You don’t just wake up one day and become the kind of person who defends child rape.
You don’t slowly evolve into someone who cheers while a one-year-old is tear-gassed, or hears a man brag about grabbing women “by the pussy” and thinks, “Well, at least he tells it like it is.”
That kind of moral decay doesn’t erupt spontaneously. It simmers. It spreads like rot behind polished teeth. It waits, festering, just beneath the veneer of civility. It’s a quiet, crawling infection that only needed one thing: permission.
And that’s the trick, isn’t it? That was always Trump’s singular skill. He didn’t teach them hate. He gave them the greenlight. He told them the filth in their hearts wasn’t shameful. It was sacred.
This isn’t just about Megyn Kelly. Or Marco Rubio. Or JD Vance or Lindsey Graham. This is Ma and Pa MAGA. This is the base. This is Becky Sue reposting memes about Jewish space lasers and calling it “research.” This is Grandpa Jack screaming about groomers while ignoring the convicted sex offender at his church.
Trump didn’t change them. He clarified them.
For Megyn Kelly, the draw is power. Relevance. Camera angles. Access. She doesn’t have beliefs. She has lighting setups. She isn’t guided by principle, but by proximity to influence. Her convictions are whatever gets booked.
But for the base, it was never about power. It was about volume. They didn’t want policy. They wanted a megaphone. They wanted to scream slurs and call it speech. To be proudly, publicly repulsive and never face a single goddamn consequence.
That’s what Trump gave them. He gave them the nerve.
He stared into the hollowed-out husks where character should have lived and told them their corruption was courage. That their misogyny was tradition. That their racism was realism. That their bigotry was bravery. That their most feral instincts were just patriotism with a facelift. And they swallowed it like gospel.
Most of my Republican friends left. They saw the shift — the rot — the slow swap of principle for populist cruelty. They saw the party become a bonfire of its own values, and they refused to warm their hands by it. They weren’t built for this moral sewer. They didn’t want to be part of a movement that traded fiscal conservatism for fascist cosplay and bloodlust in a red hat.
But the ones who stayed? They stayed because this wasn’t a betrayal. It was a reveal. They’d always been like this. They just needed someone to tell them it was safe to say it out loud.
And what Trump did for Megyn Kelly, he did for every last one of them.
His fanatical foot soldiers. His grievance-drunk groupies. His simpering sycophants. His ankle-grabbing lackeys. His clout-chasers with shriveled spines and Facebook obsessions. His flag-humpers dry-humping the Constitution between unhinged rants. His pearl-clutchers screeching about pronouns while their own kids won’t speak to them.
His wannabe warriors playing patriot in plate carriers they bought with a veterans discount they didn’t earn, stomping through Starbucks like they’re storming Fallujah, fueled by Monster energy, delusion, and decades of unresolved daddy issues.
You don’t laugh at kids in cages unless some part of you always thought they belonged there. You don’t call women “dogs” and mean it unless you’ve always seen them as beneath you. You don’t shrug at rape, mock the disabled, or cheer as brown bodies are brutalized unless that rot was already alive — festering in saved memes, barstool rants, and prayer circles, tucked behind polite nods and Sunday smiles.
They used to whisper those thoughts. Now they scream them in public and call it “owning the libs,” like cruelty is a credential.
This isn’t a transformation. It’s a confession.
They needed each other. The base and the elites. The pitchforks and the podiums. The shouting masses and the suited frauds.
The base supplied the fury. The resentment. The hunger to hurt. The elites packaged it, polished it, and sold it back to them as gospel. A feedback loop of filth. One roared for vengeance, the other handed them the script. One foamed at the mouth, the other found the cameras. Together, they built a whole apparatus of rot.
The rank-and-file got their permission structure. The pundits got their panels. The Facebook uncles got their slurs back. The failed politicians got booked on primetime. The PTA bigots got their moral panic. The aspiring authoritarians got their talking points.
It wasn’t a movement. It was a marketplace. A symbiosis of moral sickness. They fed on each other. They radicalized each other. And now, they’ll fall together.
There will be no separation in the history books. No footnotes for context. No asterisks for ambition. Whether you were screaming at a school board or smirking in a Senate hearing, you will wear this era like a second skin — and it will stink.
And now, Trump’s name isn’t just swirling around the Epstein scandal. It’s trapped inside it. The notes, the photos, the emails, the birthdays, the blackmail, the receipts — they’re not trickling out, they’re flooding. It’s relentless. A daily drumbeat of revelations.
The truth is circling him like vultures over carrion. Closer. Louder. Hungrier.
Maybe now, finally, some of them are starting to sweat. Maybe they feel the heat of the thing they tethered themselves to. Maybe they see the stink they can’t scrub off.
And they should. Because a reckoning is coming.
The Epstein story isn’t going away. It isn’t slowing down. And every one of them who embraced this, sanitized it, emboldened it, excused it — every anchor, every donor, every dead-eyed coward in Congress — they’re going to have to answer.
They don’t want forgiveness yet. But they will. Because the consequences are coming. And when they do, these people will beg for redemption without remorse. They’ll want a rebrand without reckoning. But history doesn’t owe them clarity. And we don’t owe them a fucking thing.
They weren’t duped. They weren’t dragged. They weren’t dazed.
They were eager. They were laughing. They were loud. They were grotesque.
And that’s how they’ll be remembered.
Fucked by the fickle finger of fate, tethered for eternity to the snarling, disease-ridden id of a washed-up strongman. Shackled to his vitriol, his violence, his fraud, his filth. Stained forever by the moment they chose to follow him straight into the abyss.
This should be disqualifying. The end of every show, every grift, every seat at every table. Because standards still fucking matter. Because shame is a civic duty. Because we don’t owe moral bottom-feeders a platform, a paycheck, or a place in public life.
Let them grovel. Let them whimper about fairness. Let them watch people’s eyes shift away in silence, watch doors close without explanation, watch their invitations dry up and their handshakes disappear. Let them feel what it is to be unwelcome. To be radioactive. To be finally, fucking irrelevant.
We see them. We know them. This is who they are. This is who they’ve always been. And I don’t give a single, solitary fuck if they stay that way until the day they die.
They belong in the fucking shadows, gagged by their own disgrace, stripped of power, pissing themselves in the dark.
And that is exactly where they will stay.
