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Liz Cheney calls Charlie Kirk a 'twit' for saying spouses should not lie to each other about their votes

"It is the embodiment of the downfall of the American family. I think it's so gross, it's so nauseating."

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"It is the embodiment of the downfall of the American family. I think it's so gross, it's so nauseating."

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Libby Emmons Brooklyn NY
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Democrat presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign approved an ad that encourages women to lie to their husbands. The ad, from Common Good, narrated by Hollywood A-lister Julia Roberts, shows women heading into their polling place with their husbands. Two women meet each others' gaze over their voting booths and smile, knowing that they will cast their votes one way and tell their husbands they did the opposite. 

Charlie Kirk hates the ad, as do so many conservatives and people who don't believe marital relationships should be founded on deception and lies. In response to Kirk's speaking out against it, former Wyoming GOP congresswoman Liz Cheney, a Republican who is touring the country with Harris to encourage conservatives to vote for the far-left progressive Democrat, called him a "twit."

"Listen to this twit make Donald Trump’s closing argument. Women, you know what to do. #VoteKamala," Cheney said.



"And she needs people to basically lie to their husbands, which they are promoting, by the way," Kirk told podcaster Megyn Kelly, "which I find that entire advertising campaign so repulsive, it is so disastrous. It is the embodiment of the downfall of the American family. I think it's so gross, it's so nauseating."

He went on to describe the video before saying "Kamala Harris and her team believe that there'll be millions of women that undermine their husbands and do so in a way that it's not detectable in the polling."

The ad, while likely seen as empowering by Roberts and the campaign that backs it, suggests that there is no reason for spouses to have open conversations with each other about their voting proclivities. The subtext of that is that men are such brutes that they could not tolerate their wives voting differently from them. During Trump's first term in office, many leftists said outright that spouses should divorce their partners if their partners were Trump supporters. The idea became commonplace that one could not be romantically involved with someone they did not agree with politically.

The ad claims that the polling place "is the one place in America where women still have the right to choose," which is of course a dig at those states that have reduced the gestational age at which abortions are allowed. 



Never Trump group The Lincoln Project also put out an ad showing women lying to their Trump-supporting husbands about who they would be voting for, namely, Kamala Harris. They went so far as to indicate their belief that former and perhaps future First Lady Melania Trump would be casting her ballot for Harris and the Democrats.



This kind of lying within what was once considered a sacred union has been endorsed by Democrats and Never Trump Republicans who see it as their job to install Harris at all costs, even at the cost of the foundations of the American family.
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