logo
Spicy AI-generated TACO memes are taking over social media because ‘Trump always chickens out'

Spicy AI-generated TACO memes are taking over social media because ‘Trump always chickens out'

Fast Company2 days ago

One easy way to ensure an unflattering nickname has staying power is to act defensive about it. Apparently, the same goes for unflattering acronyms.
After multiple news outlets reported on Wednesday morning that Wall Street has embraced a new acronym for approaching the topic of tariffs—TACO, or Trump Always Chickens Out—a reporter asked the president about it during an afternoon press conference.
Trump responded apoplectically, scolding the reporter for her 'nasty' question, and admonishing her, 'Don't ever say what you said.'
So, naturally, within minutes, the internet was awash with AI-generated images and other memes linking Trump with tacos.
It all started on May 2, when Financial Times columnist Robert Armstrong coined the phrase in the publication's Unhedged newsletter.
'Regular readers will not be surprised by Unhedged's view that the recent rally has a lot to do with markets realizing that the US administration does not have a very high tolerance for market and economic pressure, and will be quick to back off when tariffs cause pain,' Armstrong wrote, as stocks began recovering just over a month after the U.S.'s ostensible Liberation Day. 'This is the Taco theory: Trump Always Chickens Out.'
Even someone with only a cursory understanding of international trade would have probably noticed the pattern by this past weekend, when Trump backtracked on a recently announced 50% tariff threat against the EU.
The Streisand effect, wdith a dash of hot sauce
Giving this pattern a name so easy to remember, and so devastatingly diminishing, may have predetermined its ubiquity. Although the term had apparently flourished on Wall Street in the weeks since it was first coined, it only broke containment when it was finally written about enough that Trump had to actually respond to it.
Now that he's done so, and revealed in the process that the phrase has apparently hit a nerve, it's social media's turn to respond.
'Taco Don' memes are flourishing on X, mostly in the form of AI-generated images. Some of them depict Trump utterly ensconced in tacos or taco-related items.
Others still manage to depict Trump as both taco and chicken.
Anyone abandoning the AI route and instead searching manually for chicken-adjacent images involving Trump will strike gold in at least one spot.
When Trump hosted Saturday Night Live in 2004, he performed in a sketch called 'Donald Trump's House of Wings,' during which the cast dances around him in chicken costumes—something that has not escaped notice on X.
Another image from Trump's past has come back to haunt him even more, though, since the TACO acronym emerged.
In 2016, then-candidate Trump celebrated Cinco de Mayo by tweeting an image of himself grinning over a Trump Tower Grill taco bowl, fork in hand. That image is now making the rounds again on X and Bluesky in its new context. Even sitting U.S. Senator Tina Smith posted the image on her Bluesky account.
What happens from here might feel familiar. When the internet exploded with weird JD Vance memes earlier this year, fans of the vice president attempted to reclaim the narrative by tweeting similar memes to support Vance. Indeed, at least one X user is already trying to repurpose the new TACO acronym to mean 'Trump Always Crushes Opposition.'
Whether that version of the phrase will actually gain any traction remains to be seen. In the meantime, meme-lovers, Trump critics, and those who enjoy looking at tacos are eating well.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Has Big Brother arrived? Inside the secretive Trump effort to centralize government data on millions of Americans
Has Big Brother arrived? Inside the secretive Trump effort to centralize government data on millions of Americans

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Has Big Brother arrived? Inside the secretive Trump effort to centralize government data on millions of Americans

The Trump administration is reportedly leaning on an Elon Musk-allied tech company to build wide-ranging data tools pooling government information on millions of Americans and immigrants alike. The campaign has raised alarms from critics that the company could be furthering Musk's DOGE effort to vacuum up and potentially weaponize – or sell – mass amounts of sensitive personal data, particularly against vulnerable groups like immigrants and political dissidents. In March, the president signed an executive order dedicated to 'stopping waste, fraud, and abuse by eliminating information silos,' a euphemism for pooling vast stores of data on Americans under the federal government. To carry out the data effort, the administration has deepened the federal government's longstanding partnership with Palantir, a tech firm specializing in building big data applications, which was co-founded by Silicon Valley investor, GOP donor, and JD Vance mentor Peter Thiel. Since Trump took office, the administration has reportedly spent more than $113 million with Palantir through new and existing contracts, while the company is slated to begin work on a new $795 million deal with the Defense Department. Palantir is reportedly working with the administration in the Pentagon, the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the Internal Revenue Service, according to The New York Times. Within these agencies, the firm is reportedly building tools to track the movement of migrants in real time and streamline all tax data. The company is also reportedly in talks about deploying its technology at the Social Security Administration and the Department of Education, both of which have been targets of DOGE, and which store sensitive information about Americans' identities and finances. 'We act as a data processor, not a data controller,' the company insisted in response to the Times report. 'Our software and services are used under direction from the organizations that license our products. These organizations define what can and cannot be done with their data; they control the Palantir accounts in which analysis is conducted.' The Trump administration has reportedly pursued a variety of efforts to use big data to support its priorities, including social media surveillance of immigrants to detect alleged pro-terror views, and American activists who disagree wit Donal Trump's views.. Earlier this month, a group of former Palantir employees warned in an open letter that the company was 'normalizing authoritarianism under the guise of a 'revolution' led by oligarchs.' 'By supporting Trump's administration, Elon Musk's DOGE initiative, and dangerous expansions of executive power, they have abandoned their responsibility and are in violation of Palantir's Code of Conduct,' the employees wrote. Previous reporting from CNN and WIRED has described efforts at the Department of Homeland Security to build mass data tools to support tracking and surveilling undocumented immigrants, a key priority for the White House as deportations still aren't reaching levels necessary to meet Trump's promise of rapidly removing millions of people from the country. The effort has involved merging data from outside agencies like Social Security and the IRS, according to WIRED. 'They are trying to amass a huge amount of data,' a senior DHS official told the magazine. 'It has nothing to do with finding fraud or wasteful spending … They are already cross-referencing immigration with SSA and IRS, as well as voter data.' Since Trump took office, DOGE operatives, many of whom are unknown to the public nor have been vetted, have rapidly sought access to data at key agencies, including the Departments of Education and the Treasury, as well as the Social Security Administration, often over the objections of senior staff. The efforts have prompted scores of lawsuits against DOGE. At Social Security, the administration also moved thousands of living, mostly Latino undocumented immigrants into the agency's 'Death Master File' in an attempt to pressure them to leave the country. DOGE itself is reportedly under audit for its action by the Government Accountability Office, a federal watchdog. An April letter from Democrats on the House Oversight Committee warned of DOGE's 'extreme negligence and an alarmingly cavalier attitude' toward sensitive data. It claimed a whistleblower had described how 'DOGE engineers have tried to create specialized computers for themselves that simultaneously give full access to networks and databases across different agencies.' The 'whistleblower information obtained by the Committee, combined with public reporting, paints a picture of chaos at SSA [Social Security Administration] as DOGE is rapidly, haphazardly, and unlawfully working to implement changes that could disrupt Social Security payments and expose Americans' sensitive data,' the letter reads.'

Big night for Francisco Lindor, solid steps for Juan Soto in Mets' win
Big night for Francisco Lindor, solid steps for Juan Soto in Mets' win

New York Times

time27 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Big night for Francisco Lindor, solid steps for Juan Soto in Mets' win

NEW YORK — And finally, after weeks of struggling with an average on the interstate, New York's superstar came through with a big game. Is it Juan Soto or Francisco Lindor we're talking about? For the Mets, it was both Friday night. In a 4-2 win over the Rockies, Lindor homered from both sides of the plate, and Soto delivered just his second multihit game in three weeks. It was a night of exhaling for the Mets' linchpins. Multi-homer game for @Lindor12BC 👏 — New York Mets (@Mets) May 31, 2025 Start with Soto, who has been the alpha and omega of every conversation about the Mets for weeks. A lukewarm start through the first six weeks had turned frigid over the last three: 7-for-59 with one extra-base hit in his last 16 games entering Friday. So David Stearns' pregame press conference was largely about Soto — what's looked different, when that could change, and what support from the organization looks like in the meantime. Advertisement 'I think he's probably trying to do a little bit too much right now,' Stearns said. 'And that is natural for a player who cares.' In the third, Soto came through with a two-out double to right-center, scoring Lindor from first. It was his second extra-base hit over the last three weeks. He also led off the sixth with a single. 'Anytime you come through for the team, it's always a good feeling,' Soto said. 'I know I've been struggling and I haven't been there for the team. I will be.' 'He's had good at-bats,' Lindor said. 'Today the ball fell for him.' While Soto's slump has sucked up all the oxygen around the Mets, Lindor was quietly going through it on the offensive end. He had been 8-for-55 in his last 14 games entering Friday night. A leadoff homer from the right side opened the scoring, and a solo shot from the left side in the eighth closed it. In between, he singled up the middle. Lindor talked about getting his body in the right alignment through some physical therapy. 'I'm healthy,' he said. '(I'm) making sure my body's moving correctly.' Manager Carlos Mendoza was especially happy to see Lindor drive the ball the opposite way from the left side for the eighth-inning homer. 'When you see him going to left-center from the left side, that's when he's clicking,' Mendoza said. '(He's) in position to make some really good swing decisions and hit the ball with authority.' Lindor's numbers from the right side have been uncharacteristically poor to start the year. Even after the homer Friday, he said he's 'still not there' from that side. The same could be said for the Mets offense through 57 games this season. Lindor and Pete Alonso carried the club through April. It's been a tougher slog in May, with Brett Baty just about the only Met exceeding expectations this month. Soto has been in the spotlight, but he entered Friday with a better OPS in May than Lindor, Alonso, Brandon Nimmo and Mark Vientos — the other guys hitting first through fifth Friday. The Mets have shown they don't need all those bats to get hot to win. But the task gets a heck of a lot easier if a couple of them warm up. 'It's a matter of time,' Soto said of himself. The Mets hope that goes for the entire lineup. (Photo of Francisco Lindor: Al Bello / Getty Images)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store