
13 Families Torn Apart by Political Differences
Note: Some responses have been edited for clarity.
"My father voted for Trump in 2016, even though I made it clear to him that he would try to get rid of Obamacare, which prevented insurance companies from discriminating against me as a recent survivor of stage 3 cancer."
"I am divorced now because my ex-husband's attempt at Trumpism was the final straw... He would come home and try to repeat the Trumpy rhetoric he heard on the radio, and he was too stupid to even get it right."
"I'm not even American but Australian, and my mum is English. That's how far this crap reaches. Trump is objectively bad for our native countries, and you'll still find people squawking this crap. How can you be pro-nationalist when it's hurting your own country... I dunno. Anyway, my mum isn't fully gone. But she seems to be getting a lot of her news from Instagram and social media post-COVID. Borderline anti-vax."
"I have no contact with any of my family thanks to asshole Trump. But they also don't like me because I'm gay, and trying to talk to them is just hopeless."
"I didn't even want to stop talking to my MAGA relative; it just became impossible to talk to them at all. Every conversation, no matter what we were talking about, devolved into the latest conspiracy theory and attempts to catch me in a 'gotcha' using Fox News-esque logic."
"My mom voted for him, and my sister and I both chewed her out for it because she voted for hate, she voted for a misogynistic felon, and most importantly, she voted against the interests of her two children and her very young granddaughter."
"I cut my brother out of my life on Nov. 6, 2024. He is a total MAGA. I told him I can't and won't have someone in my life that voted to negate the very existence of people I love."
"I called my dad out a few times on the hate and bigotry he spouts off about. Every time he tells me that I need to watch real news and that I have been brainwashed by the radical left into killing our country. He is completely blind to what is actually happening because Fox News keeps telling him it's all OK."
"My oldest son and his Venezuelan-born wife are dyed-in-the-wool Trumpers. While talking to him one day, he launched into a rant that Biden was too old to be president a second time. I responded that Trump was just four years younger, so I didn't see how four years was much of a talking point. When he started to list what was wrong about Biden, I said, 'That's it.' I didn't want to ever discuss Trump with him ever again. He went off about me refusing to talk to him again. I said, for a smart guy, he was being really dumb. I said I didn't say I was never talking to him again. I told him I was never discussing Trump with him ever again. He calmed down at that point."
"I hate that my parents' right-wing MAGA beliefs are being championed at their church and within Christian circles. My mother has worked in medicine for over 40 years (and very outwardly advocates for vaccines and preventative healthcare) and is deeply pro-choice, and yet still believes immigrants, Joe Biden, and the Fed (unironically, my husband's employer) are killing the country."
"My aunt constantly sends me right-wing shit on IG, including anti-trans rhetoric, knowing full well my best friend is trans. And best friend is not even a good enough term for them. They lived with me and my husband during COVID and were there when I walked out of the bathroom mid-miscarriage, sobbing. This friend has been there through my hardest moments, and I love them like family. My aunt? She and her kids hate the term 'chosen family.' Hmmm, wonder why."
"I mentioned to my aunt that the last 9 out of 10 recessions occurred under Republican leadership, according to Musk's AI. She said she did not believe anything from AI."
And finally, "During the first Trump administration, I was visiting my father and his wife in deep rural Georgia. As we were sitting down for breakfast one morning, they were telling me how a bad storm had recently knocked down several trees across their road, trapping them and their mostly well-off neighbors for a few days."
Now we want to hear from you. Have you ever cut off someone for their political beliefs? What happened? Share in the comments or, if you'd like to remain anonymous, use the Google form below.
Want to know if Trump's economy is actually doing as well as he promised? Subscribe to the Economy Hate Watch newsletter and never miss our monthly update.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
9 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Letters to the Editor: Enough harping on the Democrats. What about the ‘spineless' GOP?
To the editor: I am so tired of hearing people talk about the ailing, aimless Democratic Party ('Kamala Harris won't cure what ails the Democratic Party,' Aug. 5). What about the ailing, spineless Republican Party? Without its complete capitulation and fealty to President Trump, this country wouldn't be in the sorry state it's in. The Democrats are fighting back with everything they have at their disposal, but when a large portion of the country no longer believes in truth, science, the law or common decency, it's almost impossible for them to get their message out. The very people that Trump's policies are hurting the most don't even recognize it. What ails the Democrats is that they care about decency, the law, the common man, fairness and all of the things our country used to stand for. What do Republicans in power care about? Their wallets and, as far as I can tell, absolutely nothing else. Certainly not clean water and air, vaccines, science, legality, helping the less fortunate — the list goes on and on. Democrats are far from perfect, but how do members of the GOP sleep at night? Tracey Pomerance-Poirier, Chatsworth


New York Post
9 minutes ago
- New York Post
Trump backers finally reap rewards after years of debanking, black-listing
The business of MAGA is booming. There's crypto, and of course The Donald's signature country clubs and golf courses that people are willing to pay big bucks to get into. There's also a quieter but increasingly lucrative business of consulting corporate America on how best to deal with Trumpers who control the vast administrative state, On The Money has learned. Yes, knowing President Trump and the people he has appointed is a good thing these days, four years ago not so much. 3 Knowing President Trump and the people he has appointed is a good thing these days, four years ago not so much. Donald Pearsall/NY Post Design In fact, being associated with Trump for many people who served during his first term was for a time the employment version of catching leprosy, former Trump officials tell me. Their comments came following my scoop that JPMorgan and Bank of America 'debanked' Trump for his role in the January 6 Capitol Hill melee. It followed pressure from the Biden administration, people at the banks say, to steer clear of Trump and his family's business interests after he lost the 2020 presidential campaign. You can be like me and not condone the January 6 upheaval and still shudder at the thought that Trump's actions that day means he can't have a private business life, which is what the Biden administrative state working with the nation's two largest banks appeared to have tried to do, people at the banks confirm. But the blackballing apparently didn't stop at the banking business – it spanned across corporate America, sources told On The Money. It included major corporations throwing away the resumes of very capable people, being excommunicated from teaching posts at major universities. It meant being kicked off the speaking circuit, and no book deals, all for working for a time with Trump during his first term, former officials said. Here's how one former top Trump economic aide put it: 'The entire weight of government came out against Trump and people who worked for him including yours truly. It went beyond banking. People couldn't get hired. People couldn't get speaking gigs. It was really, really bad all fueled by the Biden administration.' 3 JPMorgan and Bank of America 'debanked' Trump for his role in the January 6 Capitol Hill melee. It followed pressure from the Biden administration, people at the banks say, to steer clear of Trump and his family's business interests after he lost the 2020 presidential campaign. AFP/Getty Images How it was communicated by the Biden people to big companies to blacklist Trump and his people isn't quite known. Big business, however, is highly regulated. You can see how having a former Trumper in a top role at a major corporation, or Trump's businesses holding accounts at JPMorgan or Bank of America, could bring scrutiny or worse. So why take the risk? Most major companies and banks didn't, my reporting shows. The people from Trump who did land not long after January 6 and Trump's first term ended did so in safe spaces for conservative voices, such as my employer, Fox News (which shares corporate ownership with The Post) and right-of-center think tanks. Of course, many Americans rebelled against Sleepy Joe's various economic policies – from high taxes to inflation-inducing overspending – coupled with high regulation, not to mention its embrace of woke culture. 3 Many Americans rebelled against Sleepy Joe's various economic policies – from high taxes to inflation-inducing overspending – coupled with high regulation. REUTERS Trump was re-elected president in 2024 and corporate America began to open up to former Trump acolytes, But until recently, when Trump actually got back into the White House for Round 2, their job prospects never matched what those who served in the Obama administration experienced. They immediately snapped up jobs on corporate boards, and landed plum assignments in public policy and public affairs the minute Barack left office. Gary Goldstein, CEO of Whitney Partners, an executive search firm, said part of the problem with being associated with Trump wasn't just his deeds during January 6, or even his election denialism after he lost to Biden in 2020. Charlie Gasparino has his finger on the pulse of where business, politics and finance meet Sign up to receive On The Money by Charlie Gasparino in your inbox every Thursday. Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters Rather, it stems from the fact that businesses hate controversy and before he was president, Trump was a polarizing figure in New York, known more for his brash persona and reality TV show, Goldstein tells Fox Business's Teuta Dedvukaj. 'Anyone who is in business and gets involved in politics is putting themselves in harm's way,' Goldstein said. 'It's better to be agnostic. Once you cross that line, especially with someone like Trump, you can't un-ring that bell.' Well, being elected president a second time has done a lot for un-ringing. JPM and BofA will now gladly take The Donald's money, and the banks are all hiring consultants and flacks to deal with MAGA 2.0. Finally it's getting profitable to be MAGA.


The Hill
9 minutes ago
- The Hill
Trump rips Duncan over switch to Democratic Party: ‘Total loser'
President Trump ripped former Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan for joining the Democratic party and falling out of the GOP, calling him a 'total loser' for making the switch. In an early Friday post on Truth Social, Trump said that Duncan was no longer wanted in the GOP because all he did was complain. 'Failed former Lt. Governor Geoff Duncan, of Georgia, is a total loser. Was never able to get anything done, all he ever did was complain,' the president wrote. 'We didn't want him in the Republican Party any longer, so I'm told he became a Democrat.' He added, 'Good riddance Geoff. You don't even have a chance!!!' Duncan on Tuesday pushed an op-ed published by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, saying the party switch has been coming for a while. The former lieutenant governor said his journey to becoming a Democrat began when Trump tried to 'steal' the 2020 presidential election, an effort the former lieutenant governor denounced at the time. He said that his time serving in elected office taught him the best way to 'love my neighbor' is through public policy. Duncan, in his essay, called out Trump's signature tax and spending bill, which he argued would leave Medicaid funding 'in shambles.' He also criticized the legislation's cuts to funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and the impact it will have on preventing children from being hungry at school. Additionally, he slammed the Trump administration's immigration policies that he argues, 'have turned into a lesson on how not to love your neighbor.' Duncan endorsed former Vice President Harris's campaign in the 2024 presidential election and spoke at the Democratic National Convention in August. He was later expelled from the Georgia Republican Party.