“I Feel Stupid” Trump Loyalists Say Every Promise Was a Lie Just to Win Their Vote

Number Six

Chief Exit Officer (CEO)

When millions of Americans voted Trump into office in 2024, they believed one thing above everything else: he would not drag the United States into another foreign war. That promise is now broken. Supporters who once cheered Donald Trump are now saying they voted Trump and now regret it — because the man they trusted with their votes has betrayed every promise he made.

Contents

The moment Trump announced airstrikes on Iran alongside Israel, something cracked open inside his own movement. This was not a small policy adjustment. This was a full-scale war, complete with bombs falling on a girls’ elementary school in southern Iran that killed at least 148 people — most of them children, according to The New York Times. The Iranian Red Crescent reported more than 200 deaths overall, a number still rising. Three American service members were killed. Five more were badly wounded.

And where was Donald Trump when the bombs dropped? He was on the dance floor at his Mar-a-Lago resort, dancing to “God Bless the USA” at a private gala.

His Own Base Said “No”

Tucker Carlson spent years arguing that Donald Trump was the only leader who would keep America out of pointless wars. After the Iran strikes, Carlson called the attacks “absolutely disgusting and evil.” He told ABC News correspondent Jonathan Karl: “This is going to shuffle the deck in a profound way.” Carlson had championed Trump in 2024 on the very basis that his Democratic opponents were the warmongers. Now, the man he promoted was running a war of his own.

Comedian and Trump endorser Dave Smith said it plainly: “By launching this illegal war of aggression against Iran, Donald Trump has betrayed the American people and his own base, none of whom wanted this.” Andrew Tate, who received backing from Trump’s own administration, posted one line in all caps on X: “NOBODY WANTS THIS WAR.” Even Blake Neff, a producer for Charlie Kirk’s show, shared reactions from his right-leaning friends that included: “F*** this,” “This is extremely depressing,” and “Never voting in a national election again.”

These are not liberal critics. These are people who voted for Trump. And now they feel lied to.

The Promise He Broke

Trump made this pledge in plain language at a 2024 campaign rally: “I can tell you, you’re not gonna have a war with me.” His pitch was simple — Hillary Clinton wanted war, Kamala Harris wanted war, and the Democratic Party had become, in his supporters’ words, “war hawks.” Trump was the peace candidate. That was the deal.

Now that deal is gone. Curt Mills, executive director of The American Conservative, told Vanity Fair that Trump’s “core appeal” in 2024 was an “anti-globalist, anti-imperial” message. “Now it just seems overt,” Mills said. “The administration serves rich people and does wars for foreign countries.” He added that Trump “could be impeached for any of these things” — and that Republicans could realistically lose the Senate in 2026.

Rich Baris, a pro-Trump pollster, wrote on X: “No, sorry, I don’t think regime change suddenly became good policy or politics just because Donald Trump did it.”

The Cabinet’s Awkward Silence

Some of Trump’s closest allies are now standing in an impossible position. Tulsi Gabbard once sold T-shirts that read “No War With Iran.” Robert F. Kennedy Jr. endorsed Trump specifically because he said he wanted to “end the grip of the neocons on U.S. foreign policy.” Vice President JD Vance published a Wall Street Journal op-ed in 2023 titled “Trump’s Best Foreign Policy? Not Starting Any Wars” — and told an interviewer in 2024 that Kamala Harris was “sleepwalking us into war with Iran.”

None of them are talking now. The silence is deafening.

“MAGA Is Me”

Trump’s response to the backlash was dismissive. Just as he did when his Venezuela war drew criticism from his base, Trump simply redefined what MAGA means. “MAGA loves it,” he said. “MAGA loves everything I do. MAGA is me.”

That may be Trump’s most honest statement yet — because it reveals the core lie at the heart of his movement. MAGA was never a policy platform. It was a cult of personality. The voters who thought they were voting for “America First” were actually voting for whatever Donald Trump decided to do next.

And what Trump decided to do next was start a war.

The Cost Is Already Here

Gas prices have hit $3.10 per gallon nationally — up 30 cents since January — with economists at Moody’s Analytics warning they could hit $3.50 if the conflict drags on. A CNN-SSRS poll shows roughly six in ten Americans disapprove of the Iran strikes. The war powers debate is consuming Capitol Hill, with even Senate Republicans warning Trump about expanding the mission.

Meanwhile, six American service members are dead. Hundreds of Iranians are dead. And a girls’ school in southern Iran was bombed into rubble.

The people who voted Trump in 2024 because he promised peace are now watching the news and seeing the results of that vote play out in real time. As one Trump supporter’s reaction, shared by Blake Neff, put it most honestly of all: “This is highly demotivating.”
 

When millions of Americans voted Trump into office in 2024, they believed one thing above everything else: he would not drag the United States into another foreign war. That promise is now broken. Supporters who once cheered Donald Trump are now saying they voted Trump and now regret it — because the man they trusted with their votes has betrayed every promise he made.

Contents

The moment Trump announced airstrikes on Iran alongside Israel, something cracked open inside his own movement. This was not a small policy adjustment. This was a full-scale war, complete with bombs falling on a girls’ elementary school in southern Iran that killed at least 148 people — most of them children, according to The New York Times. The Iranian Red Crescent reported more than 200 deaths overall, a number still rising. Three American service members were killed. Five more were badly wounded.

And where was Donald Trump when the bombs dropped? He was on the dance floor at his Mar-a-Lago resort, dancing to “God Bless the USA” at a private gala.

His Own Base Said “No”

Tucker Carlson spent years arguing that Donald Trump was the only leader who would keep America out of pointless wars. After the Iran strikes, Carlson called the attacks “absolutely disgusting and evil.” He told ABC News correspondent Jonathan Karl: “This is going to shuffle the deck in a profound way.” Carlson had championed Trump in 2024 on the very basis that his Democratic opponents were the warmongers. Now, the man he promoted was running a war of his own.

Comedian and Trump endorser Dave Smith said it plainly: “By launching this illegal war of aggression against Iran, Donald Trump has betrayed the American people and his own base, none of whom wanted this.” Andrew Tate, who received backing from Trump’s own administration, posted one line in all caps on X: “NOBODY WANTS THIS WAR.” Even Blake Neff, a producer for Charlie Kirk’s show, shared reactions from his right-leaning friends that included: “F*** this,” “This is extremely depressing,” and “Never voting in a national election again.”

These are not liberal critics. These are people who voted for Trump. And now they feel lied to.

The Promise He Broke

Trump made this pledge in plain language at a 2024 campaign rally: “I can tell you, you’re not gonna have a war with me.” His pitch was simple — Hillary Clinton wanted war, Kamala Harris wanted war, and the Democratic Party had become, in his supporters’ words, “war hawks.” Trump was the peace candidate. That was the deal.

Now that deal is gone. Curt Mills, executive director of The American Conservative, told Vanity Fair that Trump’s “core appeal” in 2024 was an “anti-globalist, anti-imperial” message. “Now it just seems overt,” Mills said. “The administration serves rich people and does wars for foreign countries.” He added that Trump “could be impeached for any of these things” — and that Republicans could realistically lose the Senate in 2026.

Rich Baris, a pro-Trump pollster, wrote on X: “No, sorry, I don’t think regime change suddenly became good policy or politics just because Donald Trump did it.”

The Cabinet’s Awkward Silence

Some of Trump’s closest allies are now standing in an impossible position. Tulsi Gabbard once sold T-shirts that read “No War With Iran.” Robert F. Kennedy Jr. endorsed Trump specifically because he said he wanted to “end the grip of the neocons on U.S. foreign policy.” Vice President JD Vance published a Wall Street Journal op-ed in 2023 titled “Trump’s Best Foreign Policy? Not Starting Any Wars” — and told an interviewer in 2024 that Kamala Harris was “sleepwalking us into war with Iran.”

None of them are talking now. The silence is deafening.

“MAGA Is Me”

Trump’s response to the backlash was dismissive. Just as he did when his Venezuela war drew criticism from his base, Trump simply redefined what MAGA means. “MAGA loves it,” he said. “MAGA loves everything I do. MAGA is me.”

That may be Trump’s most honest statement yet — because it reveals the core lie at the heart of his movement. MAGA was never a policy platform. It was a cult of personality. The voters who thought they were voting for “America First” were actually voting for whatever Donald Trump decided to do next.

And what Trump decided to do next was start a war.

The Cost Is Already Here

Gas prices have hit $3.10 per gallon nationally — up 30 cents since January — with economists at Moody’s Analytics warning they could hit $3.50 if the conflict drags on. A CNN-SSRS poll shows roughly six in ten Americans disapprove of the Iran strikes. The war powers debate is consuming Capitol Hill, with even Senate Republicans warning Trump about expanding the mission.

Meanwhile, six American service members are dead. Hundreds of Iranians are dead. And a girls’ school in southern Iran was bombed into rubble.

The people who voted Trump in 2024 because he promised peace are now watching the news and seeing the results of that vote play out in real time. As one Trump supporter’s reaction, shared by Blake Neff, put it most honestly of all: “This is highly demotivating.”
If Trump isn't lying, then he's probably not speaking at all. Even in his first run for president, he lied more than anyone I could name. Even about the stupidest things, he'd still lie. A promise from him is less useful than literal shit.

We are in a bizarro world where the farmer keeps falling for the boy who cried wolf. If idiots had to take a bite of the cow patty that Trump told them was chocolate cake, I don't feel sorry for them. I do feel sorry for the thinkers out there who have to take one for team stupid, though.
 
View: https://x.com/EricLDaugh/status/2029735205234258114


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