French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo sets its sights on Trump, Obama
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The French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, famous for its provocative cartoons, has a new target: Donald Trump.
The latest cover of the publication shows a black-suited, grinning Trump holding a woman between her legs and dangling her upside down. “Should we give him the nuclear button?” the caption asks.
Trump won no favors with Charlie Hebdo, which specializes in targeting world political and religious leaders, after he suggested in a series of tweets that France’s strict gun laws enabled the 2015 attack on its offices by two Islamic extremists who killed 12 people. The attack was retaliation for publishing caricatures of the prophet Muhammad.
In August, Robert McLiam Wilson, an Irish writer who contributes to Charlie Hebdo, wrote an article entitled “Thank God for Donald Trump” in which he lambasted the then-candidate. “Imagine how much worse everything would be if he was smart,” he wrote.
He also offered a prediction, writing that the “witless, orange-headed know-nothing is going to lose.”
The Trump cartoon is the second cover in as many weeks focused on U.S. politics. The last one, highlighting the debate over the shootings of black men by law enforcement, showed President Obama fleeing a hail of bullets from police. The caption: “Obama: An ordinary citizen once more.”
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