President-Elect Donald Trump has not taken kindly to the thousands of protesters flooding America’s streets, and Fifth Avenue in particular, where daily demonstrations have snarled traffic throughout Midtown Manhattan and made living in Trump Tower a living hell. “Just had a very open and successful presidential election. Now professional protesters, incited by the media, are protesting,” he fumed. The continued griping of the majority of Americans who did not vote for Trump has not gone over well with Trump’s campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, either, who dismissed protesters’ grievances as the whining of entitled children.

“We’re treating these adolescents and these millennials like precious snowflakes,” Conway said Wednesday night on Hannity, while discussing the trend of college professors canceling exams for upset students and giving them college credit for protesting. “I'm just amazed by all the texts and e-mails I’m receiving,” she said. “What’s the worst that can happen to these millennials? That Donald Trump will make good on his promise to create 25 million new jobs?”

Of course, anti-Trump protesters likely have other concerns in mind. For non-white millennials, the “worst that can happen” begins with the recent rise of hate crimes against minorities in the wake of Trump’s election, and escalates from there to the possibility of mass deportation of undocumented immigrants, a ban on all Muslims entering the country, the return of a federal Muslim registry, and nationwide stop-and-frisk.

Conway did not mention those concerns. Whenever she lost a race, she said, her first response would be to light a cigar and drink some cognac—“certainly not to degrade the office of the presidency or cry crocodile tears into that cognac about who won the election,” she said. “We were raised to respect the office of the presidency and current occupant and the flag.” Conway, whose candidate spent years trying to delegitimize President Barack Obama by suggesting he was not born in the United States, added that she is sick of hearing protesters “whine and cry” about the results. “All of their grievances and complaints are so pre-election.”