The editor-in-chief of women’s magazine Marie Claire bit off more than she could chew Monday when she attacked a conservative blogger for “shaming women,” only to be barraged with examples of much worse shaming on her part.

It all began when Stephen Miller, tweeted out a joke about pop star Madonna.

Madonna with necklace. Madonna without necklace pic.twitter.com/N58ulGJBIg — Stephen Miller (@redsteeze) May 3, 2016

For the uninitiated, that’s a reference to a recent Game of Thrones episode that revealed that a beautiful, character has maintained her youthful beauty by wearing a magical necklace. The second image is what she looks like without the necklace, the first image is obviously Madonna. So the joke in essence is that Madonna should not be that beautiful for a 57-year-old woman.

That tweet prompted a rather out-of-the-blue chewing out of Miller from Marie Claire‘s Lea Goldman.

This is what men do to women with power. Shame them. About their bodies and their ages. I see you. https://t.co/5SFndkSiua — Lea Goldman (@lea) May 3, 2016

But that got turned on its head when Miller and his supporters began digging up examples of Goldman attacking women for their appearance. Just the day before, Goldman mocked the appearance of another female Game of Thrones character.

And then there was the time she attacked actress Sarah Hyland for showing too much cleavage on the red carpet.

But the worst instance when Goldman apparently took a picture of a random obese woman to mock on Twitter.

.@lea Things I’ve never done: Taken pictures of strangers and posted them online to shame them to my Twitter followers. You sick fraud. — Stephen Miller (@redsteeze) May 3, 2016

Feminism is powerful magazine editors shaming random people on the street without any power behind their back. https://t.co/So7edFbK0P — Stephen Miller (@redsteeze) May 3, 2016

.@lea This is what women do to women without power. Shame them. About their bodies and their ages. I see you. — GayPatriot™ (@GayPatriot) May 3, 2016

She took a picture of a stranger to humiliate them but is totally mad about a crack at Madonna. https://t.co/sTidMVPXhf — Jimmy (@JimmyPrinceton) May 3, 2016

@lea @redsteeze tbh seems much crueler to take photos of unsuspecting nobodies so that you shame them on Twitter. https://t.co/Qzu0i0B3bc — T. Becket Adams (@BecketAdams) May 3, 2016

In response to the tweets pointing out her own body-shaming, Goldman saw the error of her ways and apologized and ha ha of course she didn’t, she doubled down and played the victim.

@RobProvince here come the band of trolls, right on cue. — Lea Goldman (@lea) May 3, 2016

You tweeted me first. https://t.co/mezf3DOno5 — Stephen Miller (@redsteeze) May 3, 2016

I shit you not this is where the executive editor of a magazine who tweeted me out of the blue claims misogyny and online bullying. — Stephen Miller (@redsteeze) May 3, 2016

[Image via screengrab]

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