Journalist Says He Looked DeSantis In The Eye Early On And Called Him A ‘P*ssy’ For Not Attacking Trump

'I said ‘p*ssy’ in front of Casey DeSantis, my parents would be so embarrassed,'

'Abhorrent and disgusting': Trump advisor Roger Stone accused of attacking wife of Ron DeSantis with offensive slur



Roger Stone – a longtime advisor of former President Donald Trump – seemed to lash out at Casey DeSantis – wife of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. Stone appeared to attack Casey DeSantis for mentioning her children on the campaign trail for her husband, and seemed to use a slur widely regarded as one of the most offensive words.

Stone responded to a tweet from Mike Crispi – a Republican candidate who lost in the GOP primary in 2022 to represent New Jersey's 4th Congressional District.

"Casey Desantis campaigning: 'I have a 6, 5 and a 3 year old' 'I have a 6, 5 and a 3 year old' 'I have a 6, 5 and a 3 year old' 'I have a 6, 5 and a 3 year old' 'Did you know I have a 6, 5 and a 3 year old?'" Crispi wrote on the X social media platform.

Crispi was responding to a social media post by Casey declaring that her husband is "earning every vote," and featured a photo of her and her young daughter on the campaign trail.

Stone replied by saying, "SeeUNextTuesday."

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Dictionary.com explains how the phrase "See you next Tuesday" is a euphemism for an offensive slur:

"See you next Tuesday" is derived from a combination of the letters c and u, which when pronounced aloud sound like “see you,” and the first letters of the words next and Tuesday. This forms an acronym rebus that, when taken together, stands for c***. The phrase is sometimes typed out as c u next Tuesday.

Stone claimed that he didn't use a slur against DeSantis.

Stone responded to a Mediaite article with the headline: "Trump Advisor Roger Stone Calls Casey DeSantis a C*** for Mentioning Her Children on Campaign Trail."

The Trump advisor asserted, "NOT what I said! Typical Mediaite smear."

DeSantis campaign manager James Uthmeier reacted to Stone's remark by saying, "This is what we’re up against. It would be one thing if these were just crazy people saying nasty things. But they are sanctioned agents of DJT. Shame on them. Good must prevail! [Casey DeSantis] is an amazing mom and leader who works tirelessly to help our country."

On Saturday, the hashtag #IStandWithCasey gained traction on the X social media platform with thousands of people defending the wife of the Republican governor of Florida.

Several conservatives called out Stone for the apparent attack on Casey DeSantis.

Jon Dunwell, a Republican state representative in the key GOP primary state of Iowa, wrote: "Disgusting attacks from Roger Stone. Please get this out of our politics."

Constitutional law scholar Jonathan Turley said, "Nothing says unhinged, recreational rage like attacking a mother for referencing her children. The minute we shrug off these attacks as the new normal, it will become the new normal. We should demand more from politicians and pundits alike."

Conservative editor-in-chief Tracy Beanz stated, "I’m seeing this – this is abhorrent and disgusting. We are better than this – and we need to act like it. These are your sisters and brothers. Disgraceful."

Attorney and author Michael P Senger added, "Leading Trump campaign advisor Roger Stone called Casey DeSantis a c*** for talking about her children on the campaign trail. Just the latest in a long trail of repulsive, infantile behavior from Trump’s nihilistic influence machine."

Former Trump lawyer Jenna Ellis declared, "Instead of saying, 'Yeah Roger Stone shouldn’t use 'c***' to describe Casey DeSantis, that’s gross and low class,' MAGA is actually defending it. This is what happens when you lose an objective moral metric and see the political world only through 'Trump supporters good, everyone else bad.' Idiots."

Writer Kimberly Ross said, "Roger Stone is a garbage human. This is known."

At the time of publication, the official social media accounts tied to the Trump campaign have yet to condemn or mention Stone's comment.

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Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds' husband diagnosed with lung cancer



Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, a Republican, has disclosed that her husband, Kevin Reynolds, has been diagnosed with lung cancer.

The couple has been married for more than four decades. They have three daughters and 11 grandchildren, according to a biography about Iowa's first gentleman.

"We're grateful to the incredible medical team caring for Kevin. Our doctor has assured us that significant advancements in lung cancer treatment have been very effective and we have every reason to be optimistic. We are confident in our team as we begin treatment, and we will beat this together," the governor said in a statement.

"Kevin has been my anchor throughout our 41 years of marriage, and I will be the same for him as he begins treatment. We are blessed to be surrounded by a loving family and a community of prayer warriors. We know God is with us on this journey," she continued.

The governor won a decisive re-election victory last year.

"Marty, the girls, and I are saddened by the news of First Gentleman Kevin Reynolds' diagnosis," Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) tweeted. "We are praying for his strong recovery, and will keep Kevin, @IAGovernor Kim Reynolds, and their entire family in our thoughts and prayers during this time."

Florida first lady Casey DeSantis was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2021, but in 2022, Gov. Ron DeSantis announced that his wife was "considered cancer free."

Full Trump Interview: ‘I don’t consider us to have much of a democracy right now’ youtu.be

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Which GOP Wife Is The Greatest Campaign Asset?

'A successful spousal surrogate will use her own image to build her husband’s image'

Some respond with vile comments after Casey DeSantis shares photo of old oak tree that went down at the Florida Governor's Mansion



Florida first lady Casey DeSantis, the wife of Gov. Ron DeSantis, indicated that a 100-year-old tree went down at the Florida Governor's Mansion. She noted that she was at home with her three children at the time, but nobody was hurt.

"100 year old oak tree falls on the Governor's Mansion in Tallahassee — Mason, Madison, Mamie and I were home at the time, but thankfully no one was injured. Our prayers are with everyone impacted by the storm," she wrote to caption a photo of the tree.

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When asked about the fallen tree, the governor said that his wife had called and informed him that the old tree split in half. He said he didn't know that the tree "fell on, like, the residence per se," noting that he thought it had been a "little bit off to the side."

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The Sunshine State was just hit by Hurricane Idalia, and Ron DeSantis, who is running in the Republican presidential primary, has warned against looting. "You never know what's behind that door," he said, suggesting that looters could encounter individuals who can "defend themselves and their families."

Many people responded to Casey DeSantis' post by noting that they were glad nobody had been hurt.

"Thank God everyone is okay. @GovRonDeSantis is away working around the clock for the people of Florida while a tree is laying on his home. Praying for all impacted by the storm," DeSantis campaign manager James Uthmeier wrote.

But some commenters spewed venom in response to Casey DeSantis' post.

Someone suggested the tree "should have fallen on you and meatball."

"Idalia left a warning for Satan DeSantis," another response read.

"When even mother natures hates your husband," another individual wrote.

"I think this is the sign you've been waiting for Casey. Your campaign is broken. God does not like Ron," someone else wrote.

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The Case For Casey DeSantis

Casey DeSantis is a picture of classy conservatism and therefore a popular target of corporate media and the radical left.

MSNBC panelists are outclassed then blasted for their attack on Casey DeSantis, whom they called 'America's Karen'



MSNBC panelists' took turns belittling Florida's first lady on Saturday, characterizing Casey DeSantis as both "America's Karen" and as being akin to an antagonistic cultist from a dystopian novel.

Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), Megyn Kelly and others quickly fired back, noting that the MSNBC talking heads' venom evidences not only their intolerance for strong conservative women but a fear of Casey DeSantis' efficacy as a mother, a wife, and a politico.

Former Republican Rep. David Jolly, voted out of office in 2016, and Tara Setmayer, the alleged-conservative Lincoln Project member who used to work for CNN, joined the titular host of "The Saturday Show With Jonathan Capehart" Saturday in watching an excerpt of a new DeSantis campaign ad.

Rather than engage with the political themes, which they cast as "dark," or address the specifics of what was said, the pundits decided instead to denigrate Casey DeSantis.

Jolly said, "Casey DeSantis is a fairly compelling political figure in Florida and now nationally. For many, she's the brighter side to Florida's angry governor. For others, she's become America's Karen."

Capehart laughingly repeated, "America's Karen," then noted Jolly had "taken his breath away" with this characterization of Florida's first lady.

Apparently this term was not yet in the MSNBC host's lexicon when in 2020 he raged against white women, suggesting that as a political force, they serve to enforce "patriarchal norms [rather] than dismantling them" and protect that system "where they and their children might lose the shared superiority and protection they get by being attached to powerful White men."

The MSNBC host, who elsewhere stated that men can be women, further insinuated white women maintain so-called institutional racism and that "the Democratic Party should stop wasting so much time on the lost cause of suburban wine moms."

According to the BBC, "Karen," used by Jolly as a pejorative, is a slang term "referencing a specific type of middle-class white woman, who exhibits behaviours that stem from privilege. ... 'Karen' is associated with the kind of person who ... is anti-vaccination, and carries out racist micro-aggressions."

The New York Post corroborated this reading of the term as a racial epithet, noting the term "has become social-media shorthand meaning a middle-aged white woman ... who makes a big fuss, and is not-so-blissfully ignorant."

Casey DeSantis, 43, is a mother of three and former news journalist who battled breast cancer and won. Extra to her successful career on television, she has championed various causes — such as cancer research and hurricane relief — for the betterment of her state while also actively supporting her husband, Gov. Ron DeSantis, both in Florida and in his current presidential bid.

While Jolly reduced Casey DeSantis' life, relations, and accomplishment to a single racially-charged word, albeit with a patriotic modifier, his co-panelist Tara Setmayer suggested Florida's first lady was a "Serena Waterford wannabe," referencing a major character in Margaret Atwood's dystopian novel "The Handmaid's Tale."

Waterford is the barren wife of the villainous Commander Frederick Waterford in the book, which was inspired in part by "the brutal Communist reign of Ceaușescu in Romania" and evinced a "treatment of women [that] is very Islamic."

Setmayer further claimed that Casey DeSantis "needs to cut it out," adding "there's all kinds of names for her."

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The Independent reported that Gov. Ron DeSantis responded on Fox News Monday, saying that he and his wife would wear the term "America's Karen" as a "badge of honor."

"My wife is an incredibly strong first lady of Florida, a fantastic mother and a great wife, and that threatens the left," said DeSantis. "So she and I kind of shrug it off because we know it just shows they view her as a threat, because the message that she was bringing in Iowa about the rights of parents and how we are not going to take this anymore with the left trying to indoctrinate our kids, they understand that that resonates not just with Republican parents, with independent parents, and, yes, with Democrat parents."

Gov. DeSantis noted that his wife is "a great advocate for families, a great advocate for children. And I'm thankful that she's my wife. And I'm really honored that she's willing to go out there and press the case. And so we wear criticism from MSNBC as a badge of honor."

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While the DeSantis couple opted to outclass the MSNBC panelists, Megyn Kelly fired back on her podcast, saying, "If [critics] were saying this sort of thing about a leftie, these same [commentators] would be outraged by the rampant misogyny," reported the New York Post. "But as always, it’s always fair game against a Republican wife. ... They hate her in a special way. It’s almost coming at her more viciously than with [former first lady] Melania [Trump]."

Kelly added, "I think the reason they are reacting so angrily to [Casey DeSantis] is they accurately perceive her as a threat."

Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) suggested that Capehart and his panelists' attacks on DeSantis were "classless, and consistent with that network's chronic and indefensible mistreatment of @MELANIATRUMP. All this is indicative of MSNBC's status as the unscrupulous media arm of the Democratic Party."

TheBlaze reported last month that the executive editor at the Daily beast targeted Casey DeSantis in a deranged rant, stressing that she had neither the ideological mooring nor the aristocratic bona fides needed to qualify for acceptance by the media and the political establishment.

Rather than "America's Karen," Katie Baker, the executive editor of the leftist blog, called Florida's first lady "the Walmart Melania."

"While Casey may be trying to position herself after Jackie Kennedy (good luck) and even Melania, if this weekend is any indication, she’s falling far short. It doesn't matter how many times she wears that ice-blue Badgley Mischka cape-dress. The DeSantis’ will never be Camelot," wrote Baker, adding that DeSantis could never "embody the class and effortless elegance of Michelle Obama or Dr. Jill Biden."

Baker made explicit her classist digs with an allusion to "The Great Gatsby," suggesting that unlike F. Scott Fitzgerald's fictional characters Tom and Daisy Buchanan — inheritors of affluence and wealth — "the DeSantis’ are more like poseurs," bereft also of the Gatsbian wealth that the Trumps can "retreat into."

MSNBC recently provided tips on "how to counter the 'tidal wave of misogyny' spurred by anti-feminist influencers."

While the guidance was tailored to younger minds, juvenile mindsets fitting to disparage a woman in prime time on the basis of her immutable characteristics, age, and political affiliation, might similarly be cured with "consistent and positive engagement with men who are role models for respectful treatment of women."

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Man claims Florida first lady Casey DeSantis made 'a racist fashion statement' by wearing Florida alligator 'WHERE WOKE GOES TO DIE' jacket



Dr. Marvin Dunn, who describes himself on Twitter as a "Historian, author, [and] progressive Democrat," has accused Florida first lady Casey DeSantis of racism because she wore a jacket emblazoned with a design that features an alligator and an outline of the Sunshine State.

Text on the jacket says, "WHERE WOKE GOES TO DIE," a comment that Gov. Ron DeSantis has repeatedly made about Florida.

But while the message simply reflects the couple's conservative views which are also held by millions of other Americans, Dunn claimed that the jacket carries a sinister, racist meaning and that Casey DeSantis was fully cognizant of the supposed message being conveyed by her apparel.

"Casey DeSantis Florida's First Lady makes a racist fashion statement. Black babies as alligator bait was a theme in racist Florida humor of the early 1900s. It's an inside joke. If you are not from Florida, you may not get it. She does. Do you?" Dunn declared. "Casey DeSantis knew what the leather jacket she wore signified in Florida's racist history. Why did she wear it in 85 degrees weather?" he wrote in another tweet.

\u201cCasey DeSantis Florida's First Lady makes a racist fashion statement. Black babies as alligator bait was a theme in racist Florida humor of the early 1900s. It's an inside joke. If you are not from Florida, you may not get it. She does. Do you?\u201d
— Dr. Marvin Dunn (@Dr. Marvin Dunn) 1686079672

In a recent piece titled "Casey DeSantis is the Walmart Melania," Daily Beast executive editor Katie Barker wrote that the "ghastly black leather jacket ... brought to mind nothing so much as the racks of a Red State big-bin store where it would be retailing for $24.99."

Barker trashed the Florida governor and his wife.

After noting that Casey DeSantis had survived a battle against breast cancer, Barker wrote, "Anyone going through that must have strength and grit. Still, we've all met people who stared death in the face and came out the other side incandescently glowing with life and with love.

"Perhaps that is the case in Casey DeSantis' private and personal life, but on the public stage, with that black leather jacket, she’s telling us she stands for something else. She’s telling us she is cheering on a spouse who gets his kicks off targeting his fellow Americans. She’s telling us she’s down with his message of division and dehumanization. She's telling us they are ready for far more power. She's incandescent in her black leather jacket, at her husband's side—both of them seething with hate," Barker wrote.

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