The Guy Who Punched a Turning Point Reporter Is Now Sad That America Isn’t Nice to Him Anymore

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The Guy Who Punched a Turning Point Reporter Is Now Sad That America Isn’t Nice to Him Anymore

Chris Ostroushko — the man who physically assaulted Turning Point USA reporter Savanah Hernandez outside an ICE detention facility in Minneapolis on April 11th — is now publicly “second-guessing” whether he even wants to live in the United States anymore. The guy who attacked a woman holding a microphone because he didn’t like her questions now feels unsafe.

Oh no! Anyway.

Ostroushko showed up to a protest called the “National F*** ICE Day of Action” (real name, by the way — these people are so classy), told his daughter Deyanna to “stay back and watch,” and then went after Hernandez. On camera. In broad daylight. At a protest he voluntarily attended. While his kid watched.

Father of the year material right there.

Two days later — TWO DAYS — Ostroushko was sitting on Jen Psaki’s MSNBC show getting the full sympathetic victim treatment. Because that’s how this works in liberal America. You assault a conservative woman on camera, and within 48 hours MSNBC rolls out the red carpet so you can explain how you’re actually the one suffering.

Psaki nodded along like she was interviewing a war hero. Ostroushko told her, with a straight face, that his family is “absolutely not violent.” Brother, there’s video. We all watched it. You told your daughter to stay back so you could go hit a reporter. That’s not “absolutely not violent” — that’s premeditation with a witness you brought yourself.

Now the consequences have arrived and — shocker — Chris doesn’t like them. Both he and his daughter lost their jobs. He says the backlash has been “overwhelming” and “nonstop.” A GoFundMe appeared begging for $8,000 because apparently assaulting journalists doesn’t pay the bills like it used to.

And here’s the cherry on top: Ostroushko is now “second-guessing” whether he wants to live in America.

Well, Chris, allow us to write your goodbye letter for you.

*Dear America,*

*I showed up to a protest, hit a woman half my size on camera, bragged about it on MSNBC, and now people are being mean to me online. This country has become intolerant of my intolerance, and I simply cannot live under these conditions. Please forward my mail to whatever country doesn’t have extradition treaties or cell phone cameras.*

*Warmly, Chris*

*P.S. — If anyone finds my job, please don’t send it back. I don’t think my employer wants to see me again.*

Here’s what’s actually going on. Ostroushko is the perfect specimen of the modern progressive male. He assaults people he disagrees with, plays the victim when there are consequences, runs to friendly media for a hug, and then threatens to leave the country when nobody feels sorry for him. We’ve seen this script a hundred times. Remember all the celebrities who swore they’d move to Canada if Trump won? They’re all still here. Chris isn’t going anywhere either.

But the “second-guessing living in America” routine is revealing. These people genuinely believed they could assault conservative reporters with zero repercussions. They thought the old rules still applied — where you could punch a MAGA hat off someone’s head and get celebrated for it on Twitter. Those days are over. Actions have consequences now, and progressives are absolutely losing their minds over it.

Meanwhile, Savanah Hernandez — the woman who actually got assaulted — is still working. Still reporting. Still showing up to events where unhinged protesters might take a swing at her. That’s courage. What Ostroushko is doing? That’s cowardice dressed up as political commentary.

Someone named Brian Shapiro also apparently slid into Hernandez’s DMs with threats after the incident, because one unhinged attacker per news cycle just wasn’t enough. The tolerant Left strikes again.

So to Chris Ostroushko — bon voyage, buddy. If you do find a country that’s more tolerant of men who hit female reporters on camera, do let us know. We’d love to add it to the list of places we’ll never visit.

But something tells us you’ll still be right here in Minneapolis next month, attending the next protest, complaining about the next thing, and hoping everyone forgot about that little assault charge. America isn’t perfect, Chris. But at least here, we have the video.


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