Ashley Judd isn’t going to take any more shit from twitter trolls, using resilience that she has learned as a survivor of horrific abuse.
TRIGGER WARNING: This post deals with issues of online bullying, sexual and familial abuse that some readers may finds upsetting.
Ashley Judd dared to attend a basketball game last week. Then she dared to comment on it via Twitter.
Judd thought some members of the University of Arkansas team were ‘playing dirty’ against the University of Kentucky in a basketball game last week. She, like many other sports fans, voiced her opinion via Twitter.
READ MORE:“Bullying that could reach you in your own home? I wasn’t prepared for this.”
The online abuse she received came thick and fast. But they were not merely defensive comments from ticked off Arkansas fans. They were violent, and cruel and abusive.
Top Comments
It is about time that the law caught up with social media. The comments directed at Ashley Judd and the women on the clips above are disgusting and criminal. There are some really, really sick human beings out there and they need to be held accountable for their comments. It is bizarre. If a male made a comment that upset me, it would not occur to me to say I would attack their genitalia or commit humiliating, degrading sexual acts upon them in response. No, that is not just a female thing- it would never occur to my husband to respond to a female in that manner either. Where does it come from? What kind of person thinks that way? Very disturbing.
what rejects they are sending women or anyone stuff like that, they think they cant be traced then they are very wrong and I think more should be in front of the courts.