Washington Post columnist ripped to shreds for suggesting unvaccinated be prosecuted: 'This is demented beyond words'



Longtime Washington Post columnist Gene Weingarten was castigated online for suggesting that those who are not vaccinated against COVID-19 should be prosecuted.

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, Weingarten has expressed disdain to Americans who did not receive the coronavirus vaccine.

"It is hard but not impossible to refrain from hating the stupidly unvaccinated, people who are dragging us back into pandemic," the WaPo columnist wrote on Twitter in July. "It is impossible, however, to refrain from feeling contempt for them."

It is hard but not impossible to refrain from hating the stupidly unvaccinated, people who are dragging us back into pandemic. It is impossible, however, to refrain from feeling contempt for them.

— Gene Weingarten (@geneweingarten) 1626911811

In October, he tweeted, "The 'vaccine hesitant' are selfish idiots whose selfish idiocy is killing people but we are not allowed to say that because why?"

The "vaccine hesitant" are selfish idiots whose selfish idiocy is killing people but we are not allowed to say that because why?

— Gene Weingarten (@geneweingarten) 1635625966

Weingarten even attacked those who are "vaccine-hesitant" in a Sept. 9 column titled: "I have a better term for the 'vaccine-hesitant.'" In the piece, Weingarten denigrates vaccine-hesitant individuals as "ignorant people," "idiots," and "incredibly stupid people."

On Thursday, Weingarten took it to another level by asking, "Is there a point at which the 'unvaccinated' need to be prosecuted?"

Is there a point at which the "unvaccinated" need to be prosecuted?

— Gene Weingarten (@geneweingarten) 1636683295

In reactions on Twitter, the WaPo columnist was mercilessly ripped to shreds for considering legal punishments for unvaccinated individuals.

Independent journalist Glenn Greenwald: "This is demented beyond words, but as I wrote yesterday, a punitive and sadistic desire to see people imprisoned who dissent from their worldview is an increasingly central and defining feature of American liberalism. COVID can be transmitted by vaccinated people as well as the unvaccinated. And if someone is vaccinated, they are protected against serious illness and death: or don't you believe in the efficacy of vaccines?"

New York Post contributor Rav Arora: "This person is not some random blue-haired SJW Twitter activist. He's actually a decades-old @washingtonpost columnist. And he's a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner. Truly stunning."

Fox News senior editor Will Ricciardella: "They're going to push this as far as it can take them."

Liberal writer James Melville: "History has taught us that anyone who is forcing someone else into compliance is the diametric opposite of liberal and tolerant."

BlazeTV personality Matt Kibbe: "Great idea. Let's separate people, us versus them. Let's put all of 'them' in a cage. That's what you're saying?"

Podcast host Lauren Chen: "People like this weren't broken by COVID. They were just waiting for an excuse to unleash their inner tyrants."

Political strategist Seth Weathers: "Found the commie! He's at the Washington Post."

Best-selling author Tony Shaffer: "Is there a point at which @geneweingarten and the @washingtonpost defect to Cuba to join their Stalinist fellow travelers?"

The Federalist senior editor Mollie Hemingway: "Found the fascist."

Podcast host Liz Wheeler: "Try it, bro. You think the backlash against radical leftists in Virginia was a tidal wave? Keep coming for our kids & for the unvaxxed. Every elected position in the country will turn red thanks to you psychopaths."

It turns out that Weingarten proposed possible side effects from the COVID-19 vaccine when they were rolled out during the Trump administration. On Nov. 24, 2020, Weingarten asked his Twitter followers, "Okay, would you get the vaccine if it involved four days of intense, firehose diarrhea, a day of projectile vomiting, and a month of urinary incontinence and two months of sexual impotence?"

In August, Weingarten was blasted for a Washington Post article that some deemed as "extremely racist." Following the backlash, Weingarten apologized and attempted to explain the post, "From start to finish plus the illo, the column was about what a whining infantile ignorant d***head I am."

In 2013, Weingarten made an attempt at humor by writing a poem imagining St. Peter shooting then-NRA chief Wayne LaPierre in the crotch.

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Outrage erupts after liberal WaPo writer says he dislikes Indian food in 'extremely racist' column



The internet erupted with furious outrage after a Washington Post columnist penned an "extremely racist" denunciation of Indian food.

"What in the white nonsense is this?" replied reality show star Padma Lakshmi. "On behalf of 1.3 billion people, kindly f**k off."

The vituperation was aimed at a column titled, "You can't make me eat these foods," written by humorist Gene Weingarten.

This will be my most hated column of all time, and believe me, I have been hated a LOT. https://t.co/ZSR5SPcwMF

— Gene Weingarten (@geneweingarten) 1629407331.0

"This will be my most hated column of all time, and believe me, I have been hated a LOT," tweeted Weingarten.

Among the victims of Weingarten's column was Indian food, which he described as something even vultures wouldn't eat.

One critic accused Weingarten of using a racist white nationalist trope.

"This one spice nonsense is a straight up National Front propaganda point, is the WaPo literally platforming white nationalist discourse now?" tweeted writer Shiv Ramdas.

"...how the f*** is he allowed to speak on food when his palate is so numb he thinks CURRIES are a single spice dish & why the f*** is WaPo publishing straight up National Front talking points disguised as food opinions?" Ramdas added.

"That you got paid to write this tripe, and boldly spew your racism is deplorable. May your rice be clumpy, roti dry, your chilies unforgivable, your chai cold, and your papadams soft," tweeted journalist Shireen Ahmed.

"What is it with white guys with elite media jobs thinking everyone wants to read their dumb, very poorly informed rants about how much they dislike all Indian food? It is not cute. It is racist," read a tweet from filmmaker Arlen Parsa.

"...seems to me once you go to Everything Those Bazillions of Brown People Eat Is Beneath Human Consumption it takes it into a categorically different place and suddenly it's just not fun any more," responded actor Vince Gatton.

Weingarten was defiant against the criticism in a tweet Sunday.

"Took a lot of blowback for my dislike of Indian food in today's column so tonight I went to Rasika, DC's best Indian restaurant. Food was beautifully prepared yet still swimming with the herbs & spices I most despise. I take nothing back," he tweeted.

But by Monday evening he apologized for what he said about Indian food.

"From start to finish plus the illo, the column was about what a whining infantile ignorant d---head I am," tweeted Weingarten.

"I should have named a single Indian dish, not the whole cuisine, & I do see how that broad-brush was insulting," he added. "Apologies.(Also, yes, curries are spice blends, not spices.)"

Weingarten made headlines in 2013 when he penned a poem imagining St. Peter shooting then-NRA chief Wayne LaPierre in the crotch.