Meghan Markle's tech entrepreneur friend says conspiracy theorists claiming duchess was never pregnant and wore a 'moonbump' are making her life a 'nightmare'
Mr Bouzy has now turned on social media conspiracy theorists who weaponised Meghan and Harry's twerking hospital video to spread wild and groundless speculation that she wasn't pregnant at all and was wearing a 'moonbump'.
He wrote: 'When Meghan Markle posted a lighthearted video of herself dancing in a hospital room while nine months pregnant, she probably thought she was sharing a relatable moment that other mothers would appreciate. Instead, within hours, online trolls and conspiracy theorists weaponized it as "proof" she was never pregnant at all'.
‘This nightmare is what Meghan's life has become. Every joyful moment gets twisted into ammunition by people who've made destroying her their full-time job. And we need to talk about what this sustained cruelty has done to a woman whose only crime was falling in love with a prince’.
Conspiracy theorists have pored over the twerking film in order to make wild and even unhinged claims about her including that her pregnancy was faked.
Several claimed, without a shred of credible evidence, that the Sussexes used a surrogate by claiming the equipment in the background suggested it was not on a labour ward.
Others have sought to back the incredible and baseless claim that her bump was too high or the wrong shape to be real. Others said her ability to dance that way at nine months meant she was either 'superhuman' or not pregnant at all.
Mr Bouzy said in a column for Newsweek: ‘The "moonbump" conspiracy, which claims Meghan faked both pregnancies with prosthetic bellies, represents a special kind of cruelty.
'Here's a woman who bravely shared her miscarriage story to help other women feel less alone in their grief. She opened up about one of the most painful experiences a person can endure, and how do these conspiracy theorists respond? By claiming her subsequent pregnancies were elaborate hoaxes’.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article...tmare.html
Mr Bouzy has now turned on social media conspiracy theorists who weaponised Meghan and Harry's twerking hospital video to spread wild and groundless speculation that she wasn't pregnant at all and was wearing a 'moonbump'.
He wrote: 'When Meghan Markle posted a lighthearted video of herself dancing in a hospital room while nine months pregnant, she probably thought she was sharing a relatable moment that other mothers would appreciate. Instead, within hours, online trolls and conspiracy theorists weaponized it as "proof" she was never pregnant at all'.
‘This nightmare is what Meghan's life has become. Every joyful moment gets twisted into ammunition by people who've made destroying her their full-time job. And we need to talk about what this sustained cruelty has done to a woman whose only crime was falling in love with a prince’.
Conspiracy theorists have pored over the twerking film in order to make wild and even unhinged claims about her including that her pregnancy was faked.
Several claimed, without a shred of credible evidence, that the Sussexes used a surrogate by claiming the equipment in the background suggested it was not on a labour ward.
Others have sought to back the incredible and baseless claim that her bump was too high or the wrong shape to be real. Others said her ability to dance that way at nine months meant she was either 'superhuman' or not pregnant at all.
Mr Bouzy said in a column for Newsweek: ‘The "moonbump" conspiracy, which claims Meghan faked both pregnancies with prosthetic bellies, represents a special kind of cruelty.
'Here's a woman who bravely shared her miscarriage story to help other women feel less alone in their grief. She opened up about one of the most painful experiences a person can endure, and how do these conspiracy theorists respond? By claiming her subsequent pregnancies were elaborate hoaxes’.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article...tmare.html
teachings of the Bible are so muddled and self-contradictory that it was possible for Christians to happily burn heretics alive for five long centuries. It was even possible for the most venerated patriarchs of the Church, like St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas, to conclude that heretics should be tortured (Augustine) or killed outright (Aquinas). Martin Luther and John Calvin advocated the wholesale murder of heretics, apostates, Jews, and witches. - Sam Harris, "Letter To A Christian Nation"