“How do you plan on investing on the aborted children?”
Infowars.com
December 4, 2013
Wendy Davis, the Texas democrat who launched a filibuster on the Texas Senate floor last June opposing abortion restrictions, is weathering flak due to a recent ill-conceived tweet.
As governor, I’ll always make investing in our Texas children my first priority. #TeamWendy
— Wendy Davis (@WendyDavisTexas) December 4, 2013
Twitter users couldn’t resist pointing out the message’s irony, concocting the hashtag #KillWithWendie and continuing a trend at #AbortionBarbie.
Only if they aren't aborted first, @WendyDavisTexas.
— Mike Millican (@Millican17) December 4, 2013
“@WendyDavisTexas: As governor, I’ll always make investing in our Texas children my first priority.”
Do you HEAR yourself?
#AbortionBarbie
— Holly Renee (@hollyR_J_N) December 4, 2013
@WendyDavisTexas but if you don't win will you go back to supporting killing the Children of Texas? #KillWithWendy #DeathWins
— Shegma Futility (@ohgr81) December 4, 2013
.@WendyDavisTexas You mean just the lucky few that survive your crusade to abort as many of them as possible, right? #abortionbarbie
— Bill Hobbs (@billhobbs) December 4, 2013
@WendyDavisTexas How do you plan on investing on the aborted children? #AbortionBarbie
— #DefundTheGOP (@LiberalsRNuts) December 4, 2013
Where investing means aborting RT @WendyDavisTexas: As governor, I’ll always make investing in our Texas children my first priority.
— Dana Loesch (@DLoesch) December 4, 2013
@DLoesch Wendy wants to invest in children the way OJ invested in Nicole. #AbortionBarbie
— Classic Conservative (@Lessgovmorefree) December 4, 2013
One person even went as far as drawing a comparison between Davis’ filibuster and the historic filibuster Sen. Rand Paul conducted in opposition of chief counterterrorism advisor John Brennan’s nomination to head up the CIA.
"@Just_a_Texan: Spoke for 13 hours on the merits of slicing a babies spinal column. pic.twitter.com/tuPq5CsGLi" #abortionbarbie on it
— val pal (@MindSplitR) December 4, 2013
After the abortion filibuster vaulted her into national prominence, Davis in October formally announced she would seek the governorship in Texas’ November 2014 elections, hoping to replace exiting Gov. Rick Perry.
Davis proved to be an opponent of the Constitution when, in 1996 after she lost a race for Fort Worth city council, she sued the Fort Worth Star-Telegram alleging “that biased coverage led to her defeat and caused injury to her physical and mental health.” “[T]he suit was later dismissed on free speech grounds, according to news accounts in the hometown paper,” reported the Texas Tribune.
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