Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

GOPers Dragged After Journalist Tricks Them Into Posting Tweets Honoring Lee Harvey Oswald

GOPers Dragged After Journalist Tricks Them Into Posting Tweets Honoring Lee Harvey Oswald
Megan Varner/Getty Images; Samuel Corum/Getty Images

When people found out why Lee Harvey Oswald was trending on Twitter, there was the online version of applause.

Several prominent Republicans were tricked into posting a photo of the man who assassinated former President John F. Kennedy in honor of Memorial Day.


Ken Klippenstein, a journalist who formerly covered national security at the Intercept, successfully fooled GOP Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz, American Conservative Union Chairman chair Matt Schlapp and conservative commentator Dinesh D'Souza with his prank.


Klippenstein convinced the conservatives to retweet a vintage photo of Oswald in uniform—from when he served as a U.S. Marine.

They all fell for it.


The journalist is also a notorious internet prankster who got into a Twitter spat with Elon Musk and duped (now former) Iowa Republican Congressman Steve King into tweeting to his followers, "Steve King is a White supremacist."

Naomi Wolf and Richard Grennell were also past targets.

On Monday, May 31, the writer tweeted at Gaetz—who is the subject of investigation for allegations of having sex with a 17-year-old girl and engaging in sex trafficking of minors.

"Congressman, my grandpa's a big fan of yours and is a veteran," wrote Klippenstein.

"He would be thrilled if you could RT this photo of him for Memorial Day. Here he is as a young Private First Class."

Gaetz retweeted the photo without realizing the man pictured was JFK's killer.

@mattgaetz/Twitter

Klippenstein's updated Twitter handle, referring to Gaetz's alleged sex scandals, was not lost on Twitter users.




Klippenstein also tweeted Schlapp in a similar fashion.

In response, the Fox News political contributor wrote:

"Wow [Ken Klippenstein] it's my honor to retweet the photo of a veteran on a day we remember his fallen friends. God bless your grandfather."

@mschlapp/Twitter

D'Souza—who was issued a pardon by former President Donald Trump for an illegal campaign contribution in 2012—also happily obliged in blindly honoring Memorial Day with Oswald's military photo.

@DineshDSouza/Twitter



Eventually, the three Republicans removed their tweets presumably after discovering they'd been had.

But by then, Twitter users kept the receipts in the form of screenshots that circulated on social media.



But someone was enraged by the prank—conservative political commentator and staunch Donald Trump ally, Candace Owens.

Owens—who lead an unsuccessful push to get Black and Latino voters to register as Republicans—fumed over Klippenstein's prank.

She wrote him in a now-deleted tweet, saying:

"You are making a mockery of a day that is meant to memorialize men that died so that you and other anti-American leftists can laugh at their sacrifices by photoshopping a murderer into their uniforms".

After deleting that tweet, Owens responded to Klippenstein with the following:

"It is not 'political correctness' to have a soul and modicum of decency. Reminder: these men DIED—the majority of them on foreign soil—so you could be free."
"You do not photoshop murderers into their uniforms so you can have a laugh."

Unfortunately for her, she failed to recognize Oswald's military portrait was not tampered with through Photoshop at all.

It takes seconds to JFGI Oswald's military service record.




Oswald had enlisted in the United States Marine Corps on October 24, 1956, a week after his seventeenth birthday. He joined the United States Marine Corps Reserve after being discharged from active service on September 11, 1959.

Klippenstein later tweeted:

"I think I made Candace Owens short circuit lmao."


Though the internet lauded his online tomfoolery, Klippenstein's joke had consequences. He was allegedly fired from the Intercept for pranking the three conservatives on Twitter.

He blamed Owens for his firing.

He tweeted:

"Tell Candace Owens I hope she's happy I've been let go from my job."

He continued the series of tweets by writing:

"Ken Klippenstein fired for truth !!!!!!!"
"STOP THE (CANDACE OWENS) STEAL (OF MY JOB)!"

Not much is clear—including if Owens actually had a part in his termination.

His biography also remains on the Intercept's website as of this writing, but he did start his own Substack newsletter after claiming he was fired, according to Meaww.

Aren't Republicans the party that was going to cancel cancel culture?

More from Trending

Screenshots of military wife
@CassandraRules/X

Wife Of Active Duty U.S. Military Member Goes Viral For Her Furious Reaction To Trump's Attacks On Iran

@kendallybrown, a TikTok user and military wife, went viral after she published a TikTok video in which she let President Donald Trump's supporters know how much she "hates" them after Trump ordered an attack on various sites in Iran on Saturday morning.

Trump said that the U.S. military was "knocking the crap out of Iran" but the "big wave" of attacks is still yet to come, and has not ruled out putting boots on the ground, saying the war is progressing "way ahead of schedule."

Keep ReadingShow less
Ilhan Omar; Nancy Mace
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Ilhan Omar Claps Back Hard After Nancy Mace Tries To Insult Her With Bizarre Post Following Iran Attack

Minnesota Democratic Representative Ilhan Omar clapped back at South Carolina Republican Representative Nancy Mace after Mace attempted to insult her and Michigan Democratic Representative Rashida Tlaib after President Donald Trump ordered an attack on various sites in Iran on Saturday morning that killed Iranian leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and other top officials.

Omar and Tlaib were the first two Muslim women elected to Congress. Both have faced repeated attacks from members of the Republican Party tied to their religion, including being labeled part of the so-called “Jihad Squad,” a term suggesting they are sympathetic to extremism or seek to impose Islamist rule in the United States.

Keep ReadingShow less
Christian Bale
Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

Christian Bale Explains Why Fans Are Always Disappointed When They Meet Him—And His Candor Is Refreshing

We've all heard the old saying, "You should never meet your heroes," and Christian Bale most certainly agrees.

The Dark Knight actor offered very candid advice to his fans during an interview with Entertainment Tonight, explaining that the last thing any of them should do is try to meet him in real life, because he'll only disappoint them in return.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Pete Hegseth
MS Now

Pete Hegseth Ripped After Trying To Claim That The U.S. 'Didn't Start This War' With Iran

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was criticized after he claimed that the U.S. "didn't start this war" with Iran—just days after the Trump administration authorized an attack on various sites in Iran with the joint efforts of Israel over the weekend.

The war against Iran is already spreading beyond its initial battlefield. Iranian reprisals have struck Gulf states hosting U.S. bases—including Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia—while Hezbollah has entered the fight, firing rockets into Israel and ending a month-long ceasefire.

Keep ReadingShow less
Connor Storrie stands center stage on Saturday Night Live alongside U.S. Olympic gold medalists Quinn Hughes (far left), Hilary Knight (left), Megan Keller (right), and Jack Hughes (far right) during his opening monologue in Studio 8H.
Saturday Night Live/YouTube

'SNL' Turns Trump Diss About U.S. Women's Olympic Hockey Team On Its Head With Sweet Monologue Moment

Connor Storrie’s debut Saturday Night Live monologue had just about everything: jokes, a childhood throwback, a few perfectly placed Heated Rivalry innuendos, and—because this is apparently the most athletic season in Studio 8H history—both the gold-winning players from the U.S. men’s and women’s Olympic hockey teams.

The appearance came just days after controversy over invitations to the White House and President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address, giving the night an edge that felt bigger than a typical celebrity-cameo parade.

Keep ReadingShow less