Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Labour

KINDER, GENTLER POLITICS: Vile Corbyn trolls target young Tory activist and tell her to ‘have a stroke like Margaret Thatcher’

SICK Corbynista’s have been exposed as vicious trolls abusing a young female Tory activist on Twitter.

The Corbyn supporting sickos sent abusive messages after the activist criticised the Labour leader on Twitter.

Alice Terry, aged 29, told The Sun she was determined to say what she thinks online, even after the keyboard warriors said she should kill herself and that she should have a stroke “like Margaret Thatcher”.

She said: “The worst ones have been to kill myself, which are awful, especially as I have anxiety.”

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Alice said she felt compelled to speak out about Mr Corbyn as he’s peddling policies he can’t deliver and targeting the young because they are more naive.

She said: “He tries to bring in all these young people but they don’t have a lot of experience in the adult world… I think he plays on that.

“Corbyn’s cult are really quite angry and they don’t listen to reason.”

Alice said: “I don’t think he’s as nice as he comes across. In the last two weeks he’s showed himself to be not a very nice person.

“He’s a member of all these anti-Semitic groups and he hasn’t really apologised. He doesn’t want to admit that he’s wrong.”

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

https://twitter.com/aliceterry_/status/978389219403059200

But the backlash has seen people tell her “to have a stroke like Margaret Thatcher”.

“And a lot of people say they hope I get a disability. My father has Parkinsons too, it’s a horrible thing to say,” she added.

People have photoshopped her tweets to look like it said the Tories hated the elderly, and called her evil.

Alice, who describes herself as a “bloody difficult woman”, a phrase about Mrs May coined by Tory Ken Clarke, works as a planner for a supermarket in London – and says she gets a lot of stigma for being a Conservative in the capital.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

“People have sent me messages saying ‘be careful’. said Alice.

“I know they are complete strangers but it’s awful feeling like you can’t have your own opinion online or you’ll get threats.

“It’s always stuff about your appearance from the girls, or guys who say you’re a wh**e”, Alice said, admitting it was an easy shot for online trolls to make fun of her nose.

“It does get to me, I do feel intimated,” she admitted.

“Calling someone a s**g is a bit immature, it’s like what you used to say at school,” she added.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

MUST SEE!..

Latest

IT WAS only a matter of time before members of the Parliamentary Labour Party decided to weaponise some of the disclosures made in Nadine...

Latest

MICHAEL Gove is seeking power through a number of “pliant proxies” in a Machiavellian battle with Tory enforcer Dougie ‘Dr-No’ Smith, Politicalite can exclusively...

Tories

AMERICAN XL bully dogs will be banned by the end of the year following a series of attacks, Rishi Sunak has said. The Prime...

Latest

Written by Ian Adamczyk It has recently been announced that a luxury 4* Hotel in Standish, Wigan is to become the latest hotel in...

MUSIC

IN THE mid-1990s, a musical movement emerged from the United Kingdom that would captivate the world and leave an indelible mark on the cultural...

STOP THE BOATS

THE FIRST boat migrants have moved on to a barge in Dorset, named the Bibby Stockholm barge in a Government bid to finally Stop...