Texas councilman calls Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez a 'bimbo' before apologizing and deleting account
A City Council member from a Dallas suburb took aim at Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on his personal Twitter account before quickly backtracking and apologizing.
Richardson City Councilman Scott Dunn’s tweet, which appears to be in response to a post from the newly-elected congresswoman, was captured in a screenshot and re-shared online this week.
“The embarrassment is to have bimbos like you with nothing between your ears,” the Texas politician wrote.
READ MORE: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/te...

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is not particularly intelligent, as anyone who has listened to her rollout of the Green New Deal knows.
The word bimbo derives itself from the Italian bimbo,[4] a masculine-gender term that means "(male) baby" or "young (male) child" (the feminine form of the Italian word is bimba). Use of this term began in the United States as early as 1919, and was a slang word used to describe an unintelligent[5] or brutish[6] man, like in Portuguese.
It was not until the 1920s that the term bimbo first began to be associated with females. In 1920, Frank Crumit,[7] Billy Jones, and Aileen Stanley all recorded versions of "My Little Bimbo Down on the Bamboo Isle", with words by Grant Clarke and music by Walter Donaldson, in which the term "bimbo" is used to describe an island girl of questionable virtue. The 1929 silent film Desert Nights describes a wealthy female crook as a bimbo and in The Broadway Melody, an angry Bessie Love calls a chorus girl a bimbo. The first use of its female meaning cited in the Oxford English Dictionary is dated 1929, from the scholarly journal American Speech, where the definition was given simply as "a woman".
In the 1940s, bimbo was still being used to refer to both men and women, as in, for example the comic novel Full Moon by P. G. Wodehouse who wrote of "bimbos who went about the place making passes at innocent girls after discarding their wives like old tubes of toothpaste".[8]
The term died out again for much of the 20th century until it became popular again in the 1980s, with political s*x scandals.[9] As bimbo began to be used increasingly for females, exclusively male variations of the word began to surface, like mimbo and himbo, a backformation of bimbo, which refers to an attractive but unintelligent man.[4]
The term is sometimes associated with men or women who dye their hair blond, indicating that physical attractiveness is more important to them than other, non-physical traits[3] and as an extension to "the dumb blonde" stereotype.[3]