JK Rowling slams ‘mob’ after trans critic Kellie-Jay Eager Minshull is doused with tomato juice
Issues received juicy.
Embattled writer JK Rowling slammed trans rights activists in New Zealand Saturday after a number of doused anti-trans campaigner Kellie-Jay Eager Minshull in tomato juice, according to local outlet RNZ.
Kellie-Jay Eager Minshull — also referred to as Posie Parker — was in Australia as part of her controversial “Let girls converse” tour when a protester rushed forward and doused the activist with crimson liquid.
Parker, 48, was then rushed by safety forces to a ready police automotive and fled the scene.
The “Harry Potter” writer condemned the assaults as “repellent” in a sequence of tweets.
“There are a number of movies of Kellie-Jay being assaulted. Girls have change into used to lies, threats of violence and outright denial of actuality, however in the event you think about anybody feels ‘defeated’, suppose once more,” tweeted the writer. “Your males’s rights activists confirmed the world precisely who they’re.”
Parker later tweeted that she was sorry for not with the ability to converse.

“The bravery of the New Zealand men and women who got here to talk the reality shall not be forgotten,” tweeted Parker. “I used to be honored to be amongst you. I’m so sorry.”
Rowling, 57, later retweeted an image from the London-based group “The Lesbian Mission” that pro-trans activists have been “chanting” and “shouting” as a result of “lesbians are assembly with out males current.”
“After the repellent scenes from New Zealand, through which a mob assaulted girls talking up for his or her rights, #TheLesbianProject is being intimidated and threatened within the UK, proper now,” slammed the writer.


Parker responded to the protest in a video that was posted on Youtube after she was spirited away from the commotion.
“I believed they have been going to crush us to demise,” stated the controversial determine in the video. “I genuinely have by no means felt so unsafe in my life.”
Parker’s cease in Wellington was canceled after Parker’s group Communicate Up For Girls cited “credible threats to life” as the explanation.