‘F*** yall’: Texas elementary teacher spews vitriol to Trump voters, Christians

A Texas elementary teacher had a full-scale meltdown on social media, complete with profanity and hateful rhetoric toward Christians and conservatives who may have helped elect Donald Trump as…

A Texas elementary teacher had a full-scale meltdown on social media, complete with profanity and hateful rhetoric toward Christians and conservatives who may have helped elect Donald Trump as president last week.

Ashlee Walker, a teacher at El Dorado Elementary in the North East Independent School District (NEISD) in San Antonio, made the vitriolic posts before and after the election, reported Libs of TikTok.  

“I’m so disgusted with the amount of people in this country who proved their hateful and racist ideals by voting for that putrid filth,” she wrote. “I’m not joking: if you’re a MAGA cultist just unfriend me. …You voted against me as a woman, you voted against me as a teacher.” 

Walker’s rhetoric then takes an even more hateful tone. 

“F*** yall,” she wrote. “I don’t care if you’re ‘family’ or whatever. I hope your magical Savior Dump and Project 2025 makes [sic] all of your hopes and dreams of a new Nazi America come true.” 

She also commented on a graphic saying Trump supporters are “what’s wrong with America,” adding, “especially if you claim to be a ‘Christian.’” 

Last, she referenced a post claiming Trump was a “rapist,” “criminal,” “racist,” “wannabe dictator,” and “fringe, hate-filled bully.”  

“F*** every single one of you who voted for this,” Walker wrote. “Remove yourself from my life if you did.” 

Libs of TikTok questioned whether such an unhinged person was fit to be teaching young students, but said the school district would likely do nothing.  

An NEISD spokesperson said the district was aware of Walker’s posts, which “do not reflect the views of the North East Independent School District.”  

However, the spokesperson added Walker’s comments “are her own personal views and were made on her personal social media account,” implying there was no personal conduct policy against such vitriol.