The latest trendy cause for attention-seeking female influencers? Dramatically "leaving" the political right while claiming they've seen the light about conservative values. But BlazeTV host John Doyle is calling out what's really driving this phenomenon - and it has nothing to do with genuine political conviction.
A recent New York Magazine puff piece titled "The Young Women Leaving the New Right" spotlights several women - many hiding behind anonymity - who now claim to "regret" their involvement in right-wing politics. But Doyle isn't buying the manufactured drama.
"We love women, but instead, we have to talk really about this kind of phenomenon of women existing, e-celeb women existing, you know, ditching the right," Doyle explained, cutting through the mainstream media narrative to expose what's actually happening.
The real story? These aren't principled women having genuine philosophical awakenings. They're influencers who built their brands off conservative content, then discovered they couldn't handle the reality that politics isn't a feel-good social media echo chamber.
The Truth About Online 'Mean Girls'
What's driving these dramatic exits isn't policy disagreements or moral revelations - it's something far more petty. These women are abandoning conservative principles because, as Doyle puts it, people are "being mean on the internet."
Think about that for a moment, Patriots. While President Trump and his administration are fighting to secure our borders, restore American energy dominance, and drain the swamp, some female "influencers" are having meltdowns because anonymous Twitter users hurt their feelings.
This reveals everything you need to know about the shallow, social media-driven nature of modern political discourse. Real conservative women - the mothers defending their children from woke school boards, the business owners fighting government overreach, the patriots supporting Trump's America First agenda - don't abandon their principles because strangers online said mean things.
The conservative movement is stronger without fair-weather influencers who treat politics like a popularity contest. While they chase likes and sympathy clicks, real Americans are busy making America great again.
