Ted Cruz's freshman year roommate, Hollywood screenwriter Craig Mazin, made the GOP hopeful's day even more cringe-worthy with one ballsy tweet.

'Ted Cruz thinks people don't have a right to "stimulate their genitals." I was his college roommate. This would be a new belief of his,' Mazin wrote.

The inspiration for the too-much-information Twitter revelation came from a Mother Jones story, which was published today, headlined 'The Time Ted Cruz Defended a Ban on Dildos.'

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Craig Mazin wrote this tawdry tweet today about his ex-roommate Ted Cruz upon hearing about a decade-old legal case in which the former Texas solicitor general tried to uphold a law criminalizing the sale of dildos

Hollywood writer Craig Mazin (left) has become somewhat of a thorn in the side of Sen. Ted Cruz (right) as the two lived together during their freshman year at Princeton

Sen. Ted Cruz's ex-roommate Craig Mazin first responded to a Twitter user pointing out the Mother Jones piece about the sex toy legal case

Beforehand, Mazin had tweeted that Cruz 'did not have a dildo stashed under his pillow. Ted Cruz slept on top of his pillow,' as a Twitter user pointed the story out.

The article was referring to a decade-old case that was reported on by Mother Jones' David Corn.

Corn noted that Cruz never once mentioned the case when he discussed his time being the Texas solicitor general in his tome, 'A Time for Truth.'

Cruz, along with now Gov. Greg Abbott, who was then the state's attorney general, attempted to uphold a Texas law that prohibited the sale of sex toys in the state.

As part of the legal argument, Cruz's office wrote that, 'There is no substantive-due-process right to stimulate one's genitals for non-medical purposes unrelated to procreation or outside of an interpersonal relationship.'

A number of businesses began challenging the law after a Texas mother was arrested by two undercover cops for throwing a party and selling vibrators and other wares through Passion Parties, which is, like Corn explained, 'akin to a Tupperware party for sex toys.'

The plaintiffs argued that the law went against their right to privacy, which is found in the Constitution's 14th Amendment.

A federal judge kept the law on the books and then it was Cruz and company's job to defend it during the appeal.

Cruz's legal team essentially argued that 'Texans were free to use sex toys at home, but they did not have the right to buy them.'

When Sen. Ted Cruz was the solicitor general in Texas he was tasked with upholding the state's ban on the sale of sex toys

Mazin, who has more than 75,000 followers and has written the screenplays for the Hangover and Scary Movie sequels, now fields questions from people curious about Cruz on Twitter

The brief, along with its most quotable line, also argued that the government had an interest in 'discouraging ... autonomous sex' and compared the use of dildos to 'hiring a willing prostitute or engaging in consensual bigamy.'

The court of appeals, in a 2-to-1 decision, sided with the Texas business owners who wanted to legally sell sex toys in the state.

Using the case Lawrence v. Texas as precedent, which had previously struck down the state's sodomy law, the judges pointed to the 'right to be free from government intrusion regarding the "most private human contact, sexual behavior."'

They added that 'an individual who wants to legally use a safe sexual device during private intimate moments alone or with another is unable to legally purchase a device in Texas, which heavily burdens a constitutional right.'

Cruz and Abbott remained undeterred and filed a brief requesting that the full appeals court hear the case, suggesting that the three judge panel had stretched the Lawrence decision too far.

When that didn't happen, the Republican duo decided against taking the case all the way to the Supreme Court.

'Imagine how his political career might have been affected had Cruz become the public face for the anti-dildos movement,' Corn mused.

Mazin, the roommate, has become a thorn in Cruz's side since the Texan launched his political career.

After leaving Princeton and his dorm room with Sen. Ted Cruz, Craig Mazin went on to become a writer in Hollywood, penning, for instance, the two 'Hangover' series sequels

Craig Mazin has sent out funny tweets about living with Sen. Ted Cruz and more serious ones too - warning voters that he has 'no moral center' and 'no values'

The Hollywood writer, who has penned sequels to 'Scary Movie' and 'The Hangover,' has used Twitter to reminisce about his time living with Cruz.

For instance, he wrote that 'as a freshman, I would get into senior parties because I was Ted's roommate. OUT OF PITY. He was that widely loathed. It's his superpower,' Mazin wrote on Twitter in January.

'Second memory: Ted would talk about the women he thought he had a shot with,' Mazin continued. 'Pretty sure he remained untouched by a woman those four years.'

'Ted Would leave a greasy film on everything,' Mazin added. 'My friend Erik dubbed the substance "Cruhz," rhymes with "scuzz." Now there's Cruhz on my TV.'

At another instance on Twitter, Mazin was asked what Cruz liked to do on a Friday night.

For this, he had no answer.

'I have no idea because the first thing I did after my last class of the week was GET THE F*** AWAY FROM TED CRUZ,' Mazin responded.

Besides simply mocking his least favorite roomie, Mazin has sent out more serious missives as well.

'Ted Cruz will become the thing you need him to be so that he wins an election,' the screenwriter warned.

'No principles, no moral center, no values,' he said.