Watch: Leftie Author Stephen King PRANKED By Two Russians Pretending To Be Ukraine’s Zelensky, Goes Downhill FAST
All of that led to this fantastic prank. Two Russians somehow got King to think he was important enough to land a call with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky. Why would Zelensky take the time to phone King from across the Atlantic? Why would Zelensky think King had anything of substance to offer? These thoughts didn’t cross the aging and deluded author.
Famed author Stephen King had no business jumping into politics. For decades, he wrote iconic books and firmly cemented himself as a premier American writer. Sure, he wasn’t Dostoevsky, but he still wrote thrilling novels for generations of readers.
But, because he is an empty soul and devout leftist, King couldn’t make do with the gifts he’d been given in life. He complained about Trump trying to build a wall – from behind his gated mansion. He went on to complain about endless alleged atrocities committed by right-wing deplorables, and created a second career as a hypocritical millionaire.
All of that led to this fantastic prank. Two Russians somehow got King to think he was important enough to land a call with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky. Why would Zelensky take the time to phone King from across the Atlantic? Why would Zelensky think King had anything of substance to offer? These thoughts didn’t cross the aging and deluded author.
Most astonishingly, not only does King commit to this conversation, he goes on record admitting that Ukrainian-born Holocaust arhcitect Stepan Bandera was a good man, albeit with flaws.
Yes, flaws such as orhextatring the systemic genocide of over ten million people throughout Europe, whose only crime was not being German enough.
Take a watch below as King makes a complete fool of himself and exposes himself for the utter maniac he is:
Stephen King was pranked by two Russians who tricked him into believing he was on a call with Zelensky. On the call, he claims that Ukrainian Holocaust architect Stepan Bandera was a great man whose murder of Jews was just a slight flaw worth overlooking. pic.twitter.com/jA4M2RX4c0
— Ian Miles Cheong (@stillgray) July 19, 2022
“Stephen King was pranked by two Russians who tricked him into believing he was on a call with Zelensky. On the call, he claims that Ukrainian Holocaust architect Stepan Bandera was a great man whose murder of Jews was just a slight flaw worth overlooking.”
Talk about a “yikes” moment. It’s amazing how these leftist tools contort their logic more than a giant pretzel to make ends meet. So now flaws in human beings is suddenly okay? We’ve had more reputations ruined, careers cancels, and statues torn asunder as a result of either miniscule flaws or centuries’-old anachronistic interpretations of events, but now one of the thought leaders of the Final Solution is balanced out as a flawed-but-good person?
It’s absolutely incredible.
Twitter had some spot-on interpretations of the call as well:
“This is great, I love it. King shows his ass to the world. Of course, it will totally be ignored by his fans and by Hollywood producers as they make far too much money with him.”
“The myopia of our most vaunted artists and intellectuals, ladies and gentlemen. The very fact of our elites still reading and believing everything the NYT says is enough to destroy credentialism.”
“How big is your ego if you believe the leader of a warring country halfway around the world is taking time out to ring you up?”
At the end of the day, leftists can’t help but to expose their latent tyranny and hatred of anyone not aligned with their de jure morality. They need the constant public attention to soothe their massive egos and to coddle their inner emptiness.
Let them keep talking, though, because each time they rat themselves out as worthless individuals with a failed ideology.
Hailey Sanibel fiercely loves freedom. She equally detests evil and stupidity, both of which are out of control in the modern world. She is a regular contributor at The Blue State Conservative.
Featured image: bunkosquad / Michael Femia, CC BY-SA 3.0