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Clay Edwards unloads on one of the most absurd stories of the week: Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders getting asked to leave a Little Rock restaurant called Croissantiere after she and her friends had already eaten, paid, and tipped—simply because her presence made the staff "uncomfortable" due to her political views.
Clay paints the full picture: In a deep-red state she won by a landslide, the governor can't even enjoy a casual lunch without the staff deciding her conservative politics are a threat to their "safe space." The restaurant's lengthy statement basically admitted they booted her post-meal because employees felt "threatened and uncomfortable." A patron even flipped her off and yelled "it's time to go." Clay's reaction? Pure incredulity mixed with savage humor.
He calls out the glaring double standard: These are the same people who scream that your daughters must share bathrooms and locker rooms with biological men claiming to be women—or you're a bigot. Trans women in girls' spaces? Totally fine, feel uncomfortable and you're transphobic. But a 50-year-old woman (who's lost 100 pounds, shout-out Ozempic) sitting at a table eating croissants? That's a bridge too far—evict her immediately.
Clay zooms in on the staff photo and the proud social media posts: one employee declaring "I'm proud AF to be gay" and "no amount of evil you send our way can take our smiles away"—while literally admitting her presence ruined their vibe. Clay's takedown is merciless: If a Republican governor's mere existence wipes the smile off your face, how are you gonna handle real confrontation? And if you're that fragile, maybe the civil war against MAGA isn't the flex you think it is.
He ties it to broader cultural rot: the audacity of demanding tolerance while refusing to tolerate anyone who disagrees. Clay jokes these rainbow-supremacy types want "safe spaces" from elected officials but expect everyone else to suck it up around their ideologies. He even speculates on the irony—if it had been the Clintons, would they have gotten the boot? Doubtful.
Expect Clay's signature no-holds-barred commentary, laugh-out-loud mockery of the hypocrisy, and a reminder that this is peak modern leftism: fragile, performative, and hilariously inconsistent. A segment that's equal parts infuriating and entertaining—perfect for anyone tired of the tolerance-that-only-goes-one-way crowd.
Grab your coffee (or croissant), settle in, and enjoy Clay roasting the restaurant crowd that just proved conservatives aren't the only ones who can be asked to leave.
By Clay Edwards4.5
106106 ratings
Clay Edwards unloads on one of the most absurd stories of the week: Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders getting asked to leave a Little Rock restaurant called Croissantiere after she and her friends had already eaten, paid, and tipped—simply because her presence made the staff "uncomfortable" due to her political views.
Clay paints the full picture: In a deep-red state she won by a landslide, the governor can't even enjoy a casual lunch without the staff deciding her conservative politics are a threat to their "safe space." The restaurant's lengthy statement basically admitted they booted her post-meal because employees felt "threatened and uncomfortable." A patron even flipped her off and yelled "it's time to go." Clay's reaction? Pure incredulity mixed with savage humor.
He calls out the glaring double standard: These are the same people who scream that your daughters must share bathrooms and locker rooms with biological men claiming to be women—or you're a bigot. Trans women in girls' spaces? Totally fine, feel uncomfortable and you're transphobic. But a 50-year-old woman (who's lost 100 pounds, shout-out Ozempic) sitting at a table eating croissants? That's a bridge too far—evict her immediately.
Clay zooms in on the staff photo and the proud social media posts: one employee declaring "I'm proud AF to be gay" and "no amount of evil you send our way can take our smiles away"—while literally admitting her presence ruined their vibe. Clay's takedown is merciless: If a Republican governor's mere existence wipes the smile off your face, how are you gonna handle real confrontation? And if you're that fragile, maybe the civil war against MAGA isn't the flex you think it is.
He ties it to broader cultural rot: the audacity of demanding tolerance while refusing to tolerate anyone who disagrees. Clay jokes these rainbow-supremacy types want "safe spaces" from elected officials but expect everyone else to suck it up around their ideologies. He even speculates on the irony—if it had been the Clintons, would they have gotten the boot? Doubtful.
Expect Clay's signature no-holds-barred commentary, laugh-out-loud mockery of the hypocrisy, and a reminder that this is peak modern leftism: fragile, performative, and hilariously inconsistent. A segment that's equal parts infuriating and entertaining—perfect for anyone tired of the tolerance-that-only-goes-one-way crowd.
Grab your coffee (or croissant), settle in, and enjoy Clay roasting the restaurant crowd that just proved conservatives aren't the only ones who can be asked to leave.

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