According to ABC’s vile coven known as The View, if you’re against the left doxxing the addresses of conservative justices and threatening mobs assailing their homes, then you’re against the First Amendment. That was essentially the argument co-host Sunny Hostin made on Monday as she proceeded to claim the justices were against the right to peacefully protest because they wanted the privacy they were stripping from women with the draft abortion ruling.
Hostin didn’t really speak until the B-block and when she did she began with faux sympathy for Supreme Court Justice Alito and touted the protesters that assailed their homes:
Yeah, over the weekend I was -- I was watching a lot of the protests that were happening outside of some of the justices' homes. And my understanding is that Justice Alito has had to go into hiding because of this, you know, draft opinion that was leaked.
And while I think it is terrible that a justice would have to go into hiding, I think it is really clear to the justices now that, as Ana mentioned, 64 to 66 percent of Americans believe that the Supreme Court should uphold Roe v. Wade, right?
Hostin was hopeful the “outcry gives Chief Justice Roberts some leverage for a more moderate approach.”
The table was irate that Justice Clarence Thomas continued to resist the intimidation tactics from the leftists (Click “expand”):
HOSTIN: And I just think when you have the Supreme Court justices like Clarence Thomas coming out this weekend and saying at the 11th Circuit Judicial Conference that they will not be bullied, and that people need to live with outcomes they don't agree with –
WHOOPI GOLDBERG: Tell that to your wife!
HOSTIN: Yeah, and other --
JOY BEHAR: Tell that to Donald Trump who refuses to say that he lost.
Following that griping, Hostin lashed out and suggested the justices were against free speech because they didn’t want to be targeted at their homes. “And then other justices are saying you have no right to stand and freely protest -- peacefully protest outside of our homes.”
According to her, they wanted the privacy that they were stripping from women who wanted abortions. “We have a right to privacy. Well, women have a right to privacy as well, and women have a right to privacy with their bodies,” she sneered, ignoring the fact abortion takes a life.
And what about the leftist terrorism from over the weekend? We got one sentence from co-host Ana Navarro. “We saw this weekend in Madison, Wisconsin where an anti-abortion clinic was targeted and was bombed, and we cannot condone violence from anybody,” she said.
And as they ended the B-block, Whoopi Goldberg suggested the justices were going to make interracial marriage illegal by passing a “law.” She didn’t have an explanation of how this could be true since Thomas is in an interracial marriage and the Supreme Court doesn’t pass laws.
Goldberg also claimed, without evidence, that overturning Roe would determine “Where your kid goes to school and what your child can learn.” Seemingly unable to comprehend what she just asserted, she huffed: “I don't understand why we're still talking about schools, public schools being bullied by governors.”
And as they went to break, Goldberg urged viewers to “make sure you get out and vote because this one thing can change an entire country into something and someplace you don't want to be.”
This nonsense about Roe and the touting of targeting justices was made possible because of lucrative sponsorships from L’Oréal and Olay. Their contact information is linked.
The transcript is below, click "expand" to read:
ABC’s The View
May 9, 2022
11:14:28 a.m. Eastern(…)
SUNNY HOSTIN: Yeah, over the weekend I was -- I was watching a lot of the protests that were happening outside of some of the justices' homes. And my understanding is that Justice Alito has had to go into hiding because of this, you know, draft opinion that was leaked.
And while I think it is terrible that a justice would have to go into hiding, I think it is really clear to the justices now that, as Ana mentioned, 64 to 66 percent of Americans believe that the Supreme Court should uphold Roe v. Wade, right?
And so that being said, maybe these protests, and maybe this outcry gives Chief Justice Roberts some leverage for a more moderate approach. Because we saw during the hearing that he was looking for a way, a moderate way to handle this -- this -- this case.
And I just think when you have the Supreme Court justices like Clarence Thomas coming out this weekend and saying at the 11th Circuit Judicial Conference that they will not be bullied, and that people need to live with outcomes they don't agree with --
WHOOPI GOLDBERG: Tell that to your wife!
HOSTIN: Yeah, and other --
JOY BEHAR: Tell that to Donald Trump who refuses to say that he lost.
GOLDBERG: No, but his wife is --
HOSTIN: Yeah, his wife. And then other justices are saying you have no right to stand and freely protest -- peacefully protest outside of our homes. We have a right to privacy. Well, women have a right to privacy as well, and women have a right to privacy with their bodies.
And umm… I'm just shocked that that's what we're hearing from men. That's what we're hearing from the justices. That's what we're hearing from, you know, Republicans, that people don't have a right to protest these -- this draft opinion when the Supreme Court has found that you have a right to protest in front of abortion clinics, that there can be no buffer zone.
ANA NAVARRO: You said a word that I think is key. You said peacefully protest.
HOSTIN: Peacefully protest.
NAVARRO: I think that's a keyword.
HOSTIN: Absolutely.
NAVARRO: We saw this weekend in Madison, Wisconsin where an anti-abortion clinic was targeted and was bombed, and we cannot condone violence from anybody.
HOSTIN: Right.
NAVARRO: The way to overturn this is through public pressure. It's through the votes. Everybody should go and check the voter registration right now and make sure that they are dually registered because the voting laws have changed in many state.
(…)
11:17:17 a.m. Eastern
WHOOPI GOLDBERG: Or how about people married to, you know, gay marriage, interracial marriage, and that -- that goes for every -- all of these -- this law, and their ability and zeal about changing it, 50 years.
BEHAR: Yeah.
GOLDBERG: This really puts a finger on a lot of stuff. Where your kid goes to school and what your child can learn. I don't understand why we're still talking about schools, public schools being bullied by governors. The public school is for everybody. It's for PUBLIC use. It's for people of many, many, many different belief systems. It's for parents -- children of gay parents. It's for parents -- children with black and white parents. It's for -- it's PUBLIC school.
Yes, I see you. I see you. You know? It's imperative that you make sure you get out and vote because this one thing can change an entire country into something and someplace you don't want to be. We'll be right back.
(…)