In the column Straight Nonsense, columnist Moises Mendez II takes a queer eye to the insanity of straight culture.
Can we get one day of our supposed commander in chief not doing something absolutely heinously racist? For those unaware, on Friday (in the first week of Black History Month), President Donald Trump uploaded a violently racist video that depicted former President Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama as apes. The video was part of an overnight posting spree on Truth Social, where he's said to have uploaded over 60 posts within two hours late Thursday night until about 12:30 a.m. on Friday. Many of the posts that were shared included conspiracy theories about rigged elections, and it ended with the disgusting video uploaded by the president.
In the video, according to The Daily Beast, there are several other Democrats depicted: Joe Biden as a baboon; Kamala Harris as a tortoise; Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer as a zebra; House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries as a meerkat; Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez as a donkey; New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani as a hyena; and Hillary Clinton as a warthog.
Of course, the White House's press secretary Karoline Leavitt went into her usual defense mode and tried to lambaste anyone who had a problem with the president's post, claiming that the outrage surrounding the video is "fake." Leavitt shared a statement with Newsweek, saying, "This is from an internet meme video depicting President Trump as the King of the Jungle and Democrats as characters from The Lion King." Except there's a glaring issue with this defense — outside of it overlooking the vile racism — there aren't any gorillas in The Lion King.
Leavitt also said, "Please stop the fake outrage and report on something today that actually matters to the American public."
This comes not too soon after a barrage of racist posts from the Trump administration, including one from the White House that showed an AI-doctored image of Nekima Levy Armstrong, depicting her crying, when Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem (the woman who shot her family dog) posted the original photo of Armstrong with a neutral expression just 30 minutes earlier. Or when Trump also shared an AI-generated video of himself wearing a crown and flying a fighter jet over a crowd of "No Kings" protestors and dropping poop all over them.
If it's not one thing during this administration, it's another, and it's easy to let the increasingly inhumane actions of the president or his evil cronies get to you. But if we don't have humanity for one another, then there won't be any left, and they will get to complete their insane agenda of setting the country back 250 years and stripping away rights for everyone that isn't a rich, white, straight man. We are in an empathy drought that's being exacerbated by the presidential administration every day, and with new atrocities being broadcast to our screens every second on the hour, it's easy to see why that is — ICE agents get to continue being relentlessly heartless every day, the Supreme Court is going up against a 15-year-old trans girl who wants to play some sports with her friends, and the president gets to post stomach-churning racist videos with no consequences.
In some not-so-horrible news, Trump ultimately did delete the Truth Social post after some rare pushback from his own party. (Senator Tim Scott, who is Black, responded Friday, "Praying it was fake because it’s the most racist thing I’ve seen out of this White House.") Administration officials ultimately blamed the post on an unnamed staffer and claimed Trump was unaware of its contents — though the president himself refused to apologize for it. Great.
I wish I had wisdom, light, and guidance to give you during this bleak era of American politics we're in, but you probably have about as much as I do right now, with that light only dimming by the day. I'd urge you not to let that light go out and to support community organizations that are fighting the good fight and pushing back on the stupidity taking place in our country every single day.
Moises Mendez II is a staff writer at Out magazine. Follow him on Instagram @moisesfenty.
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