Chrissie Hynde is the Donald Trump of rockers. She refuses to apologize for her incendiary comments, and she keeps making more.

Now, Hynde, founder of the power rock band The Pretenders, is lashing out at today’s pop starlets. She’s not naming names, but the women in her crosshairs couldn’t be more obvious (like, um, Miley Cyrus, whose entire career is based on her scantily clad, sexually charged shows).

That isn’t feminism, Hynde said.

“It’s provoked by this pornography culture. It’s provoked by pop stars who call themselves feminists. Maybe they’re feminists on behalf of prostitutes — but they are no feminists on behalf of music, if they are selling their music by bumping and grinding and wearing their underwear in videos,” Hynde said.

“That’s a kind of feminism — but, you know, you’re a sex worker is what you are,” she told BBC’s Woman’s Hour.

Hynde, an outspoken PETA advocate, wasn’t finished. She called out stars who promote their product while clad in skimpy outfits as a cultural problem.

“I think it’s provocative in a way that has nothing to do with music,” she said. “I would say those women are responsible for a great deal of damage.”

[lz_ndn video= 29630815]

The lead singer caused a stir late last month when she blamed herself, partly, for a brutal rape that occurred decades ago. She said she wasn’t sober at the time and was dressed provocatively, two factors, she said, that led to a nightmarish scenario.

Feminists howled, but Hynde stood her ground.