A recent clip from ABC’s The View showed Whoopi Goldberg doubling down on a wildly irresponsible comparison of Donald Trump to Adolf Hitler, leaving the studio audience visibly stunned. The moment, replayed across conservative channels and on Dave Rubin’s program, captured the cultural left’s habit of turning political disagreement into moral absolutes. When television hosts resort to Hitler analogies, they aren’t debating policy — they’re trying to cancel opponents by any means necessary.
This kind of rhetoric is more than sloppy; it is dangerous. Branding mainstream political figures with the worst evils of history cheapens real atrocities and signals to fringe actors that violence and demonization are acceptable tools of political combat. Hardworking Americans who want safer streets and secure borders deserve serious debate, not melodramatic moralizing designed to inflame.
Dave Rubin was right to call out the spectacle for what it is: a performative obsession from elites who have lost touch with the concerns of ordinary citizens. Rubin’s rebuttal wasn’t merely about defending Trump — it was about defending the idea that political disputes should be fought with facts and ballots, not character assassination. Conservatives have watched for years as the left weaponizes language to silence opposition, and moments like this show why that tactic must be exposed.
The View’s theatrics also underscore a broader media malaise where hyperbole replaces reporting. When anchors and hosts compare American presidents to totalitarians, they abandon responsibility and embrace hysteria. The payoff is ratings, but the cost is civic stability, as tribal fever replaces reasoned judgment in the public square.
ABC and advertisers should be called to account for platforming this kind of extremism under the guise of commentary. If networks want credibility, they must stop tolerating hosts who substitute shrill accusations for honest analysis. The public has the power to demand better programming; sponsors and viewers can make clear that reckless, dehumanizing rhetoric has consequences.
For conservatives, the takeaway is simple: stay engaged, keep pushing back, and refuse to accept the left’s moral grandstanding as legitimate discourse. Vote, speak up at town halls, and support independent media that holds everyone to a standard of facts and fairness. America is stronger when its debates are vigorous but honest, not when they collapse into melodrama and slander.
Patriots who love this country should be unafraid to challenge media elites and expose their hypocrisy at every turn. The choice is ours — reclaim the conversation or let the culture of outrage win by default. We will not be intimidated, mischaracterized, or silenced by talk-show theatrics dressed up as moral clarity.






