Rosie O’Donnell is leaving the TV show The View even earlier then she had originally planned. Friday was her last show. A show as fate would have it, I actually watched. It seems that her decision to leave the show early is a direct result of her recent verbal kung-fu with co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck. An argument that Hasselbeck seems to have won. Not just because O’Donnell is quiting the show early, but because I’ve read the transcript.
This from the Los Angeles Times:
But in the last several days, the two have tussled over a rhetorical comment O’Donnell made about the number of civilian deaths in Iraq that appeared to equate U.S. military actions with terrorism.
On Monday’s show, O’Donnell complained that conservative critics had twisted what she said by claiming that she called the troops “terrorists.” She asked Hasselbeck if she thought O’Donnell believed the soldiers were terrorists. Rather than answer, Hasselbeck urged her to clarify what she had meant, at which point O’Donnell reiterated her support for the troops.
On Wednesday, O’Donnell initially appeared reluctant to be dragged into the debate again.
“Because here’s how it gets spun in the media: ‘Rosie, big fat lesbian loud Rosie, attacks innocent pure Christian Elisabeth,’ ” she said.
Hasselbeck called that “unfair,” adding: “I just don’t understand why it’s my fault if people spin words that you put out there or phrases that suggest things. And I gave you an opportunity two days ago to clarify the statement that got you in trouble on all those things.”
“That got me in trouble?” O’Donnell repeated sarcastically. “As a friend, you gave me the opportunity. That was very sweet of you. I was asking if you, who actually knows me, do you believe I think our troops are terrorists, Elisabeth?”
Hasselbeck hesitated.
“Do you believe that, yes or no?” O’Donnell pressed.
Hasselbeck raised her finger in the air. “Excuse me. Let me speak.”
“You’re going to doublespeak,” O’Donnell said. “It’s just a yes or a no.”
“I am not a double speaker, and I don’t put suggestions out there that lead people to think things and then not answer my own question, OK?” Hasselbeck shot back. “I don’t believe that you believe troops are terrorists. I have said that before. But when you say something like 650,000 Iraqis are dead, we invaded them … ”
“It’s true!” O’Donnell responded.
“Let me finish!” Hasselbeck said.
“You don’t like facts!” O’Donnell retorted.
Hasselbeck’s tone grew angrier: “I am all about facts. You know that. You tell me not to use facts because you want me to go only on emotion. Guess what? I like facts.”
As the tone grew more heated, Behar and guest co-host Sherri Shepherd fidgeted uncomfortably and finally pretended to get up from the table to break the tension.
But the two kept at it, and the producers switched to a split screen to showcase their back-and-forth.
O’Donnell said she was hurt that Hasselbeck didn’t defend her.
“I am certainly not going to be the person for you to explain your thoughts,” Hasselbeck retorted, pointing her finger at her co-host. “They’re your thoughts. Defend your own insinuations! Defend your own thoughts!”
“Frankly, every time I defend them, it’s poor little Elisabeth that I’m picking on,” O’Donnell responded. “That’s why I’m not going to fight with you anymore, because it’s absurd. So for three weeks, you can say all the Republican crap that you want. I’m not going to do it.”
“It’s much easier to fight someone like Donald Trump, isn’t it?” Hasselbeck spat, alluding to O’Donnell’s much-publicized feud with the real estate magnet. “Because he’s obnoxious.”
The audience oohed in surprise and O’Donnell looked shocked.
“I think it’s sad because I don’t understand how there can be such hurt feelings when all I did was say, ‘Look, why don’t you tell everybody what you said?’ ” Hasselbeck continued. “I did that as a friend.”
“Every day since September I have told you that I support the troops,” O’Donnell shot back. “I asked you if you believed what the Republican pundits were saying. You said nothing, and that’s cowardly.”
“No, no, no!” Hasselbeck said furiously. “You will not call me a coward, because No. 1, I sit here every single day, open my heart and tell people exactly what I believe.”
“So do I!” O’Donnell said.
“Do not call me a coward, Rosie.”
“It was cowardly.”
“It was not cowardly, it was honest.”
Behar broke in: “Is there no commercial in this show?”
Hasselbeck continued: “I’ll tell you what’s cowardly. Asking a rhetorical question that you never answer yourself. That is cowardly.”
Behar had had enough. “Who is directing this show?” she said. “Let’s go to commercial!”
Even though my personal politics are much more aligned with O’Donnell then Hasselbeck, I cannot stand her. I think Rosie O’Donnell’s loud, obnoxious, rude, uninformed, and a bully. Granted, she does a lot for various charities, but I would argue that the only reason people know this is because Rosie O’Donnell is constantly bragging about it.
Modest she ain’t.
Take any issue that Rosie is for and I believe she actually does more harm then good. The last thing you want Rosie doing is screaming and yelling about a cause you believe in. I literally cringe when I hear her speak up against the Iraq war.

Yeah, you totally hit the nail on the head. When I hear Rosie O’Donnell spew her “facts,” it makes me want to pretend that I enjoy war and carnage.
It’s funny- i didn’t like Donald Trump until his argument with Rosie.
Have you checked out her blog, by the way? She writes poetry on it. And uses “u” instead of “you.” I shit you not. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that she’s mentally 12 years old, but jesus, does she have to write like a 12 year old too?
In my version of Utopia, Paris Hilton and Rosie O’Donnell somehow give each other cancer-AIDS and both die.