MSNBC star: I will strangle Sarah Sanders (disturbing video!)
MSNBC is a network known for their liberal narrative with extreme exaggerations, but most of all they are known for consistency with their attacks on the White House.
This time, daytime host Nicole Wallace went way too far when she insinuated she wanted to choke White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders because she did not agree with Sander’s opinion.
A White House aide allegedly mocked Senator John McCain’s opposition of CIA nominee Gina Haspel and reportedly claimed he’s “dying anyway.”
During a White House briefing, Sanders was asked why that aide was not yet fired and Sanders explained that she did “not want to comment on an internal staff meeting.”
That response was not good enough for Wallace who said she wanted to strangle Sanders for not giving a better answer. “How do you resist the temptation to run up and wring her neck? Why can’t she just say, ‘If a staffer said that, we’re going to get to the bottom of it and she’ll be fired?’” Wallace asked NBC White House reporter Kristen Welker.
You can watch the disturbing clip here —
On Twitter Friday, Wallace apologized for her “poorly chosen words.”
But, in that same hour that Wallace stated she wanted to choke Sanders, MSNBC analyst John Heilemann said he would kill himself if he had to sit in Sanders’ press briefings.
“I could not go down there and do what Kristen Welker did today. I could not. I would slit my throat after about maybe two of those briefings if I had to sit in that room every day,” he said.
This Democratic man would rather take his own life than listen to a conservative white woman discuss a different opinion than his own.
These liberals have promoted physical harm towards themselves and Sanders because listening to beliefs that do not align with their party truly hurts them that much.
MSNBC has yet again taken the liberal narrative to the next level, and these hosts deserve to be fired.
–The Horn editorial team
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for commenting. Your comments are needed for helping to improve the discussion.