Hollywood shames America for electing Trump again: 'AmeriKKKa is showing,' 'deep nihilism'

“I swear to God I’m gonna f*** you up," rapper Cardi B tells fan who asks her to come to Trump inauguration. "Burn your f***ing hats motherf***er."

Published: November 6, 2024 11:04am

The nation's TV, film, music and literary stars took to their digital pulpits Wednesday to condemn the sin of Americans for making Republican Donald Trump president again, as catalogued by the New York Post.

Rapper Cardi B lashed out at a fan on Instagram Live who wrote "we need you at the Trump inauguration." The Grammy winner, whose real name is Belcalis Cephus and campaigned in Milwaukee with Democratic nominee Kamala Harris last week, responded "I swear to God I’m gonna f*** you up, get away from me" and told Trump voters to "Burn your f***ing hats motherf***er."

"America dead at 248," director Quentin Tarantino, best known for "Pulp Fiction," wrote on Instagram. Actor Alec Baldwin, whose involuntary manslaughter case was tossed for withheld evidence, simply posted a blank screen on Instagram, reminiscent of the "Blackout Tuesday" racial justice gesture.

Actress Christina Applegate, who is fighting multiple sclerosis, wrote on X that her daughter is "sobbing because her rights as a woman may be taken away" and asked followers who disagree to "please unfollow me." 

Actress Yvette Nicole Brown spurned her sweet demeanor on cult sitcom "Community" by calling Trump's win a "disgrace at a level I can’t even quantify" by "choosing a criminal. AmeriKKKa is showing out tonight," she wrote on X.

“The fact that the country would choose to destroy itself by voting in a convicted felon rapist and Nazi is a sign of deep nihilism," actor John Cusack wrote on X in a display of his high fidelity to unabashed progressivism. 

"Glee" actor Kevin McHale despaired that "Supreme Court gone for the rest of my lifetime. Ultra-conservative evangelical bigotry, xenophobia, racism is the mandate."

Author Stephen King compared American democracy to a shop that sells "beautiful but fragile items," where whoever breaks it buys it, apparently accusing more than 70 million Trump voters of ending democracy.

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