Reporter Runs Out of Fucks Regarding Trump
This is what journalism is supposed to look like.
MS Now White House correspondent Vaughn Hillyard recently stunned viewers with a broadcast that finally said what so many have been thinking.
He didn’t tiptoe around Trump’s latest outrage. He called it out for what it was: a deliberate act of cruelty, not an isolated slip.
The immediate trigger was Trump’s grotesque Truth Social post about the murder of Hollywood legend Rob Reiner and his wife Michele, who were found stabbed to death in their Los Angeles home on December 14.
Hillyard’s response was raw and unfiltered. He accused Trump of showing “a disregard for others’ well-being, their safety, their humanity.”
But he didn’t stop there. He made it clear that this wasn’t a one-off. It was the latest in a long, ugly pattern that the media has been too polite to call out.
A Systematic Catalog of Cruelty
Hillyard didn’t just vent. He laid out a damning record of Trump’s calculated indifference. He listed incident after incident where Trump refused to show even basic decency to those he saw as adversaries.
Trump “made no comment or condolence at the passing of Vice President Dick Cheney,” ignored “the assassination of Melissa Hortman,” and stayed silent after a police officer in Georgia was killed.
When a gunman fired 180 rounds at CDC headquarters, Trump never acknowledged the officer’s death or the shooting.
The pattern extended to international tragedies. When journalist Jamal Khashoggi was murdered, Trump dismissed him as “a controversial man” instead of expressing outrage or sympathy.
Even Trump’s own allies weren’t spared. Hillyard pointed out that Trump didn’t call Mike Pence for days after the January 6 attack. When Marjorie Taylor Greene received threats, Trump brushed them off, saying “nobody cares about Marjorie Taylor Greene.
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The Stunning Double Standard
Hillyard’s critique hit hardest when he exposed Trump’s selective empathy. When conservative commentator Charlie Kirk was assassinated, Trump called it “sick and deranged for anyone to celebrate” and demanded consequences for those who spoke negatively about Kirk.
The contrast was glaring. Trump only shows compassion when it suits him or his allies. For everyone else, especially critics, he offers mockery and contempt.
This double standard isn’t just hypocrisy. Hillyard made clear it’s a strategy - dehumanize opponents, protect friends, and use tragedy as a weapon.
The reporter’s frustration was palpable. He described this as “another echo of what has been an increasing type of response in terms of lack of empathy coming out of this White House.”
The Media Must Wake Up
Hillyard’s segment stands out because it should not be an outlier. The media landscape is often too timid to call Trump’s cruel behavior what it is.
Reporters normalize the abnormal by treating Trump’s outbursts as just another news cycle. Hillyard refused to play that game.
He looked into the camera and called out the “disregard and a lack of sensitivity” for what it truly is. More journalists need to abandon the safety of neutrality when facing such open malevolence.
Ignoring the cruelty only enables it. Hillyard showed that it is possible to tell the truth without sugarcoating it, and the rest of the press corps needs to take notes.
Hillyard’s remarks begin at the one-minute and 24-second mark, but the remainder of the broadcast is equally interesting.
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What a difference between 2 presidents. Trump in 2025
And President Obama in 2016.
https://abcnews.go.com/US/video/obama-addresses-mass-shooting-15th-time-term-39817570
I'll tell you one thing. I will never offer my condolences to anyone in the trump family when this mother *ucker dies.