“LOOK at this guy, by the way you know his penis would be this big, you can just tell.”

Just when you thought the introduction to Gavin McInnes’ smackdown of Waleed Aly was salacious enough, the tirade just gets worse.

The “godfather of hipsterdom” and co-founder of Vice Media has launched an attack against The Project host claiming he “can’t handle the truth” while criticising him for “blowing up” and “dramatising” his recent tirade against US presidential hopeful Donald Trump.

McInnes left Vice in 2007 and has consistently supported Trump despite a host of criticism.

In the outrageous vlog for conservative news site Rebel Media, Mr McInnes described Aly as an “East Indian virgin” and a “retard” and claimed the Logie winner had a “micro penis”. He also described Australia as “hot Canada”.

McInnes refuted Aly’s claims Trump had sexually assaulted women in a YouTube video segment posted overnight, two days after Aly condemned the Republican nominee for “double standards”.

In a recent turn of events, McInnes switched his attention to Aly’s wife, Susan Carland, claiming “whenever I see a white women (sic) in a hijab I just think, ‘Her poor father.’”

Come on, Australia. You're one of the last vestiges of Western Chauvinism. #ProudBoys https://t.co/5S6gXiir6S — Gavin McInnes (@Gavin_McInnes) October 12, 2016

Whenever I see a white women in a hijab I just think, "Her poor father." https://t.co/u1Xqglacnv — Gavin McInnes (@Gavin_McInnes) October 12, 2016

“You don’t act in public the way you riff with your buddies,” said McInnes, who has been previously hailed as one of the “primary architects of hipsterdom”.

“This is how guys talk, ladies.”

“I lost a friend on Friday, my friend’s wife was all pissed at me. She goes ‘you have a daughter’, screamed at me.

“That Trump is going around making out and grabbing vaginas and wants to institute it as law is somehow part of his deep down inner psyche and that’s going to affect our daughters ... it’s sick, it’s perverted, it’s just wrong that they bring your children into this.”

Aly said he had no comment about the video when contacted by news.com.au.

Mr McInnes claimed “what really is going on” was a “war on masculinity” and that women were “incredibly attracted to success and power”.

“I’m not rich and famous and successful but I’ve hung out with rich, successful and famous people and I see women lining up,” he said, referencing Johnny Knoxville and Terry Richardson, the latter whom is notorious for years-long, rampant reports of allegedly sexually exploiting and abusing his models.

“No, I was there, they were hurling themselves at him,” Mr McInnes defended.

“Women hurl themselves at rich and successful men and what kind of pussy is going to sit there and go ‘no thank you, you clearly haven’t thought this blow job through yet’.

“No, they oblige”.

This isn’t the first time McInnes had claimed a war on masculinity.

In October 2013 during a Huffington Postlive discussion, he claimed “people would be happier if women would stop pretending to be men.”

Feminism, he said, “has made women less happy.”

“Women are feigning that toughness. We’ve trivialised childbirth and being domestic so much that women are forced to pretend to be men. They’re feigning this toughness, they’re miserable,” he said.

In a double whammy to Aly, he has also argued Trump’s proposal to “ban Muslims from returning to America is brash and bold, but it’s also what we need in this day and age.

“The reality is that most “homegrown terrorists” were radicalised abroad. (Google it.),” McInnes wrote.

“Preventing people like that from re-entering the country just makes sense.”

During Aly’s editorial, co-written with The Project’s managing editor Tom Whitty, the presenter zeroed in on Trump’s now infamous p***y remarks — a 2005 recording — which shows Mr Trump verbally demeaning women; notably, Access Hollywood host Arianne Zucker and Entertainment Tonight host Nancy O’Dell.

“Behind closed doors there is everything that makes our stomachs turn. The predatory nature. The privilege. The sexism. The double standard. The sinister motivation. Behind closed doors, this is what Donald Trump sounds like,” Aly said.

In the video, released by The Washington Post over the weekend, Trump discusses candidly his desires for women and brags that when you’re a “star” you can “do anything”.

“I better use some Tic Tacs just in case I start kissing her,” Trump says, the microphone rolling. “You know I’m automatically attracted to beautiful — I just start kissing them. It’s like a magnet. Just kiss. I don’t even wait.

And when you’re a star they let you do it. You can do anything.

“Grab them by the p****. You can do anything.”

In an unapologetic smackdown, Waleed said the latest comments to come to light were “the moment that everything we’ve suspected about Donald Trump was confirmed” and accused him of “sinister motivations” and “double standards”.

Aly said the world has allowed Trump’s offensive comments for too long — including his remarks that Mexicans are rapists, calling for a ban on the immigration of Muslims and advocated torture, and the murder of women and children in the hunt for terrorists.

“But this time, people aren’t moving on,” Aly said.

“Sexism is no laughing matter. Racism is no laughing matter. Inciting violence is no laughing matter. Sexual assault is no laughing matter. And for those reasons and sadly more, Donald Trump … is no laughing matter.”

-youngma@news.com.au