The NRCC Has Raised a Ton of Cash in 2026
The Replies to This Cenk Uygur Tweet About Ed Gallrein Were Brutal
Iran Threatens War 'Beyond the Region' if the US Resumes Attacks
The Rich Save What the Government Destroys
The AP Is Jealous of Pentagon Food Court Workers; LA Times Says a...
If Voter Fraud Doesn't Happen, Why Is Spanberger Blocking Feds From Polling Places?
A Book About the Threats to the Truth by AI Contains False Content...
Civil Liberties Group Sues Illinois Over FOID Requirement
A Bill Maher Guest Argued That China Has 'Freedom' It's Just a Different...
When Political Violence Becomes Acceptable, It Becomes Inevitable
Former Execs Plead Guilty to Helping Tech-Support Scammers Steal from Elderly Americans
3 Dead, 18 First Responders Quarantined After Exposure to Mystery Substance in New...
Moscow-Based Crime Ring Members Get Prison Time in $2B Healthcare Fraud Case
Doctor Allegedly Used $45M of Medicare Fraud Money on Trips, Cybertruck, and $12,000...
Michigan Woman Faces 20 Years After Pleading Guilty to $4.6M Child Modeling Scam
Tipsheet
Premium

Fun Trolling vs. Bad Trolling

Fun Trolling vs. Bad Trolling
Photo/Alex Brandon

I'm all for trolling the Left a bit, especially because so much of their current ethos is anti-fun, scolding, joy-crushing drudgery.  There are different levels of such activity, however, and some sense of propriety and civic virtue should always be kept in mind.  Especially when the trollers are running the federal government. At level one, there is harmless, enjoyable, and perhaps even a bit juvenile trolling.  

Elon Musk's 'name change' stunt comes to mind, inspired by a DOGE-related controversy, which generated instant classics like this:


Level two involves relatively clever trolling that strikes back in a recent culture war, with a twist:

U.S. Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth has signed a Memorandum, once again renaming Fort Liberty in North Carolina, formerly Fort Bragg, back to Fort Bragg, but instead of having the Namesake of the Base be Confederate Civil War General Braxton Bragg, it will instead be named after Private First Class Roland L. Bragg, a World War II Hero who earned the Silver Star and Purple Heart for his Exceptional Courage during the Battle of the Bulge.

'Exceptional courage' is right. My goodness: 

The new name pays tribute to Pfc. Roland L. Bragg, a World War II hero who earned the Silver Star and Purple Heart for his exceptional courage during the Battle of the Bulge. "During these hellish conditions and amidst ferocious fighting, PFC. Bragg saved a fellow soldier's life by commandeering an enemy ambulance and driving it 20 miles to transport a fellow wounded warrior to an allied hospital in Belguim," the memo states..."The directive honors the personal courage and selfless service of all those who have trained to fight and win our nation's wars, including PFC. Bragg, and is in keeping with the installation's esteemed and storied history," the memo said.

Then there's level three trolling, which crosses a line, in my mind. Pronouncing the Gulf of Mexico hereby remaned to the 'Gulf of America' is one thing; punishing a media organization for not adopting the current administration's preferred terminology is quite another. Maybe pressure the AP over its embarrassingly false, recent 'fact check' of Trump, instead of this silliness?


If the Biden administration had retaliated against, say, Fox News because the network wouldn't dutifully refer to sex change operations for minors as 'gender-affirming care,' how would conservatives have responded? If Joe Biden woke up one morning and decided the Atlantic Ocean was suddenly the Hunter Ocean, named for his criminal son, would everyone on the Right just shrug if the White House froze out outlets that didn't play along? Were media figures supposed to treat his bizarre and laughably lawless assertion of a new constitutional amendment seriously, because Biden said so? You may not find these examples analagous, but it's about the principle. Presidents don't get to dictate press style guides.  FIRE has earned credibility, through consistency, on free speech and the first amendment. Other groups, like the partisan and hypocritical American Bar Association, are much easier to write off and ignore as hacks:


Biden cited the ABA in his insane statement conjuring a made-up, illegitimate "constitutional amendment" during the lame duck session after his party lost the election.

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement