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New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd’s comparisons of former President Barack Obama to "The Great Gatsby" and Marie Antoinette were apparently too extreme for many liberal fans of the ex-commander-in-chief on Twitter this weekend. 

Many social mediaites suggested Dowd was acting like a "Karen" for penning the critical piece, while others accused her of being "jealous" that she wasn’t invited to Obama's celebrity-packed Martha’s Vineyard birthday party last weekend.

And there was more than a little Trump "whataboutism" in the fast-flying tweets. 

Dowd, a Pulitzer Prize winner, criticized the 44th president for his 60th birthday bash, which oozed ostentatiousness and seemed to favor A-listers over the less famous friends who were once the wind beneath his wings when he was just a junior U.S. senator from Illinois. 

"The party crystallized the caricature of the Democratic Party that Joe Biden had to fight against in order to get elected," Dowd pointed out in her piece, titled "Behold Barack Antoinette," published Saturday. 

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"It was as far from Flint and Scranton as you can imagine: an orgy of the 1 percent — private jets, Martha’s Vineyard, limousine liberals and Hollywood whoring." 

"It was as far from Flint and Scranton as you can imagine: an orgy of the 1 percent — private jets, Martha’s Vineyard, limousine liberals and Hollywood whoring." 

— Maureen Dowd, New York Times
Maureen Dowd of The New York Times is seen in New York City, March 13, 2018. (Getty Images)

Maureen Dowd of The New York Times is seen in New York City, March 13, 2018. (Getty Images)

Many of the guests invited to what was initially supposed to be a 500-person event were summarily uninvited after the former president received widespread backlash for having a potential "super-spreader" event while the delta variant of the coronavirus is spiking. Nevertheless, a massive tent was seen erected on Obama's Massachusetts property to accommodate the scaled-back gathering.

Former President Barack Obama speaks in Detroit, Oct. 26, 2018. (Getty Images)

Former President Barack Obama speaks in Detroit, Oct. 26, 2018. (Getty Images)

Dowd pointed out the ousted partiers tended to be people like political operatives David Axelrod and Rahm Emanuel, who helped Obama become the man he is today, while uber-celebrities Beyoncé and John Legend made the cut. 

Kicked-to-the-curb guest Stephen Colbert later joked Obama had to scale back the guest list to "only his closest Beyoncés." 

Beyoncé and Jay-Z are seen in Beverly Hills, California, Jan. 25, 2020. (Getty Images)

Beyoncé and Jay-Z are seen in Beverly Hills, California, Jan. 25, 2020. (Getty Images)

"Whether the party was 500 or 300 or 30, Obama should have made sure to have the people there who made the moment possible, the ones who worked so hard to get him elected and cement his legacy," Dowd mused. 

She compared Obama to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Jay Gatsby having lavish parties on his lawn to get his love Daisy to notice him – except Obama did it, she wrote, because "Being cool is important to him."

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"One difference is that Gatsby opened his house to the uninvited," she added. "Obama closed his house to many of the invited after getting flak for hosting ‘a celebrity mosh pit,’ as Stephen Colbert called it, while officials were telling people to mask back up.’"

"Gatsby opened his house to the uninvited. Obama closed his house to many of the invited."

— Maureen Dowd, New York Times

Nuanced as the article was, Obama Twitter wasn’t having it.  

"Says Maureen Dowd, who remains desperate for relevancy," one person wrote. 

Another added, "Trump and the republicans have one spreader event after another. But Maureen Dowd attacks Barack Obama's 60th Birthday bash. Everybody there was vaccinated Maureen. It was no spreader event. And you weren't invited."

"he's just not that into you, maureen. get over it," a third mocked.