Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Attacking the guys family is a bit over the top

Hate doesn’t take a holiday: ‘Hateful, threatening messages’ led to ‘hard decision’ for Pritzker family Thanksgiving. 


Gov. Pritzker said he has become accustomed to the “vitriol” spewed at him — occasionally anti-Semitic in nature — as leader of the state but warned “my kids are off limits.”

By Rachel Hinton Updated Nov 17, 2020, 8:28pm CST


Pat Nabong/Sun-Times



An emotional Gov. J.B. Pritzker clarified his family’s Thanksgiving plans on Tuesday, saying his wife and teenage daughter plan to remain in Florida “indefinitely” after a false social media post sparked “hateful, threatening messages” directed at the high school student.

Pausing briefly to clear his throat before discussing the matter at his daily coronavirus briefing, the Democratic governor said the posts falsely portrayed his daughter as flouting COVID-19 restrictions at an outdoor restaurant with friends, igniting a firestorm directed at the girl even after the governor’s office had made it clear she was not in the photograph.

“That was a lie,” Pritzker said. “It wasn’t her.”


Pritzker said he has become accustomed to the “vitriol” spewed at him — occasionally anti-Semitic in nature — as leader of the state but warned, “My kids are off limits.”

The governor said he had been “taken aback” by a reporter’s question on Monday about whether he’d be in Illinois for the holiday. Pritzker had told the reporter, “that is my hope, but I’ll let you know.”

A day later, after announcing the state would be under stricter coronavirus mitigations, Pritzker addressed that Monday answer, saying he and his wife had been in the process of “making the very hard decision” to celebrate the holiday apart for the first time.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker attends a news conference where he announced he is enforcing tier three mitigations in Illinois to curb the spread of COVID-19 at the James R. Thompson Center in the Loop on Tuesday. Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

With the state “at a crisis point” because of the COVID-19 storm, Pritzker said he planned to spend the holiday with his son in Chicago, while his wife and daughter stay in Florida.

The governor said his daughter “came under attack” last week by someone’s attempt to have “some political effect” on him.

The girl was falsely identified in a photo posted by a parody Twitter account that alleged to show her ignoring the city’s COVID-19 restrictions while dining outdoors, Pritzker said. His chief of staff identified the account as “@deuxmoiworld” in a Twitter thread posted hours after Pritzker’s briefing.

But “the trolls who permeate these social media platforms” spread the photo anyway, he said, and though Pritzker’s office put out a statement trying to clear things up, that didn’t stop some “Republican elected officials, a network of propaganda publications in the state and some radio shock jocks from telling people that the picture was of my daughter despite knowing that this was a lie.”
Gov. J.B. Pritzker pauses during his coronavirus briefing on Tuesday while discussing hateful and threatening messages sent to his daughter. BlueRoomStream

That prompted people to send “hateful, threatening messages” to Pritzker’s daughter, and lawyer Thomas DeVore – who has filed lawsuits seeking to overturn Pritzker’s COVID-19 restrictions — to offer what Pritzker called a “bounty” for photos of the governor out celebrating Thanksgiving.

It was all too much, Pritzker said.

“Put yourself in the shoes of a high school girl who’s being weaponized against her father by his political opponents — weaponized with lies,” he said.

“I’m an adult, and I can handle people throwing my face up on anti-Semitic picket signs likening me to Hitler,” said Pritzker, who is Jewish. “This kind of vitriol is apparently what I have to deal with to keep the state, and its people, safe, but my kids?

“My kids are off limits. ... I’m going to fight like hell to protect her privacy.”
Gov. J.B. Pritzker walks from the podium after announcing that he is enforcing stricter mitigations in Illinois to curb the spread of COVID-19 at the James R. Thompson Center on Tuesday. Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

What exactly has Pritzker done to deserve this treatment. Enough.

No comments: