In an age where men like Bill Cosby have used their innate ability to tell what a women truly desire to justify their sexual assaults, Lena Dunham has had enough of songs that seem to legitimize date rape. According to the latest gossip news updates, it was for that reason that the Girls director took to Twitter to let Justin Bieber know that she thought some of the lyrics from his new song, "What Do You Mean", were entirely inappropriate. After the Belieber's decided to strike back through their vicious comments, however, the HBO activist seemed to apologize.
Apparently bristling under the trend of songs like 2013 "Blurred Lines" to seemingly glorifying date rape, Lena Dunham took to Twitter to apparently let Justin Bieber know that his line, "When you nod your head yes, but you wanna say no," was not cool:
"Let's do away with pop songs where a girl nods yes when she means no and vice versa, k?"
After Justin's rabid Beliebers basically piled on Dunham in the tweet's comments -- suggesting rather matter of factly that she had molested her sister as a child -- Lena seemingly tried to defuse the situation with a humors Instagram update that has since been deleted reports People magazine:
"The Girls star took to Instagram on Wednesday to post a side-by-side picture of her and a pre-pubescent Bieber with the caption:
"How could anyone think I have an issue with Bieber?"
Despite her clearly having already lost the Belieber vote, Lena's friend and Girls costar Jenni Konner seems to think that Dunham is Presidential material all the way.
In a caption accompanying a photo uploaded to Instagram of Lena leaning against Hilary Clinton's campaign poster, Konner suggested that perhaps the HBO director would make the perfect Vice Presidential candidate to invigorate the former Secretary of State's lagging pole numbers:
What do you think about Justin Bieber's fans using such ugly comments to try to humiliate Lena Dunham for having a pro-feminist voice?
Is it what we should just come to expect from the tweens that propel Bieber's superstardom?
Or, should the media finally take the vitriolic trolls on the internet to task for the disgusting things they say in defense of their ridiculous demigods?
Let us know what you think in the comment field below.
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