Ashley Massaro was a professional wrestler long abuses and used by the WWE and she lasted only three years with Vince McMahon's prison empire of professional wrestling. The WWE is the FOXXCONN of professional wrestling and America as past rosters of the WWE are filled with primarily male wrestlers who died at an early age forced to take steroids and perform at a high risk adventures for the global prosperity of billionaire scumbag Vincent K McMahon.
McMahon and his old bad wife used much profits form the breaking of ribs and bones of pro wrestlers in order to attempt to prop up his wife purchasing a senate seat out North East a couple of times that thankfully was defeated.
Right-wing New Hampshire fashion critic and radio host Alan Sorrentino also gave his words of this female wrestlers death at an early age of 39 and said basically the WWE and Vince McMahon have women professional wrestlers to push cheap clothing and a tramp-look role model for women to look up and said that Vince's goals of this is flabbergasting and typical of the global class.
Alan Sorrentino was not the only critic of Vince McMahon and other believe the treatment this woman received and was so discarded by Mr McMahon and had her wrestling career cut short eventually lead to her depression and suicide if we are to believe the reports of her true death. Sorrentino says billionaires and millionaires in the executive capitalist world wish to remake the female vision and image into whores and this is why we see such provocative scantly clad clothing and yoga pants available and pushed by this sick business society. The WWE should not even have women ion the ring aside form holding time cards and being cheerleaders or something as the female body is not made to do the rigorous actions of the WWE fake flying style pretend fighting. As a former professional wrestler in an era of no female wrestlers I can attest the rigor of extreme body harm we cause is not suited for the feminine body of weaker bones and minds. This woman was way over her head and couldn't handle later years of the pain and likely opioid addiction she suffered like much of rural America these days.
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