Show Host Fires Cheap Shots At Natural Disaster Victims

Whoopi Goldberg hit a new low late last week as she openly mocked groups of conservatives during a broadcast of “The View,” making the claim that she had not heard quite as many people trying to deny climate change since their family had been injured and their houses had been “blown down … for the fourth or the fifth time.”

Goldberg stood alongside her other co-hosts on the midday talk show hosted on ABC in a preemptive post-mortem of the Republican Party spawned out of the indictment of former President Donald Trump that took place on Tuesday —  kicking things off with co-host Joy Behar expressing that the party would never win be able to secure another election.

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Behar went on to state that people would now stand against voting for Republicans because they did not want to see additional tornadoes or school shootings, appearing to claim that by voting for Democrats, they would someone prevent natural disasters or school shootings from taking place at all.

At that point, co-host Sunny Hostin chose to chime in to argue that Republicans were just “the part of dinosaurs,” making the claim that they could not win an election without “cheating” because they did not possess an actual platform and instead relied entirely on “grievance politics.” She also made the claim that Republicans were making use of entirely unfair districting maps — also known as gerrymandering — in order to hold on to their power. All despite the fact that the most recognizable examples of gerrymandering come out of Illinois, where the entire map was drawn by none other than the Democrats to their own obvious advantage.

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It was at that point that Goldberg chose to step in, claiming while laughing that at least it had been quite a while since she had heard many Republicans vocally advocating against the reality of climate change.

“I’ve noticed in the last, I don’t know, seven months, there hasn’t been much denying of climate change going on,” she exclaimed with a satisfied smirk. “You haven’t heard them — it used to be, ‘I don’t believe it, it’s never happened, it’s never happened —’ and now they are like, ‘Yeah, I think my house just got blown down … for the fourth or fifth time.'”

“Because another … you know, there’s been so much evidence saying something is wrong,” she concluded.

Tornadoes have killed multiple dozens of Americans in the last few weeks alone, with more than 20 dying in Mississippi in late March and an additional seven in Tennessee just a week later.

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