
Rosie O'Donnell hits back after Trump threatens to revoke citizenship
Over the course of almost a dozen posts, the comedian and former chat show host laid into Trump and any association he may have had with Epstein, but some focused squarely on the president himself. 'Thirty-plus years of sexual abuse - The known victims,' O'Donnell posted along with a profile shot of Trump and a list of women who have accused him of sexual abuse dating back to the 1980s.
Another posting showcased a photo montage of Trump meeting Epstein and his convicted sex trafficker girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell. In the center was a Truth Social post from Trump pleading for people to 'STOP TALKING ABOUT EPSTEIN!!!!!'. Other posts designed to irk the president further showed a photoshopped picture of Trump wearing one of his signature red MAGA caps, only with the words changed to read: 'I'm on the list' referring to the supposed client list Epstein kept. Earlier this week the White House said that there is in fact no 'client list,' a narrative that some question.
O'Donnell then posted a message aimed squarely in response to Trump's suggestion to revoke her citizenship. 'Hey Donald - you're rattled again? 18 years later and I still live rent-free in that collapsing brain of yours. you call me a threat to humanity - but I'm everything you fear: a loud woman a queer woman. a mother who tells the truth an American who got out of the country b4 u set it ablaze,' O'Donnell began. 'You crave loyalty - I teach my children to question power you sell fear on golf courses - I make art about surviving trauma you lie, you steal, you degrade - I nurture, I create, I persist,' she went on. 'You are everything that is wrong with America - and I'm everything you hate about what's still right with it. You want to revoke my citizenship? Go ahead and try, king Joffrey with a tangerine spray tan. i'm not yours to silence i never was - Rosie.'
Responding directly to Trump's threat, she wrote how the president opposes her because she 'stands in direct opposition with all he represents.' 'The president of the USA has always hated the fact that i see him for who he is - a criminal con man sexual abusing liar out to harm our nation to serve himself - this is why i moved to Ireland,' O'Donnell wrote in another posting on Saturday. 'He is a dangerous old soulless man with dementia who lacks empathy compassion and basic humanity - i stand in direct opposition all he represents ... ur a bad joke who cant form a coherent sentence.'
In other blatant attacks on Trump, O'Donnell posted artwork of the president stating 'He rapes', while in another she posted a tweet stating: 'Damn, I wish Trump would go after the Epstein list pedophiles the way he's going at Rosie O'Donnell rn.' 'Let's not waste Time and Energy on Jeffrey Epstein, somebody that nobody cares about,' Trump concluded, casting the controversy as a ploy to derail his political momentum. O'Donnell, a longtime target of Trump's insults and jabs, moved to Ireland earlier this year with her 12-year-old son after the start of the president's second term. She has said she's in the process of obtaining Irish citizenship based on family lineage.
O'Donnell said in a March TikTok video that she would return to the US 'when it is safe for all citizens to have equal rights there in America.' Trump's outburst followed O'Donnell's July 7 HuffPost interview, in which she discussed her decades-long feud with him and her 2024 move to Ireland, made ahead of Trump's reelection. Trump's disdain for O'Donnell dates back to 2006 when O'Donnell, a comedian and host on The View at the time, mocked Trump over his handling of a controversy concerning a winner of the Miss USA pageant, which Trump had owned. 'I look at America and I feel overwhelmingly depressed,' O'Donnell, 63, said, citing her need to protect her mental health and care for her 12-year-old son, who has autism.
'I knew what [the Trump administration] was planning to do, because I read Project 2025. I know what he's capable of. And I didn't want to put myself through another four years of him being in charge.' Watching Trump's second term from abroad, O'Donnell added: 'I think it's as bad as everyone worried it would be. I believe fascism has taken a foothold in the United States.' She also criticized a new bill she claims grants Trump his own 'secret police,' with a budget 'greater than the money we give to Israel, which is already unbelievably high.' 'I look at America, and it feels tragic,' she said. 'I feel sad. I feel overwhelmingly depressed. I don't understand how we got here.'
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The Guardian
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