Trumpβs AI poop post caps a week of MAGA indifference to Hitler jokes
An estimated 7 million Americans turned out Saturday to peacefully protest against the breakdown of our checks-and-balances democracy into a Trump-driven autocracy, rife with grift but light on civil rights.
Trumpβs response? An AI video of himself wearing a crown inside a fighter plane, dumping what appears to be feces on these very protesters. In a later interview, he called participants of the βNo Kingsβ events βwhacked outβ and βnot representative of this country.β
Iβm beginning to fear heβs right. What if the majority of Americans really do believe this sort of behavior by our president, or by anyone really, is acceptable? Even funny? A recent Economist/YouGov poll found that 81% of Republicans approve of the way Trump is handling his job. Seriously, the vast majority of Republicans are just fine with Trumpβs policies and behavior.
According to MAGA, non-MAGA people are just too uptight these days.
Vice Troll JD Vance has become a relentless force for not just defending the most base and cruel of behaviors, but celebrating them. House Speaker Mike Johnson has made the spineless, limp justification of these behaviors an art form.
Between the two approaches to groveling to Trumpβs ego and mendacity is everything you need to know about the future of the Republican Party. It will stop at nothing to debase and dehumanize any opposition β openly acknowledging that it dreams of burying in excrement even those who peacefully object.
Not even singer Kenny Loggins is safe. His βTop Gunβ hit βDanger Zoneβ was used in the video. When he objected with a statement of unity, saying, βToo many people are trying to tear us apart, and we need to find new ways to come together. Weβre all Americans, and weβre all patriotic. There is no βus and themβ,β the White House responded with … a dismissive meme, clearly the new norm when responding to critics.
It may seem obvious, and even old news that this administration lacks accountability. But the use of memes and AI videos as communication, devoid of truth or consequence, adds a new level of danger to the disconnect.
These non-replies not only remove reality from the equation, but remove the need for an actual response β creating a ruling class that does not feel any obligation to explain or defend its actions to the ruled.
Politico published a story last week detailing the racist, misogynistic and hate-filled back-and-forth of an official, party-sanctioned βyoung Republicanβ group. Since most of our current politicians are part of the gerontocracy, that young is relative β these are adults, in their 20s and 30s β and they are considered the next generation of party leaders, in a party that has already skewed so far right that it defends secret police.
Hereβs a sample.
Bobby Walker, the former vice chair of the New York State Young Republicans, called rape βepic,β according to Politico.
Another member of the chat called Black Americans βwatermelon people.β
βGreat. I love Hitler,β wrote another when told delegates would vote for the most far-right candidate.
There was also gas chamber βhumorβ in there and one straight up, βIβm ready to watch people burn now,β from a woman in the conversation, Anne KayKaty, New Yorkβs Young Republicanβs national committee member, according to the Hill.
Group members engaged in slurs against South Asians, another popular target of the far right these days. Thereβs an entire vein of racism devoted to the idea that Indians smell bad, in case you were unaware.
Speaking of a woman mistakenly believed to be South Asian, one group member β Vermont state Sen. Samuel Douglass, wrote: βShe just didnβt bathe often.β
While some in the Republican party have denounced, albeit half-heartedly, the comments, others, including Vance, have gone on the attack. Vance, whose wife is Indian, claims everyone is making a big deal out of nothing.
βBut the reality is that kids do stupid things. Especially young boys, they tell edgy, offensive jokes. Like, thatβs what kids do,β Vance said. βAnd I really donβt want us to grow up in a country where a kid telling a stupid joke β telling a very offensive, stupid joke β is cause to ruin their lives.β
Not to be outdone, Johnson responded to the poop jet video by somehow insinuating there is an elevated meaning to it.
βThe president was using social media to make a point,β Johnson said, calling it βsatire.β
Satire is meant to embarrass and humiliate, to call out through humor the indefensible. Iβll buy the first part of that. Trump meant to embarrass and humiliate. But protesting, of course, is anything but indefensible and the use of feces as a weapon is a way of degrading those βNo Kingsβ participants so that Trump doesnβt have to answer to their anger β no different than degrading Black people and women in that group chat.
Those 7 million Americans who demonstrated on Saturday simply do not matter to Trump, or to Republicans. Not their healthcare, not their ability to pay the bills, not their worry that a country they love is turning in to one where their leader literally illustrates that he can defecate on them.
But not everyone can be king.
While the young Republicans believe they shared in their leaderβs immunity, it turns out they donβt. That Vermont state senator? He resigned after the Republican governor put on pressure.
Maybe 7 million Americans angry at Trump canβt convince him to change his ways, but enough outraged Vermont voters can make change in their corner of the country.
Which is why the one thing Trump does fear is the midterms, when voters get to shape our own little corners of America β and by extension, whether Trump gets to keep using his throne.