First Romney was chided from the entire MSNBC panel for having a black grandchild. How dare he? It was so bad that Melissa Harris Perry had to apologize for it.
Now it's Sessions who is a bad person for daring to have an Asian grandbaby. Doesn't he know he's supposed to be racist and hate Asians?
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.bu...iter-jeff-sessions-tweet-2017-1?client=safari
A writer for MTV News came under fire on Tuesday after joking that Sen. Jeff Sessions, the attorney general nominee, kidnapped an Asian child from a local Toys R Us to use as a prop at his Senate confirmation hearing.
"Sessions, sir, kindly return this Asian baby to the Toys 'R' Us you stole her from," Ira Madison III, a cultural writer for MTV News, wrote in a now deleted tweet.
Madison continued to attack the Alabama senator. The MTV News writer referred to Sessions' grandchild as a mere "prop."
"There is no reason for that child to be in his lap in a hearing other than to send an 'I'm not racist message,'" Madison tweeted.
The comments were immediately condemned online. CNBC anchor John Harwood called them "disgusting," and The Washington Post's Chris Cillizza suggested Madison "never tweet."
Now it's Sessions who is a bad person for daring to have an Asian grandbaby. Doesn't he know he's supposed to be racist and hate Asians?
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.bu...iter-jeff-sessions-tweet-2017-1?client=safari
A writer for MTV News came under fire on Tuesday after joking that Sen. Jeff Sessions, the attorney general nominee, kidnapped an Asian child from a local Toys R Us to use as a prop at his Senate confirmation hearing.
"Sessions, sir, kindly return this Asian baby to the Toys 'R' Us you stole her from," Ira Madison III, a cultural writer for MTV News, wrote in a now deleted tweet.
Madison continued to attack the Alabama senator. The MTV News writer referred to Sessions' grandchild as a mere "prop."
"There is no reason for that child to be in his lap in a hearing other than to send an 'I'm not racist message,'" Madison tweeted.
The comments were immediately condemned online. CNBC anchor John Harwood called them "disgusting," and The Washington Post's Chris Cillizza suggested Madison "never tweet."