#Yikes 1. “He kills the people of Gaza.” • This refers to U.S. support for Israel’s operations in Gaza under Trump’s administration. In November 2025, the UN Security Council endorsed Trump’s “Comprehensive Plan to End the Gaza Conflict,” which involved disarming Hamas, establishing a U.S.-led transitional board, and deploying an international stabilization force.  Proponents argue this led to a ceasefire and redevelopment efforts, aligning with Trump’s “peace president” narrative. Critics, however, accuse the plan of enabling continued Israeli military actions that resulted in civilian casualties, framing U.S. involvement (via arms sales and diplomatic backing) as complicit in “killing” Gazans. Left-leaning media and human rights groups have highlighted this as a failure to prioritize humanitarian concerns. 2. “He attacks Yemen.” • This points to U.S. military strikes against the Houthis (Ansar Allah) in Yemen. On January 22, 2025, Trump redesignated the Houthis as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO), reversing Biden’s delisting, and authorized airstrikes to counter their attacks on Red Sea shipping.  The administration expanded these into broader “shadow wars,” with reports of more airstrikes in Yemen than under Biden’s entire term.  Supporters claim this restored deterrence against Iran-backed groups; detractors say it escalated a humanitarian crisis without congressional approval. 3. “He attacks Iran.” • A direct reference to U.S. military actions against Iran, including strikes on nuclear facilities during the “12-Day War” between Israel and Iran in June 2025. Trump ordered U.S. airstrikes on June 22, 2025, which damaged Iran’s nuclear infrastructure and were praised bipartisans as preventing a nuclear-armed Iran.   The administration reimposed “maximum pressure” sanctions and withdrew from inspection agreements.  While Trump framed this as “peace through strength,” critics argue it risked broader regional war and ignored diplomatic paths, with some experts calling the strikes an overreach.  4. “He attacks Venezuela.” • This alludes to U.S. operations against the Maduro regime, including deadly strikes on boats suspected of drug trafficking near Venezuela in 2025, and designating Venezuelan groups as terrorists.   Trump also facilitated the release of opposition hostages in February 2025.  Defenders see this as combating narco-terrorism and supporting democracy; opponents view it as unauthorized “shadow wars” that heightened tensions in Latin America without clear strategic gains.  5. “He removes Mohammed al-Jolani from the terrorist list.” • Mohammed al-Jolani (also known as Ahmad al-Shara) is the leader of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a Syrian group with al-Qaeda roots. In December 2025, the Trump administration engaged with him, granting “political legitimacy” during visits and potentially delisting aspects of HTS from terrorist designations to stabilize Syria post-Assad.  This was part of broader redesignations of groups like the Muslim Brotherhood and cartels as FTOs.  Supporters argue it was pragmatic for countering Iran; critics blast it as whitewashing a former al-Qaeda affiliate, risking empowerment of extremists.  6. “He threatens Mexico.” • Trump designated Mexican drug cartels as FTOs in 2025 and threatened military action, including potential invasions or strikes, to address border security and fentanyl flows.   This echoed his first-term rhetoric but escalated with executive orders.  Pro-Trump sources praise it as tough on crime; others see it as inflammatory and a violation of sovereignty. 7. “He threatens Colombia.” • In early 2025, Trump threatened economic sanctions on Colombia for refusing U.S. military planes carrying deported migrants, nearly “shoving Colombia off an economic cliff.”  He also designated Colombian crime groups as terrorists.  Amid Colombia’s internal violence and “total peace” policy failures, this was defended as anti-cartel pressure but criticized as bullying a neighbor. 8. “He says Canada should become the 51st state of the United States.” • Trump publicly insisted Canada become the 51st state in early 2025, alongside threats to annex Greenland and the Panama Canal.   This was dismissed by some as bluster or humor, but it drew international ridicule and strained relations. Supporters frame it as leverage in trade talks; critics call it imperialistic. 9. “He renames the Department of Defense the Department of War.” • This may be exaggerated or satirical, as no direct evidence shows a formal rename. Historically, the U.S. War Department was reorganized into the Department of Defense in 1947. Trump has used aggressive rhetoric (e.g., “peace through strength”), but this could stem from proposals or memes amplifying his militaristic style. No confirmed action in sources. 10. “He intensifies nuclear testing.” • No evidence of resumed full-scale U.S. nuclear testing (banned since 1992 under the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty, though unratified). However, Trump’s strikes on Iran’s nuclear program and suspicions of China’s low-yield tests have fueled debates on U.S. readiness.   Critics fear his policies could erode non-proliferation norms, potentially leading allies like Poland or Japan to seek their own nukes.  This point might be hyperbolic, referring to intensified simulations or threats. 11. “But he shamelessly claims that I deserve the Nobel Peace Prize.” • #Trump has actively campaigned for the #Nobel #Peace #Prize in 2025-2026, citing actions like the #Gaza plan and #Iran strikes as achievements.   He was nominated multiple times in his first term (e.g., for Israel-UAE deals) and has echoed those claims. Supporters highlight “100 foreign policy wins” like Houthi designations. ✌️ https://image.nostr.build/5ad431623cecd46e4219f59be2311a6e3932bac157a6f99457c16dbfd0fc7736.jpg