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Foul, Potty-Mouthed, Woke Women | The American Spectator

“I’m not f—ing apologizing for that,” screeched angry actress Amanda Seyfried, who had referred to Charlie Kirk as “hateful” after his assassination. “I mean, for f–k’s sake, I commented on one thing…. What I said was pretty damn factual, and I’m free to have an opinion.”
I was alarmed and disappointed to see such guttural language from Ms. Seyfried. For this family-friendly publication, I abbreviated the f-bombs. Read them silently to yourself, in original form, to get the full brunt and gut-punch.
So many of them, and indeed young women generally, have become terribly profane.
And though I was alarmed by Seyfried’s language, I’m sadly not surprised. After all, she is a modern celebrity woke woman. So many of them, and indeed young women generally, have become terribly profane.
Nonetheless, I was saddened because, gosh, Seyfried was such a cute gal when she playacted as the lovely “Cossette” in the outstanding 2012 film adaptation of Les Misérables, starring Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe, Anne Hathaway, and Eddie Redmayne. Redmayne was lucky enough to be Cosette’s love interest, “Marius.”
Indeed, watch Cosette sing “A Heart Full of Love” to Marius and tell me your heart doesn’t melt. Any red-blooded male would strap on a football helmet and run through a wall for that girl. Many a dude would wish he were Marius, looking into Seyfried-Cosette’s loving eyes as she croons admiringly. Kind of like how every guy of my youth wished that Olivia Newton-John as “Sandy” in Grease might have pictured themselves rather than John Travolta when she beautifully sang “Hopelessly Devoted to You.”
Of course, one can’t imagine the delightful Newton-John launching into an f-bomb tirade at anyone of her era, least of all a Republican. In fact, Olivia was a Reagan supporter. She was a nice girl on and off the screen who didn’t swear like a truck driver. In fact, she immediately expressed grave doubts about racy lyrics in her hugely successful 1981 hit, “Physical.” ‘Goodness, maybe I’ve…

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