Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Yale Student Asks Ted Cruz If He'd 'Fellate Another Man' To End World Hunger In Awkward Video

Yale Student Asks Ted Cruz If He'd 'Fellate Another Man' To End World Hunger In Awkward Video
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; @therecount/Twitter

Things got a little awkward for Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz during a Q&A session at Yale University after a student asked him whether he'd "fellate another man" if it meant ending world hunger.

The student—who identified themselves as "Evan"—asked the question when he approached the microphone during a live taping of the podcast Verdict with Ted Cruz.


The question was met with laughter from the audience.

Cruz declined to answer.

You can watch what happened in the video below.

Although Cruz chose not to answer the student's question, conservative commentator Michael Knowles did, saying that the question was typical of a "left wing undergraduate" engaging in consequentionalism.

Consequentialism is a class of normative, teleological ethical theories that holds that the consequences of one's conduct are the ultimate basis for judgment about the rightness or wrongness of that conduct.

Knowles said:

"Like a typical left wing undergraduate, you are enaging in consequentionalist ethics. You are attempting to justify flagrantly immoral behavior to achieve a good end."
"And I tell you, my friend, the ends do not justify the means. Absolutely, absolutely not."

Cruz did ask, however, if Evan would vote for former President Donald Trump "if it meant solving world hunger," a remark that prompted further laughter from audience members.

The exchange quickly went viral, exposing Cruz to significant mockery



The incident later caught the attention of Fox News, which ran a segment in which several of the network's hosts complained about "woke" leftist students on college campuses and demanded that colleges "crackdown on that threatening behavior."

Cruz, for his part, called on Yale to punish student protesters who picketed an appearance he made at the university last month, during which he repeated patently false claims that the 2020 general election was stolen and defended his treatment of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson during her Supreme Court confirmation hearings.

Cruz joined Republicans in signing an open letter urging Yale to punish students who objected to the inclusion of a conservative Christian lawyer and anti-LGBTQ+ rights activist on a panel.

More from Trending

Yassamin Ansari; Screenshot of Kellyanne Conway
Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; Fox News

Dem Rep. Epically Shuts Down Kellyanne Conway's Claim Sydney Sweeney Ad Is Causing Liberal 'Panic'

Actor Sydney Sweeney recently faced backlash over her American Eagle ad campaign titled “Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans.” The campaign plays on the words “jeans” and “genes,” which some critics claim alludes to eugenics—a theory widely discredited as scientifically inaccurate and ethically dangerous.

According to former presidential counselor Kellyanne Conway—who gave us the term "alternative facts"—the campaign has sparked "panic on the left."

Keep ReadingShow less
Lisa Kudrow in 'Death to 2020'
Netflix

Lisa Kudrow's Portrayal Of A MAGA Spokesperson Resurfaces—And It's Eerily Accurate

Actor Lisa Kudrow has gone viral after her performance in the Netflix mockumentary Death to 2020 as a truth-denying spokesperson for President Donald Trump went viral—prompting many to point out that her portrayal is still spot on.

The film, from the minds of Black Mirror creators Charlie Brooker and Annabel Jones, centers on a group of fictional characters reflecting on major U.S. and U.K. events of 2020, such as the COVID-19 pandemic and the U.S. presidential election.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Molly Martinez
RSBN

White House Reporter Reacts After Video Glitch Sparks Conspiracy Theory That She's A 'Lizard Person'

White House reporter Molly Martinez responded after a White House livestream glitched and caused her eyes to look completely white for a split-second—prompting conspiracy theorists to go wild and claim she is a "lizard person" who is secretly controlling the government.

Martinez, a Washington-based journalist for local TV chain Gray Television, appeared on camera June 19 in the White House press room, smiling at a friend. A glitch in the original footage made her eyes look entirely white—something conspiracy theorists seized on as “evidence” she’s a lizard person.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Ben Ferguson and Abby Philip
CNN

Right-Wing Podcaster Blasted After Making Absurd Claim About Trump And Crime Rates In 2024

Conservative podcaster Ben Ferguson left hs fellow CNN panelists stunned after he made the bizarre claim that falling crime rates in 2024 were due to President Donald Trump's policies—even though Trump didn't begin his second term until January 2025.

Ferguson spoke after Trump—who presented fake crime statistics—announced his decision to federalize police in Washington, D.C., and deploy the National Guard in an effort to fight crime.

Keep ReadingShow less
A bride and a groom holding hands
man and woman holding hands focus photo

People Who Attended Multiple Weddings For The Same Person Describe The Differences

Weddings are a wonderful celebration of love and commitment.

That being said, all of us have likely been to a wedding where we have wondered "how long do you think it's going to last".

Keep ReadingShow less