow the rules and comply?

Isn't that their mantra when people of color protest?




A few actually chose to answer Lahren's concerns.





Many addressed Lahren's claims about mental gymnastics.







The United States hit a milestone on Tuesday, with confirmed cases of the viral pathogen behind the global pandemic exceeding one million. The death toll in the United States now sits at 60,474.

All of this is with the social distancing Lahren and heavily armed protestors rail against.

The book The Cult of Trump: A Leading Cult Expert Explains How the President Uses Mind Control is available here.

More from Trending

Most Telling Signs That Someone Is Smarter Than They Let On

Brains and smarts.

Those two things don't always go together.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Lauren Boebert and Roger Stone
C-SPAN

Boebert Dragged After Confusing Director Oliver Stone With Roger Stone At JFK Hearing

Colorado Republican Representative Lauren Boebert hit a new low after she attempted to grill director Oliver Stone—the director of the classic 1991 political thriller JFK—on some of his views on the assassination of JFK, only to have colleagues point out that she'd mistaken him for Roger Stone, a former adviser and strategist to President Donald Trump.

The hearing—held in response to last month’s release of 80,000 pages of documents by the Trump administration related to the 1963 assassination—took an awkward turn when more than halfway through the hearing, Boebert brought up a book Roger Stone wrote, which alleges that former President Lyndon B. Johnson played a role in former President John F. Kennedy’s assassination.

Keep ReadingShow less
Amy Schumer
Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

Amy Schumer Epically Fails To Convince Husband She's Pregnant As April Fools' Prank

Stand up comic Amy Schumer realized that her husband Chris Fischer was no fool.

On April Fool's Day, the Trainwreck star tried to prank her husband by telling him she was pregnant, but he knew better than to fall for it.

Keep ReadingShow less
Val Kilmer
Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic/Getty Images

Hollywood Pays Poignant Tribute To Val Kilmer After His Tragic Death At 65

Hollywood stars are paying tribute to Top Gun actor Val Kilmer after he died on Tuesday at the age of 65 after a battle with pneumonia, surrounded by family and friends.

Kilmer got his start in Hollywood with comedic roles in Top Secret! (1984) and Real Genius (1985), but his breakout moment came with Top Gun (1986), which cemented his status as a rising star.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; portrait of Andrew Jackson
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images; Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Trump Slammed Over Plans For Magnolia Tree Planted By Andrew Jackson To Be Chopped Down

President Donald Trump was criticized after he took to Truth Social to announce he would chop down a magnolia tree that was planted next to the White House to commemorate President Andrew Jackson's late wife in the early 1800s, touting the move as one of the "tremendous enhancements" his administration has undertaken.

Trump announced that, following consultations with the Executive Residence Staff and the National Park Service, his administration has decided to replace the tree on the White House’s south side, citing safety concerns. The tree has historically served as a backdrop for past presidents greeting foreign dignitaries.

Keep ReadingShow less