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Eric Swalwell Eroticizes Violence Against Women in Disturbing Drunken College Sex Poem Inbox

Text excerpt from a poem by Eric Swalwell, featuring vivid imagery of passionate and intense emotions expressed through biting and kissing.

After I filed a Petition for Writ of Mandate against the California Secretary of State, demanding that Eric Swalwell be removed from the California governor’s race, Swalwell attacked me on Twitter, calling me a “MAGA idiot”.

In my petition, I contended that because the California Constitution requires a candidate for governor to live in the state for 5 years prior to an election, that Swalwell does not qualify.

I cited the fact that Swalwell declared his Washington D.C. home as his principal residence on his Deed of Trust, while not having any address in California.

In fact, Swalwell used his attorney’s address on his personal candidate statement Form 501 when filing to run for governor in California, under penalty of perjury, stating that was his home address. Its all on my website: SwalwellIsDisqualified.com.

All Swalwell had to do on Twitter was say “Hey Joel, you are wrong, here’s my California home address”. But he didn’t have one, so he stooped to name calling.

Swalwell’s childish behavior inspired me to have a look at his college years, starting with his attendance at Campbell University, a private Christian, liberal arts university in Buies Creek, North Carolina for two years after graduating high school from 1999 to 2001.

Swalwell was a Government and History student and wrote for the student newspaper “The Campbell Times”.

Low and behold I discovered that Swalwell also contributed a disturbing violent sex poem to the annual literary magazine “The Lyricist”.

In the 2001 edition of “The Lyricist”, Eric Swalwell wrote a drunken violent erotic sex poem entitled “Hungover From Burgundy”.

The Contributor’s Notes page describes Eric Swalwell as “an active member off the Campbell University student body, a write for the Campbell Times, and is completing his third screenplay”.

Illustration of a hand holding pink sunglasses above a notebook filled with handwritten lyrics, representing creativity and songwriting.
The Lyricist Cover

Poem "Hungover From Burgundy" by Eric Swalwell featuring vivid imagery of beauty, longing, and the aftermath of a passionate encounter.

I believe “Hungover From Burgundy” reveals Swalwell has a troubling a view of women that is dehumanizing, and involves drunkenness as a tool for sex. Swalwell confuses intimacy with physical harm.

In the poem, kissing escalates into grotesque imagery of exploding veins and blood running down chins. For Swalwell, physical harm becomes intimacy.

It’s disturbing is how Swalwell eroticizes violence in his poem. Swalwell says, “My anxious arm she bit— my scar is beautiful.” Swalwell transforms the injury into a sick proof of desire.

Swalwell, meanwhile, dwells on his own discomfort – cracked lips, a vanished scar. For Swalwell, women are desirable only when unreal, exaggerated, or destructive. When they return to ordinary human form, they lose value.

This reflects a deeper attitude in Swalwell in which women are denied humanity, used instead as symbols for male experience.

Hungover From Burgundy” is unsettling not because it is graphic, but because it shows that Eric Swalwell’s view of women is deeply sick at its core.

He also needs alcohol to take advantage of a woman. The chaos of his life makes more sense now. Swalwell’s 2011 divorce and alleged affair of Chinese “honey trap” spy Fang Fang can now be better understood.

This poem is further evidence that Eric Swalwell is psychologically unfit to serve as California governor and should resign from Congress now.

Joel Gilbert is a Los Angeles-based film producer and president of Highway 61 Entertainment. He is the producer of the new film Roseanne Barr Is America. He is also the producer of: Dreams from My Real FatherThe Trayvon HoaxTrump: The Art of the Insult, and many other films on American politics and music icons. Gilbert is on Twitter: @JoelSGilbert.

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