Ivanka Trump insulted after her vaccination against Covid-19
Proud to be vaccinated against the coronavirus, Ivanka Trump recently took to her social networks to relay the news. Only problem, and as the magazine Vanity Fair spotted this Thursday, April 15, Internet users saw only one umpteenth provocation.
Between Ivanka Trump and Internet users, tensions have always been at their height. Because many are those who believe that the ex-first daughter only taunts the anonymous. The proof, once again, this Wednesday April 14 when, proud of having been vaccinated against the coronavirus, she published a snapshot of the procedure on her Instagram and Twitter accounts. "Today, I was vaccinated", she wrote in the caption of this post, "I hope you too!" The American magazine Vanity Fair could not help but notice a surge of insulting comments.
In the eyes of many anonymous, the photo of the businesswoman was only a painful reminder of the Trump administration's disengaged behavior in the face of the coronavirus pandemic. Of which Ivanka Trump was a part for four years. "You could have told people that the Covid-19 was not a democratic hoax", criticized an Internet user, quoted by our colleagues from across the Atlantic, "you could have helped prevent hundreds of thousands of deaths.
" Another puts on a diaper: "You couldn't just whisper 'hey masks, are you okay' in daddy's ear?" Same reproach from the side of an anonymous third. "Too bad you refused to intervene while your father and his soulless cohorts politicized the pandemic, hid his grave death, spread lies and propaganda." A stormy comeback on social networks: Ivanka Trump left the Web in January 2021, in the wake of her departure from Washington.
Like father like daughter
Indeed, at the start of the health crisis caused by the coronavirus, and just like Boris Johnson in the United Kingdom, Donald Trump took the pandemic lightly. It was not until October 2020 that he paid the price. Joe Biden's predecessor then announced that he had been diagnosed positive for Covid-19, to which he is particularly vulnerable, just like his wife Melania Trump. The real estate mogul was then admitted to Walter Reed's military hospital in suburban Washington, before he, too, was vaccinated against the viral disease.