Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Republican CNN Analyst Epically Fact-Checked After Blaming Democratic 'Rhetoric' For Trump Attack

Scott Jennings; TizzyEnt
CNN; @TizzyEnt/TikTok

After Republican CNN on-air analyst Scott Jennings seemed to blame Democrats' 'rhetoric around Donald Trump' for the attempt on his life, TikToker @Tizzyent brought receipts.

Republican political analyst Scott Jennings claimed "Democratic rhetoric" was the catalyst for the shooting at former Republican President Donald Trump's Saturday rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

One rallygoer was killed—firefighter Corey Comperatore, age 50; two others injured—David Dutch, 57 and James Copenhaver, 74; and the presumptive GOP 2024 presidential candidate, 78, was wounded on his upper right ear. The 20-year-old gunman was shot and killed by law enforcement on scene.


During an appearance on CNN, conservative pundit Jennings said:

"I hate to say it, but the rhetoric around [Donald Trump] over the last few weeks—that if he wins an election our country will end, our democracy will end, it’s the last election we’ll ever have. These things have consequences.”

You can see Jennings' comments here:

But Jennings' claim got a fact-check from TikTok political and social commentator TizzyEnt.

His TikTok—which you can watch below—went viral across multiple social media platforms.


TizzyEnt said:

"I do want to talk about something that Scott Jennings, an on-air personality at CNN, said yesterday."
"Oh, I'm sorry Scott, it's the Democrats who are inciting violence, by what, pushing dangerous rhetoric about Trump?"

r/truth/Reddit


r/truth/Reddit


r/truth/Reddit

TizzyEnt continued:

"I guess I see your point. Like the other day when that big time Democrat went on an interview and said 'we're starting the second American Revolution' and it will remain mainly bloodless as long as the right allows it to be."
"Oh, wait a minute..."

In his rebuttal, TizzyEnt pointed to the many times conservatives have openly called for or threatened violence.

At a MAGA rally in Ohio in March, Trump said:

"If I don’t get elected, it’s going to be a bloodbath for the whole country."

Trump's comments were later explained away as a reference to the auto industry.

r/truth/Reddit

But Trump often employs familiar rhetoric that was popular in Nazi Germany's propaganda and White supremacist, Christian nationalist groups in the United States.

Announcing his candidacy in 2015, Trump said:

"When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best.... They’re sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems with us. They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists."

More recently, Trump said immigrants are "poisoning the blood of our country" and said he'd "root out the communists, Marxists, fascists, and the radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country." America First and Make America Great Again are both slogans borrowed from the Ku Klux Klan and America's White nationalist movement.

Then in the last several weeks, Project 2025 architect Kevin Roberts—president of the Christian nationalist Heritage Foundation—twice called for a "second American Revolution, which will remain bloodless if the left allows it to be."

r/truth/Reddit


@michellestillman/Threads

After playing video of Roberts making his threat of domestic terrorism, TizzyEnt stated:

"Yeah, no, he said the left, as long as the left allows it to be. Because that's Kevin Roberts, the president of The Heritage Foundation, the ones who wrote and created Project 2025."
"You know that 'rhetoric' that we've been spreading."

@michellestillman/Threads


r/truth/Reddit

TizzyEnt continued:

"Then there's that Democrat who's running for governor in North Carolina who said this."

He then showed a clip of right-wing candidate Mark Robinson saying:

"Get mad at me if you want to—some folks need killing. It's time for somebody to say it."

TizzyEnt quipped:

"Oops, no, my bad. That's Mark Robinson, the MAGA Republican running for governor of North Carolina."
"But maybe it's all the Democrats who since this incident have been talking about how if Donald Trump had died we'd be having a Civil War and they've been almost giddy about it."

He then shared several MAGA minions' TikToks threatening violence.

@michellestillman/Threads

r/truth/Reddit

r/truth/Reddit


Afterward, TizzyEnt said:

"Oopsie number three and that's not even all the people I saw making videos saying 'one inch difference and we'd be at war."

After remarking on how excited one of the MAGA minions seemed, TizzyEnt shared that right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones hosted an X space titled "Will the Deep State Assassinate Biden?"

People thought the TikTok was spot on calling out conservative double speak from people like Jennings in the wake of violence.

@michellestillman/Threads

Other global denizens just shared concern for our future.

r/truth/Reddit

A full investigation into the shooting at Saturday's MAGA rally hasn't been completed.

Trump is expected to attend the Republican National Convention taking place in Milwaukee, Wisconsin July 15-18 without issue.

Trump arrived in Wisconsin on Sunday.

More from News/2024-election

Screenshot of Charles Barkley; Donald Trump
CBS; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Charles Barkley Sounds Off On Trump's Immigration Crackdown 'Disgrace' During March Madness Rant

Former NBA star turned sports analyst Charles Barkley condemned President Donald Trump's "disgrace" of an immigration crackdown in remarks on CBS on Sunday, lamenting the fates "amazing immigrants" who have been terrorized by the federal government.

Barkley pivoted to discussing immigration after CBS ran a feature on University of Connecticut star Alex Karaban, whose parents are immigrants from Eastern Europe.

Keep ReadingShow less
Gavin Newsom; Donald Trump
Steve Jennings/Getty Images; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Gavin Newsom Rips Trump After Report Reveals Massive Amount Taxpayers Have Spent For Trump To Go Golfing

President Donald Trump's trips to his golf courses have cost taxpayers a fortune in his second term, prompting California Governor Gavin Newsom to criticize him for the massive tab in a post on X.

Trump’s golf outings have cost taxpayers at least $101.2 million in travel and security expenses since he returned to office. That total is about two-thirds of what his golf trips cost during his entire first term and puts him on pace to spend roughly $300 million by the end of his second term.

Keep ReadingShow less
Joe Rogan; JD Vance
The Joe Rogan Experience; Heather Diehl/Getty Images

JD Vance Weakly Claps Back After Joe Rogan Says MAGA Is Filled With A 'Bunch Of F—king Dorks'

Former actor, comedian, and Fear Factor host turned podcaster Joe Rogan has spent years profiting off the conspiracy theorists, Christian nationalists, and White supremacists that make up the MAGA movement.

But lately, Rogan has gone from enabling Republican President Donald Trump and his cronies to criticizing them.

Keep ReadingShow less
Aaron Taylor-Johnson
Mike Marsland/WireImage

'28 Years Later' Star Aaron Taylor-Johnson Just Debuted His New Look—And He's Nearly Unrecognizable

At the movie premiere for the British crime thriller Fuze opposite Divergent's Theo James, Aaron Taylor-Johnson walked the red carpet rocking a new look that wowed his fans.

Since his breakout role in 2008 in Nowhere Boy, the 28 Years Later star is well-known for his dark-brown, curly locks that frame a face with bright, blue eyes and a beard. While he was clean-shaven at a much younger age for Kick-A** and even appeared blond for Anna Karenina, Taylor-Johnson is best known for his signature darker features.

Keep ReadingShow less
Nick Cannon
Carol Lee Rose/Getty Images

Nick Cannon Gets Blunt History Lesson After Saying Democrats Are 'The Party Of The KKK' While Backing Trump

Comedian Nick Cannon received a blunt history lesson after claiming on a recent episode of his web talk show Big Drive that the Democratic Party is "the party of the KKK."

After his guest, model Amber Rose, said that Democrats “don’t care about people of color and the Republicans do,” Cannon said:

Keep ReadingShow less