The Epstein Files reveal, Trump’s reaction
President Trump called for further disclosure regarding the Epstein case after many people requested the release of the so-called “client list.”
- President Donald Trump shared a fake video of former President Barack Obama’s true society arrest.
- The video came after National Intelligence Director Tarshi Gabbard claimed that the Obama administration manipulated information about Russian interference in the 2016 election.
- The Senate Intelligence Election Committee’s report supported the Intelligence Election findings that found Russia intervened in support of Trump in the 2016 election.
President Donald Trump has reposted a video about the true society that showed false, artificially rendered scenes of former President Barack Obama being arrested.
Social’s July 20th post was a Tiktok video by an account named “Neo8171” with a montage of elected Democratic officials saying “no one is beyond the law.” It’s unclear where the clip came from, but Democrats used the phrase when talking about Trump’s criminal cases, including arrests in Georgia and a felony conviction in New York.
The video then shows Pepe the Frog, a popular internet meme that was added to the hatred symbol database during the 2016 election.
As “YMCA” begins to play, the video shows Trump and Obama sitting in an oval office, and in the artificially rendered scene, FBI agents drag Obama out of their chair and cuff their hands behind their backs. The fake video shows Obama in an orange jumpsuit in a prison. Obama’s representative declined to comment on the fake AI video.
#arrestobama is a true social trend after Tulsi Gabbard claims
On July 18th, National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard released evidence that there was evidence that the Obama administration produced “the political intelligence news that was used as the basis for countless smears attempting to outlaw Trump’s victory” after the 2016 election.
In 2020, the Republican-led, bipartisan Senate Intelligence Election Committee supported the Intelligence Election Agency’s conclusion that it found Russia interfered in support of Trump in the 2016 presidential election. Trump has long said that his campaign investigation was a hoax.
D-Connecticut, a ranking member of Rep. Jim Himez of the intelligence news committee, said Gabbard’s new claim was “a dangerous lie.” Clinton.
On Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures, Gabbard said he intends to send his findings to the Department of Justice and the FBI for criminal referrals. Trump also shared an excerpt from Gabbard’s interview to Truth Social.
“As always been the case, President Trump was right about his biggest witch hunt in American history and his clear involvement in the Obama administration in the origins of a decade-long saga that tores the will of our people and undermines the will of our people.” “The President and his entire administration are committed to unearthing fraud and to take personal responsibility for this gross abuse of this power and blatant plot against President Trump and his supporters.”
Pepe became political during the 2016 election and became a symbol of hatred
The graffiti of the cavalry accessory frog flashing in the video is known as Pepe the Frog, and its appearance in Trump’s social media posts has previously been of interest.
Pepe the Frog began in 2005 as a character in Matt Fury’s comic series “Boy’s Club.”
The somewhat sad-looking frog had no racist or anti-Semitistic origins, but its spread through the internet as a meme led to an adaptation to the symbols of single men who felt they were on social suburbs.
“Pepe connected to the alt-right ideology because it was a response to people they called “normies,” Kim told The New York Times. “Pepe was a symbol of a disenfranchised social outcast. It was Trump’s natural audience.”
In 2016, the Prevention League added Pepe to its list of hatred symbols, but the organization points out that many uses of the meme are not yet rooted in prejudice or hatred.
“The number of Pepe memes for “Alt Right” is increasing, and tends to get worse by the controversial and controversial 2016 presidential election,” says Pepe’s ADL page. “However, it’s important to look at the use of memes only in context, as so many pepes are not inherently biased.”
Contributors: Kevin Johnson, Christine Phillips, USA Today
Kinsey Crowley is a Trump Connect reporter for the USA Today Network. Contact her at kcrowley@gannett.com. Follow her on X and Tiktok @kinseycrowley or Bluesky @kinseycrowley.bsky.social.

