Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Rally Crowd Chants 'Bulls–t' To Echo Trump After He Touts Polls Saying Support For Impeachment Is Dwindling

Rally Crowd Chants 'Bulls–t' To Echo Trump After He Touts Polls Saying Support For Impeachment Is Dwindling
Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

There's no disputing that President Donald Trump has transformed what's acceptable in politics.

Corruption can go unchecked, social media posts can be unhinged, and words that used to be unacceptable for a President to say at a rally now get chanted by the crowd.


The latter was on full display at Trump's Tuesday night rally in Sunrise, Florida.

Railing against the impeachment inquiry against him, Trump called the constitutionally enshrined oversight "bulls**t."

Watch below.

Trump said:

"They're pushing that impeachment witch hunt. A lot of bad things are happening to them. You see what's happening in the polls? Everybody said, 'That's really bulls**t!'"

The supporters at his rally soon echoed him with chants of the word.

If you've noticed a coarsening of language across both sides of the aisle since Trump ascended to office, you're far from alone. The New York Times has called Trump "the profanity president" for his uninhibited use of language not fit for television. In turn, his opponents have followed suit, albeit less blatantly.

The irony of Trump using the word "bulls**t" to connote a sham or falsehood stood out to people.


@dagster43442931/Twitter


@mikelimtw/Twitter


@qtseven/Twitter



Trump supporters, however, commended the President's irreverence with the expected level of class.



According to the Washington Post, Trump has made nearly 13,500 false statements in the three years since his inauguration.

That's a lot of bulls**t.

More from News

Screenshot of Donald Trump
Fox News

Trump Suggests Kids Will Just Have To Deal With Having A Lot Fewer Toys Due To His Tariffs

President Donald Trump was criticized for his response to concerns about empty store shelves due to his tariffs, suggesting that children will just have to settle for "two dolls instead of 30," and that those dolls might cost more than they used to.

U.S. businesses are already canceling orders from China and delaying expansion plans as they brace for the fallout from Trump’s trade policies.

Keep ReadingShow less
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Mario Tama/Getty Images

AOC Gives GOP A Blunt Reminder After They Promise Not To Make Cuts To Medicaid

Every election cycle since at least the 1980s, Republicans vow to not cut Social Security and Medicaid benefits. Then once elected, they try to cut Social Security and Medicaid.

For some reason, supporters of the GOP are shocked every time it happens.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; Joe Biden
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Bruce Glikas/WireImage

Trump Called Out Using His Own Past Tweet After He Tried To Blame The Economy On Biden

After President Donald Trump declared that former President Joe Biden is to blame for for current stock market performance—saying "this is Biden's stock market, not Trump's" in a rant on Truth Social—people quickly fact-checked him for previously taking credit for the stock market when Biden was in office.

A preliminary estimate shows the U.S. economy contracted by 0.3% in the first quarter of Trump’s second term, a sharp contrast to the 2.4% GDP growth recorded during Joe Biden’s final quarter in office.

Keep ReadingShow less
Katy Perry
Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Katy Perry

Katy Perry Opens Up About Recent 'Unhinged' Hate She's Gotten Online In Viral Post

Katy Perry has had a very busy and shall we say out-of-this world kind of month.

On April 14, alongside CBS Morning's anchor Gayle King, as well as journalist and philanthropist Lauren Sánchez, Perry took part in an eight-minute, all-female space trip via the Jeff Bezos-founded tech company.

Keep ReadingShow less
The golden Oscar statue as seen at The Academy's 96th Oscars .
Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images

Oscar voters skip films, upset fans

Remember to press play… then put it on MUTE?

That’s the loophole that certain Oscar voters revealed after the Academy announced that members must now watch all films nominated in each category.

Keep ReadingShow less