Herschel Walker threatens to sue the Daily Beast for defamation over report he paid for girlfriend's abortion



The U.S. Senate race in Georgia was upended Monday after the Daily Beast published an explosive report claiming to have evidence that pro-life Republican Herschel Walker paid for his girlfriend's abortion more than a decade ago.

Walker, a football legend in the state, has vehemently denied the report and said he intends to sue the Daily Beast for defamation. He called the story a "flat-out lie" and a "hatchet job," and a lawyer for his campaign accused the Daily Beast of targeting "black conservatives" with anonymously sourced reporting.

The Daily Beast report cites a woman who asked to remain anonymous for her privacy. She is a registered Democrat who claims to have conceived a child with Walker in 2009. The woman says she aborted the child, purportedly at Walker's urging, and that Walker reimbursed her for the expense.

The woman supported her claims by providing the Daily Beast with a $575 receipt from the abortion clinic, a "get well" card signed by Walker, and a bank deposit receipt that shows an image of a signed $700 personal check from Walker. She says there is a $125 difference between the check and the receipt because she "ballparked" the cost of an abortion after Googling the procedure and added estimated travel expenses and recovery costs. The Daily Beast also spoke with friends of the woman who supported her claims.

Walker is a pro-life Republican who supports a national ban on abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy and has stated there are "no exceptions in my mind." He says the Daily Beast story is false.

"This is a flat-out lie - and I deny this in the strongest possible terms," Walker said in a statement released Monday.

\u201cRegarding the latest Democrat attack:\u201d
— Herschel Walker (@Herschel Walker) 1664839020

"This is another repugnant hatchet job from a democrat activist disguised as a reporter who has obsessively attacked my family and tried to tear me down since this race started," he added. Walker accused the Daily Beast reporter of harassing his friends with questions about his illegitimate children and of using anonymous sources "to further slander me."

"I'm not taking this anymore. I planning [sic] to sue the Daily Beast for this defamatory lie. It will be filed tomorrow morning," Walker said.

The October surprise accusations have roiled what was already considered a highly competitive race between Walker and incumbent Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.). Walker, who was recruited to run for Senate and endorsed by former President Donald Trump, has been within the margin of error in several head-to-head polls against Warnock in September. He has faced attacks from the left over his controversial background and self-admitted struggles with mental health issues.

In contrast stands Warnock, a progressive reverend who is unapologetically pro-choice and opposes restrictions on abortion. The Democratic incumbent has painted Walker as too unstable to represent Georgia in the Senate, though Republicans have brought up domestic violence allegations leveled against Warnock by his ex-wife.

Republicans in Georgia are panicking over the Daily Beast story and the reaction from members of Walker's family. His 19-year-old son Christian Walker, an outspoken conservative, ripped his father on social media and accused him of "lying" about his past on the campaign trail.

“Every family member of Herschel Walker asked him not to run for office, because we all knew (some of) his past. Every single one,” Christian Walker tweeted. “He decided to give us the middle finger and air out all of his dirty laundry in public, while simultaneously lying about it. I'm done."

Atlanta-based conservative radio host Erick Erickson shared that GOP sources he's in touch with are despairing over the latest attacks on Walker, which he said might be a "KO" in the Senate race.

\u201cI'd largely thought Walker could pull this off despite his baggage. I'll see what sort of response he mounts, but given text messages tonight, Georgia GOP'ers are praying for Dr. Oz to win. Walker hasn't mounted a good response to any attack, and this is brutal, probably a KO.\u201d
— Erick Erickson (@Erick Erickson) 1664846890

The election in Georgia will be pivotal in determining which party controls the Senate next year. Warnock, a Democrat representing a typically Republican southern state, was viewed as a vulnerable candidate and his seat a good pick-up opportunity for the GOP. But the latest allegations against Walker may turn off enough pro-life Republicans to give Warnock the edge he needed to win reelection.

MSNBC guest: Republicans love 'negroes' like Herschel Walker who 'do what they're told'



On Saturday, the Nation contributor Elie Mystal asserted on MSNBC’s "The Cross Connection" with Tiffany Cross that Georgia's Republican candidate for Senate Herschel Walker was “unintelligent” and bereft of “independent thoughts.” The self-professed justice correspondent then proceeded to accuse Republicans of backing Walker because he “is going to do what he’s told ... That’s what Republicans want from their negroes: to do what they’re told.”

Elie Mystal has repeatedly and publicly denigrated Herschel Walker’s intelligence and made wild racially-charged accusations as a means to support Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock's bid to stay in power.

Some have taken to Twitter to point out the apparent double-standard when it comes to racially-charged language on the left and the absence of consequence for Democrat-adjacent racial hatred.

\u201cIf a Republican pundit had said on Fox what was said of @HerschelWalker on Fox, major news outlets would be shoving microphones in Raphael Warnock's face demanding he denounce it.\u201d
— Erick Erickson (@Erick Erickson) 1659380055

Radio show host Erick Erickson suggested that comparable language uttered by a Republican would have prompted calls for denunciation.

Florida Rep. Byron Donalds called out Mystal, saying: "If you are a Black Republican, they will...question your Blackness, and insult your intelligence."

\u201cIf you are a Black Republican, they will call you a coon, sell out, question your Blackness, and insult your intelligence.\n\nIt's easy for people like @ElieNYC to talk "tough" without any push back from one of the "Republicans' negros." @TiffanyDCross invite me on, let's talk.\u201d
— Byron Donalds (@Byron Donalds) 1659367327

Javon A. Price regards Mystal's comments on MSNBC as more evidence of the racist mindset possessed by the left.

\u201cCalling Black men \u201cnegroes\u201d is apparently okay if you\u2019re speaking about Black conservatives. \n\nFrom Herschel Walker to Justice Thomas, the Left\u2019s bigotry & racism seems to always reveal itself when Black folks start to question/challenge the Democrat\u2019s narrative\u201d
— Javon A. Price \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 (@Javon A. Price \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8) 1659368091

Race, a leftist obsession

Seizing upon the resultant uproar, Mystal doubled down on Twitter, suggesting Walker's only qualification is his race. Walker's race is, for the Nation contributor, something of an obsession.

In April, the Nation published an article written by Mystal entitled “The Herschel Walker Senate Campaign is an Insult to Black People,” wherein Mystal called Walker “an animated caricature of a Black person drawn by white conservatives.” He suggested that his campaign was a “political minstrel show.” In the same piece, he simultaneously argued that Georgia Republicans don’t support black candidates yet excitedly support Herschel. He concluded by demanding that black Americans vote as a racial bloc against Walker. Failing to do so, says Mystal, would render them "clapping seals."

Herschel hits back with kindness and prayer

Herschel took to Twitter on August 1 to hit back. In a video response, he said, “Shame on MSNBC and shame on him...I’m going to pray for both of them, because they need Jesus.”

\u201cMy response to @MSNBC and the man who called me the N word. \n\n@ReverendWarnock and the left wing crazies believe America is a fundamentally bad country full of racist people. But you and I know this is a great country, full of good people. #gasen\u201d
— Herschel Walker (@Herschel Walker) 1659377897

Walker noted further that Mystal's screed reminded him of the stark differences between the "leftwing crazies" in the Warnock camp and himself. The former "want to divide us, turn us against each other."

Notwithstanding the MSNBC guest's racial framing, Walker underlined how America is a "good country full of good people."

Social conservatives slam Fox News for airing pride month segment on transgender teen



Social conservatives slammed Fox News on Friday after the cable network aired a lengthy segment praising a transgender California teenager as an "inspiration" for LGBTQ+ pride month.

"Pride month continues as we highlight the story of Ryland Whittington, who's journey of transitioning at age 5 has been seen by seven million people in a family YouTube video," said anchor Dana Perino as she introduced the controversial segment on "America's Newsroom" Friday.

Fox News correspondent Bryan Llenas then reported on Ryland Whittington, a 14-year-old gender dysphoric girl who identifies and presents as a boy.

“If you saw me walking down the street you wouldn’t think anything different,” Ryland says at the beginning of the segment.

“14-year-old Ryland Whittington is a typical southern California teenager. And the Whittingtons, along with mom Hillary, dad Jeff, and sister Brynley are a typical family. The only difference though, in Ryland’s eyes, is what this family can mean to the tens of thousands of kids under 18 who identify as transgender,” Llenas reported.

“We put our story out there so people could see that, like, there's another family out there that is going through what we’re going through or there is another family who is proud of who they are," Ryland said.

Watch:

The Whittingtons claim they knew their child was transgender even before Ryland could speak.

“I could see it. It wasn’t him trying to be a brat. It was like painful. It was truly painful for him to have to wear feminine clothing and for us constantly telling him that you're a girl,” said Ryland's mother, Hillary.

When Ryland vocalized her gender confusion at age 5, her parents "fully embraced" her new identity as a boy, Llenas reported.

“We were confused like most people are. We thought gender and sexuality were the same thing. It took us a while to figure out those two things are different and that children actually do recognize their gender identity very young. Some of them, not all,” Hillary said.

She claims that her "conservative faith" led her to believe that God made Ryland transgender.

“For me, it is just a deep spiritual belief that you believe in God and he created us the way he wanted us and he created Ryland just the way he is,” Hillary said.

The Whittington family said they want Ryland's story to raise awareness for how transgender youths are at a higher risk of self-harm when their self-proclaimed gender identities are not accepted. Llenas reported statistics from the Trevor Project, a suicide hotline for LGBTQ+ youth, that show more than 50% of transgender youths consider suicide.

“That was the turning point. I didn’t want to see Ryland go through that,” said Ryland’s father Jeff.

“I would rather have a living son than a dead daughter," added his wife Hillary.

"I guarantee that if we had pushed back and done what a lot of parents do, I don’t think we would have either one of the kids that you see before you here today,” she said.

The family has written a book, "Raising Ryland," that chronicles their experience. They also posted a YouTube video telling Ryland's story in 2014 that has since been viewed more than 8 million times.

“I’m just here to make the ride smoother for others. You might be struggling right now but we believe in you. This family, we might not know you, we might not know where you live but, you know, we understand you and we believe in you,” Ryland concluded.

“What extraordinary courage, displayed by Ryland, his sister Brynley, father Jeff, and mom Hillary. I want to thank the family for speaking to us,” Llenas said at the end of the segment. "It is not easy, particularly at a time when transgender issues have been politicized. People are afraid of what they don’t understand, Dana. This family hopes their story will lead to more understanding, more acceptance, and ultimately more love."

Social conservatives reacted poorly to the Fox News segment, which was aired as part of the network's diversity programming for Pride Month.

"I’m stunned that Fox News ran a segment celebrating a girl whose parents 'transitioned' her into a boy when she was 5 because she apparently told them she was a boy 'before [she] could talk,'" tweeted BlazeTV host Allie Beth Stuckey of "Relatable."

\u201cI\u2019m stunned that Fox News ran a segment celebrating a girl whose parents \u201ctransitioned\u201d her into a boy when she was 5 because she apparently told them she was a boy \u201cbefore [she] could talk.\u201d Absolutely maddening & heartbreaking. https://t.co/T8k1QQS6uH\u201d
— Allie Beth Stuckey (@Allie Beth Stuckey) 1654876263

"For those saying, 'why are you stunned?' Look - of course we all knew most at Fox are socially liberal. But THIS? Is a whole other level. It’s as extreme and depraved as it gets," she said in a follow-up tweet.

"Fox has become Jenner’s press agent, so this is sadly its next logical descent into the mouth of madness," BlazeTV host Steve Deace of "The Steve Deace Show" said, quoting Stuckey's tweet and referring to Caitlyn Jenner, a transgender former Olympic athlete who has since been hired as a contributor by Fox News.

\u201cFox has become Jenner\u2019s press agent, so this is sadly its next logical descent into the mouth of madness.\u201d
— Steve Deace (@Steve Deace) 1654879979

Conservative radio host Erick Erickson commented that the segment on Ryland was likely to hurt Fox News' reputation as the go-to cable news channel for conservatives.

"Fox News promoting trans propaganda is something to behold. That’s gonna hurt the network more than calling Arizona for Biden," Erickson tweeted.

\u201cFox News promoting trans propaganda is something to behold. That\u2019s gonna hurt the network more than calling Arizona for Biden.\u201d
— Erick Erickson (@Erick Erickson) 1654875747

Others slammed Fox News for promoting the pro-trans position.

\u201cPretty sick, @FoxNews.\u201d
— David Reaboi, Late Republic Nonsense (@David Reaboi, Late Republic Nonsense) 1654879055
\u201cHearing that Fox News ran a peppy segment about a young girl (minor) who has "transitioned" to male. And then the reporter called the child brave. SURREAL\u201d
— Eddie Scarry (@Eddie Scarry) 1654883215
\u201cFOX has gone.\u201d
— Sebastian Gorka DrG (@Sebastian Gorka DrG) 1654884262

USA Today cites 'science' to claim 'there’s no simple answer' to defining a woman. Social media responds.



Critics on social media lambasted USA Today on Thursday after the newspaper cited "science" to suggest that "there is no simple answer" to the question, "What is a woman?"

What are the details?

The paper was responding to a widely publicized moment from Senate confirmation hearings earlier this week when President Biden's Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson told Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn (Tenn.) she couldn't provide a definition for the word "woman" since she's "not a biologist."

The exchange quickly went viral on the internet as conservatives expressed shock and anger at the judge's absurd embrace of anti-scientific progressive gender politics. Ironically, Jackson's own womanhood was a primary reason that she was nominated for the court in the first place.

During the hearing, Blackburn spoke for much of the American populace when she chided Jackson's non-answer, saying, "The fact that you can’t give me a straight answer about something as fundamental as what a woman is underscores the dangers of the kind of progressive education" being taught in school districts across the country.

Yet, in a lengthy report published Thursday, USA Today offered a defense of the judge's answer. The headline of the report said, "Marsha Blackburn asked Ketanji Brown Jackson to define 'woman.' Science says there's no simple answer."

"Scientists, gender law scholars, and philosophers of biology said Jackson's response was commendable, though perhaps misleading," USA Today reported in the story's opening paragraphs. "It's useful, they say, that Jackson suggested science could help answer Blackburn's question, but they note that a competent biologist would not be able to offer a definitive answer either."

"Scientists agree there is no sufficient way to clearly define what makes someone a woman, and with billions of women on the planet, there is much variation," the newspaper confidently told its readers, later adding, "While traditional notions of sex and gender suggest a simple binary — if you are born with a penis, you are male and identify as a man and if you are born with a vagina, you are female and identify as a woman — the reality, gender experts say, is more complex."

To articulate its point, the paper trotted out not scientists but prominent progressive gender studies scholars such as Barnard College's Rebecca Jordan-Young, UCLA's Juliet Williams, Wheaton College's Kate Mason, and Harvard-educated "philosopher of biology" Sarah Richardson.

At one point, Jordan-Young pointed to at least six "biological markers" of sex in the body, including "genitals, chromosomes, gonads, internal reproductive structures, hormone ratios, and secondary sex characteristics" to proclaim "there isn't one single 'biological' answer to the definition of a woman."

"There's not even a singular biological answer to the question of 'what is a female,'" she added.

What was the reaction?

Not surprisingly, the article was mercilessly ridiculed on social media.

NewsBusters managing editor Curtis Houck called the report "truly insane," adding, "This isn't a column, editorial, guest op-ed, or even one of those you might see labeled as 'analysis.' This is a news article from USA Today's 'Health & Wellness' section."

This isn't a column, editorial, guest op-ed, or even one of those you might see labeled as "analysis."\n\nThis is a news article from USA Today's "Health & Wellness" section.
— Curtis Houck (@Curtis Houck) 1648162125

Conservative commentator Erick Erickson mocked USA Today's inability to determine womanhood in light of archaeologists' comparative ease in doing so on thousand-year-old skeletons.

This USA Today story is amazing. It posits that scientists cannot determine what a woman is, but we can dig up 9000 year old skeletons and make that determination. https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/health-wellness/2022/03/24/marsha-blackburn-asked-ketanji-jackson-define-woman-science/7152439001/\u00a0\u2026pic.twitter.com/Bu2GCrfgYI
— Erick Erickson (@Erick Erickson) 1648219767

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee said, "If USA Today had any credibility left (they don't), they laughably lost it in this utterly nonsensical 'story.'"

If USA Today had any credibility left (they don't), they laughably lost it in this utterly nonsensical "story." Real science has an answer.\nUSA Today: Science says there\u2019s no simple answer to the definition of \u2018woman\u2019 https://twitchy.com/brettt-3136/2022/03/24/usa-today-science-says-theres-no-simple-answer-to-the-definition-of-woman/\u00a0\u2026 via @twitchyteam
— Gov. Mike Huckabee (@Gov. Mike Huckabee) 1648221246

"There is no sufficient way to define what makes someone a woman, of which there are billions," Washington Examiner reporter Jerry Dunleavy quipped.

there is no sufficient way to define what makes someone a woman, of which there are billions. https://twitter.com/usatoday/status/1507093018234347520\u00a0\u2026pic.twitter.com/uRIj7V00U1
— Jerry Dunleavy (@Jerry Dunleavy) 1648163869

The mockery only continued from there:

Those quotation marks need to be taken off the word, woman, and put around the word, science
— Gavin \ud83c\udff4\udb40\udc67\udb40\udc62\udb40\udc65\udb40\udc6e\udb40\udc67\udb40\udc7f\ud83c\uddec\ud83c\udde7 (@Gavin \ud83c\udff4\udb40\udc67\udb40\udc62\udb40\udc65\udb40\udc6e\udb40\udc67\udb40\udc7f\ud83c\uddec\ud83c\udde7) 1648162880

Mehdi Hasan says if Dems face a drubbing during the midterm elections, it will largely be Manchin and Sinema's fault



Mehdi Hasan, host of "The Mehdi Hasan Show" on Peacock and MSNBC, said that if Democrats endure a drubbing during the upcoming midterm elections, the party's poor performance will largely be the fault of Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona.

"If (when?) the Dems get hammered in November in the midterms, the number 1 reason will not be the left, or the economy, or Joe Biden, or Joe Biden’s chief of staff, or mask mandates. It’ll be two Democratic senators called Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema. We all know this," Hasan tweeted on Thursday.

On Friday, he followed up with another tweet: "Lots of conservatives angry at this tweet on Joe Manchin’s behalf. This isn’t about left or right, normal people don’t vote like that. It’s about delivery. Democrats haven’t delivered on bulk of their agenda not because of progressives but because of… Manchin and Sinema."

Lots of conservatives angry at this tweet on Joe Manchin\u2019s behalf. This isn\u2019t about left or right, normal people don\u2019t vote like that. It\u2019s about delivery. Democrats haven\u2019t delivered on bulk of their agenda not because of progressives but because of\u2026 Manchin and Sinema.
— Mehdi Hasan (@Mehdi Hasan) 1645199671

Manchin and Sinema, who both support the Senate filibuster, refused to back a plan to change the rules to enable Democrats to ram so-called "voting rights" legislation through the chamber last month.

The two also proved to be an obstacle as the Biden administration and Democrats sought to push a massive spending proposal last year. Manchin said in December that he would not vote to pass the spending plan.

Democrats could face an uphill battle during the midterm election cycle. Americans have been facing rapidly rising prices, and President Biden remains underwater on his job approval numbers.

Responding to Hasan's claim that Manchin and Sinema will be to blame if Democrats do poorly during the midterms, Erick Erickson said that if that were the case, progressives would win elections, not Republicans.

"By this logic, more progressive candidates would be getting elected, not Republicans. But it will not work that way. Which means this guy has no freaking clue what he was talking about," Erickson tweeted.

By this logic, more progressive candidates would be getting elected, not Republicans. But it will not work that way. Which means this guy has no freaking clue what he was talking about.https://twitter.com/mehdirhasan/status/1494500094472863747\u00a0\u2026
— Erick Erickson (@Erick Erickson) 1645193355

Outrage: Stock broker service Robinhood shuts down trading of GameStop



Popular stockbroker services were accused of manipulating the market by angry social media users Thursday after Robinhood, Interactive Brokers, and others took steps to restrict trading of GameStop, AMC Entertainment, Nokia, and other "volatile" stocks.

The financial world was captivated this week by the sudden and tremendous rise of video game retailer GameStop's stock price after millions of individual, non-professional "retail" investors decided to buy the stock in an attempt to "squeeze" hedge fund investors planning to short it. These retail investors, who congregate to discuss their trades on the website Reddit in a forum called WallStreetBets, were successful in driving GameStop's stock up from about $17 last week to a high of $376 on Wednesday.

The hedge fund investors attempting to short GameStop stock lost more than $5 billion because of the WallStreetBets campaign. After the news of what was happening went mainstream and some financial analysts began accusing the retail investors of WallStreetBets of manipulating the market, popular stockbroker services used by retail traders began restricting trades of GameStop and other shorted stocks caught up in the buying frenzy. Customers awoke on Thursday morning to find that they could no longer buy GameStop, AMC Entertainment, BlackBerry, Nokia, and other stocks, and could only close their current positions.

Robinhood, a company that prides itself on "democratizing finance for all" by letting customers trade stocks on their smartphone app, issued the following statement:

"We continuously monitor the markets and make changes where necessary. In light of recent volatility, we are restricting transactions for certain securities to position closing only, including $AMC, $BB, $BBBY, $EXPR, $GME, $KOSS, $NAKD and $NOK. We also raised margin requirements for certain securities."

Margin requirements are the amount of money an investor using Robinhood must have in their account in order to buy a stock.

Interactive Brokers, another stock trading service, also made a statement explaining the trade restrictions to CNBC:

"As of midday yesterday, (1/27/2021) Interactive Brokers has put AMC, BB, EXPR, GME, and KOSS option trading into liquidation only due to the extraordinary volatility in the markets. In addition, long stock positions will require 100% margin and short stock positions will require 300% margin until further notice. We do not believe this situation will subside until the exchanges and regulators halt or put certain symbols into liquidation only. We will continue to monitor market conditions and may add or remove symbols as may be warranted."

Customers are furious. Users on the WallStreetBets forum immediately accused Robinhood and other brokers of preventing them from buying these stocks to protect the hedge funds and Wall Street "suits." Some have called for a class action lawsuit against Robinhood, writing "allowing people only to sell is the definition of market manipulation." Others are encouraging other investors to hold their positions, reasoning that Robinhood and other brokers are trying to incentivize users to sell their stocks to bring GameStop and other surging stock prices down.

Barstool Sports President Dave Portnoy became one of the fiercest critics of Robinhood after he said on Wednesday that he put $1 million into AMC and Nokia stock.

Wait are people not being allowed to buy $amc and $nok?
— Dave Portnoy (@Dave Portnoy)1611840217.0
I will burn @RobinhoodApp to the ground if they shut down free market trading.
— Dave Portnoy (@Dave Portnoy)1611840441.0

Portnoy blasted Robinhood, accusing the company of siding with the Wall Street establishment over ordinary people who are just trying to get rich.

And it turns out @RobinhoodApp is the biggest frauds of them all. “Democratizing finance for all” except when we m… https://t.co/OsFR3LgMXc
— Dave Portnoy (@Dave Portnoy)1611840553.0
Somebody is going to have to explain to me in what world @RobinhoodApp and others literally trying to force a crash… https://t.co/2C8xktqPSU
— Dave Portnoy (@Dave Portnoy)1611840722.0

The controversy has made strange bedfellows. People on the right and the left are uniting to criticize Robinhood and defend the rights of retail traders to take on Wall Street.

It took less than a day for big tech, big government and the corporate media to spring into action and begin collud… https://t.co/58aXqa5Amv
— Donald Trump Jr. (@Donald Trump Jr.)1611842821.0
Straight up collusion to protect the suits in suites. @RobinhoodApp @stoolpresidente https://t.co/RAZ1iWCTqE
— Jason Johnson (@Jason Johnson)1611843058.0
Robinhood is restricting GameStop trading to help their Wall Street Buddies from going under. Yesterday Wall Street… https://t.co/kL1I3cR9vt
— Kyle Kashuv (@Kyle Kashuv)1611846056.0
So @RobinhoodApp, an app named after the guy who took from the rich and gave to the poor, is now blocking the littl… https://t.co/INABtHSBM7
— Erick Erickson (@Erick Erickson)1611845407.0
More like...Transfer any stock you have with Robinhood to another account...Withdraw your money from Robinhood'… https://t.co/qIylizJlLq
— Yashar Ali 🐘 (@Yashar Ali 🐘)1611845790.0
Very disappointed in @RobinhoodApp! They said they allow free trading but are now blocking users from buying specif… https://t.co/lONZtnpG97
— Rosanna Pansino (@Rosanna Pansino)1611847479.0