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Boston influencer wishes 'complicated pregnancies' on 'ugly, uneducated' women who supported Trump

J.Green35 min ago
A devastated Kamala Harris influencer has been forced to delete a video she made wishing 'complicated pregnancies' on women who voted for Trump.

Jessie Beyer said Trump voters should be forced to live with the consequences of their vote on all fronts - namely any potential economic and medical repercussions .

The 28-year-old from Boston, Massachusetts , had spent months detailing both candidates' stances on key issues to her 20,000 TikTok followers, with close attention to women's reproductive rights and the Israel-Palestine conflict.

After Trump claimed victory in the early hours of Wednesday morning, a devastated Beyer created a video in her car slamming his voters as 'ugly, dumb bigots.'

'I think if you voted for Donald Trump you're ugly, and I think you're dumb as bricks and I think you're a bigot in every sense of the word,' she said.

'I also won't care when all of the bad stuff that's gonna happen to you happens to you. I actually want it to happen to you.

'I want your taxes to go up, I want things to be more expensive for you, I want you to have a complicated pregnancy. I want all that bad stuff to happen to you because that's what you deserve.'

Beyer went on to say that there was a 'silver lining' in the election results for blue voters like her.

'We actually have educations and good jobs,' she said.

'Y'all are broke as f**k, so it's going to really suck for you when he raises taxes.'

Her video went viral on TikTok and was shared by pro-Trump activists on X, who described her comments as 'evil' and 'unhinged.'

Democrat women have been sounding the alarm that reproductive rights could be under threat in a Trump administration after he famously celebrated the overturning of Roe v Wade in 2022.

During his previous administration he was happy to be seen as the most 'pro-life' president in history.

Trump said the issue had torn the country apart for more than 50 years and that no one wanted it determined by the federal government.

He had appointed three of the justices who made the landmark reversal decision, and described them as 'very brave judges' after the decision.

During the campaign, Trump insisted he believes in abortion exceptions for rape, incest, and the life of the mother. But not all states that have banned abortion since Roe v. Wade was overturned have such exceptions.

Just last week, an 18-year-old woman died in agony from sepsis in Texas after doctors refused to abort her fetus even after she began to miscarry .

During one of her rallies, Harris said: 'No Donald, everybody did not want Roe v. Wade to be overturned.'

She described Trump's vow to be the 'protector of women' while simultaneously refusing to expand reproductive rights as 'offensive.'

'It's very offensive to women in terms of not understanding their agency, their authority, their right and their ability to make decisions about their own lives, including their own bodies,' she said.

Trump tried to distance himself from wading into abortion issues during the campaign and walked a narrow path in order to try not to alienate any voters .

Just weeks before the nation voted, Trump rubbished polling that suggested women were against him.

'I think I do very well with women,' he said. 'It's all nonsense. I see the polls, and we do well.

'You have one issue, you have the issue of abortion. Without abortion, the women love me.'

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