It’s been a bad week for hate-Trump nurses.
Last night, Virginia Commonwealth University’s (VCU) Health division fired a nurse for encouraging medical professionals to inject Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents with a drug that paralyzes breathing.
Today, Florida revoked the license of a nurse who wished that White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt would be severely injured when she gives birth to her next child, due in July.
Like Malinda Cook, formerly of VCU Health, Lexie Lawler wished harm on those with whom she disagrees politically. And not just Leavitt. She also wished supporters of President Donald Trump would die.
Results: Baptist Health Boca Raton Regional Hospital fired Lawler. Then the Sunshine State’s attorney general, James Uthmeier, announced that she won’t get near patients in Florida again.

Vicious Attack
Yet another of leftist white women who appear slightly or more than slightly deranged, Lawler posted videos to social media in which she wished harm on others.
The video attacking President Trump and Trump supporters was less vicious than the second about Leavitt. But it was vicious nonetheless.
“Remember when the death cults used to just drink the Kool Aid and then die, and leave use the f*** alone?” she asked. “Why can’t we go back to that? I just wanna go back to that. Please?
That was labeled with the hashtag 8647, a leftist meme allegedly calling for the murder of Trump, or, less explosively, his removal from office.

But last week, Lawler’s cerebellar train jumped its tracks.
“As a labor and delivery nurse, it gives me great joy to wish Karoline Leavitt a fourth-degree tear,” she fumed:
I hope that you f***ing rip from bow to stern and never s**t normally again, you c***.
Were Lawler not a labor and delivery nurse, one might have dismissed the rant as meaningless. But Lawler knew what she wished for Leavitt, who announced her pregnancy in December, and wished it anyway.
“Fourth-degree vaginal tears are the most severe,” the Mayo Clinic says:
They go through the anal sphincter and into the mucous membrane that lines the rectum. Fourth-degree tears usually need to be repaired in an operating room rather than in the delivery room. Sometimes they require more complex repair than stitches alone. Healing may take 4 to 6 weeks or more. If you have a fourth-degree tear, you may need to take antibiotic medicine to prevent an infection.
After a fourth-degree vaginal tear is repaired, some problems that can happen include infection, separation of the repaired area, leaking stool — also called fecal incontinence — and leaking urine — also called urinary incontinence.
Some of those problems — notably fecal incontinence — can be permanent. Thus, the cruelty of Lawler’s repellent video about Leavitt.
Fired in Florida Forever
To its credit, Baptist Health Boca Raton Regional Hospital pink-slipped Lawler immediately.
“The comments made in a social media video by a nurse at one of our facilities do not reflect our values or the standards we expect of healthcare professionals,” the hospital said:
Following a prompt review, the individual is no longer employed by our health system.
“There is no place in healthcare for language or behavior that calls into question a caregiver’s ability to provide compassionate, unbiased care,” the hospital continued, a sentiment with which Lawler apparently disagreed.
For now, barring a successful appeal or court challenge, Lawler’s career as a nurse in Florida is over.
Granted, no hospital whose officials are in their right minds would hire Lawler, a clear legal liability. But beyond that, they can’t. She is barred from practicing in Florida.
The state’s Attorney General James Uthmeier said yesterday that “Being fired isn’t good enough. Any healthcare worker who fails to uphold his or her obligation to provide adequate, safe healthcare should not be licensed in Florida. No excuses!”
And today he announced on X that, “Effective today, Lexie Lawler is no longer allowed to practice nursing in Florida”:
Making statements that wish pain and suffering on anyone, when those statements are directly related to one’s practice, is an ethical red line we should not cross. I’m proud of @FLSurgeonGen for taking this decisive action.
The surgeon general is Joseph Ladapo.
Nurse in Virginia
Lawler’s predicament mirrors that of Malinda Cook, an anesthesia nurse recently fired by VCU Health. She urged viewers to poison ICE agents.
“All the medical providers, grab some syringes with needles on the end, have them full of saline, or succinylcholine, you know, whatever, whatever,” she said. “That will probably be a deterrent. Be safe.”
That drug causes breathing to stop during surgery so doctors can intubate patients and put them on a respirator. A doctor wrote on X that Cook solicited “attempted murder.”
Cook also urged viewers to pick poison oak and ivy, create a solution with water, then spray it in the faces and on the hands of ICE agents. A third measure called for putting Ex-Lax in an agents drinks.
Cops are investigating Cook’s post, which almost certainly violates both state and federal law.










