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Secret Service to investigate Madonna’s 'I want to blow up the White House' comment

By Clement Edward Kumsah
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Pop Singer Madonna
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The Secret Service has allegedly said they will open an investigation into Madonna after her DC speech.The pop icon said she'd thought a lot about 'blowing up the White House'

More than 500,000 people participated in the Women's March on Washington in DC on Saturday. The march route was completely filled with people, making it physically impossible to actually march. There are also 600 sister marches planned throughout the country and even across the world. Pink p***yhats - knitted beanies with cat ears - became the accessory of the march in reference to Trump's quote 'grab her by the p***y'. America Ferrera, Scarlett Johnasson, Michael Moore and Alicia Keys spoke at the DC event. Their speeches were a call of action to the crowd, asking them to run for office, fight for reproductive rights.

However, Ashley Judd and Madonna raised eyebrows with their controversial contributions.Judd read a poem saying Trump has 'wet dreams infused with his own genes'.

Madonna said she had contemplated blowing up the White House.

The Secret Service has reportedly said they will open an investigation into Madonna after the singer told the Women's March on Washington that she had thought about 'blowing up the White House'.

Donning a black p***yhat, the music icon caused controversy by dropping the F-bomb four times, sparking a slew of apologies from broadcasters airing the protest live.

She went on to speak of her rage at the election result, telling the crowd she had thought a lot about 'blowing up the White House' but knew that it 'wouldn't change anything'.

According to the Gateway Pundit, a spokesman for the Secret Service said they were 'aware' of Madonna's comments and will open an investigation, but the ultimate decision whether or not to prosecute is the decision of the U.S. Attorney's Office.

The Daily Mail Online has reached out to the Secret Service for a comment.

Madonna stated: 'I'm angry. Yes, I am outraged. Yes, I have thought an awful lot about blowing up the White House. But I know that this won't change anything.'We cannot fall into despair. As the poet W. H. Auden once wrote on the eve of World War Two, "We must love one another or die." I choose love. Are you with me?'

'We cannot fall into despair. As the poet W. H. Auden once wrote on the eve of World War Two, "We must love one another or die." I choose love. Are you with me?'

Her speech was met with raucous applause from the crowd of over half a million people in attendance at the National Mall for the march.

Tempers ran high as more than half a million marchers took to Washington D.C. on Saturday to oppose Donald Trump's new presidency - with both Madonna and Ashley Judd spewing lewd rants against the new President.
The Hollywood actress and the pop star departed from the general spirit of inclusivity and calls for mutual respect with personal attacks not only on Trump but also his family, including daughter Ivanka.
They say well-behaved women rarely make history, and Judd clearly took that quote to heart as she recited a poem written by a 19-year-old from Tennessee.
'I feel Hitler in these streets, a mustache traded for a toupee,' she said.
'I am a nasty woman,' she continued - referencing Donald's famous attack on Hillary Clinton - 'I'm not as nasty as a man who looks like he bathes in Cheeto dust.'
'I'm not as nasty as your own daughter being your favorite sex symbol, your wet dreams infused with your own genes'.

'I’m not as nasty as confederate flags being tattooed across my cities, maybe the south is actually going to rise, maybe for some it never really fell.'
Judd continued to proudly repeat the phrase 'I'm a nasty women' as the crowd of thousands continued to cheer.
'And our p***ies ain’t for grabbing, they’re for reminding you that our walls are stronger than America’s ever will be,' she concluded.
'Our p*****s are for our pleasure, for birthing new generations of filthy, vulgar, nasty, proud, Christian, Buddhist, Muslim, Sikh, generations of nasty women.'
However, not to be outdone pop star Madonna later took to the stage and upped the ante on controversy.
Dropping the F-bomb four times, causing a slew of apologies from broadcasters airing the protest live, she went on to speak of her rage at the election result, even telling the crowd she had thought a lot about 'blowing up the White House' but knew that it 'wouldn't change anything'.
The surprise guest, whose name was on the list of speakers for the event, asked the crowd: 'Are you ready to shake up the world? Welcome to the revolution of love.'
'To the rebellion, to our refusal as women to accept this new age of tyranny,' she continued. 'Where not just women are endangered but all marginalized people.'
‘Where being uniquely different right now might truly be considered a crime. 'It took this this moment of darkness to wake us the f***k up,' she exclaimed.
'It seemed as though we had all slipped into a fall sense of comfort, that justice would prevail and that good would win in the end. Well good did not win this election, but good will win in the end.'

 Credit: Dailymail