MockingbirdNews Logo

Mockingbird News

REAL NEWS NEVER FELT FUNNIER

Categories

The Gyst
Loading...

MAGA Civil War: When America’s Finest Turned Into Meme-Warring Factions

MAGA Civil War: When America’s Finest Turned Into Meme-Warring Factions
Photo by CHUTTERSNAP on Unsplash

KEY POINTS

  • Last December, MAGA's America First base clashed with Elon Musk allies over H-1B visas, igniting anti-Indian racism and culture wars.
  • In June, MAGA split over US-Israel bombings of Iran’s nuclear sites, with Tucker Carlson-led isolationists opposing pro-Israel hawks.
  • September’s assassination of Charlie Kirk and November’s Tucker Carlson-Nick Fuentes interview triggered bitter feuds and staff defections at Heritage Foundation.

In 2025, MAGA went from Trump's shadow dictatorship to a chaotic potluck of outrage. Starting last Christmas, Vivek Ramaswamy got dunked on for praising excellence over 'America's mediocrity,' triggering anti-Indian racism—because nothing says unity like xenophobic tweet avalanches! June brought a 12-day US-Israel bombing spree in Iran that split MAGA between holy warriors and Tucker Carlson isolationist cheerleaders, sparking antisemitic flames hotter than Tinder in July. July’s DOJ memo on Epstein killing hopes for the 'client list' buried every MAGA expose dream, leading to hard-right diva Marjorie Taylor Greene's surprise exit. September's plot twist? Charlie Kirk got assassinated (no, seriously), turning MAGA’s coalition glue radioactive with Candace Owens conspiracy theories blaming Israel and cover-ups. Then in November, Tucker Carlton’s cozy chat with Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes sent the Heritage Foundation into meltdown-ville, spawning a mass staff defection to Mike Pence. At AmericaFest’s 30,000-strong war zone, VP J.D. Vance played peacemaker (with 84% straw poll love), but his refusal to pick a side has Cruz itching sparks and Fuentes fans howling over Vance's 'techy' interracial marriage. So congrats MAGA, you've turned a movement into a thirteen-faction Twilight Zone episode with more infighting than a family Thanksgiving dinner, but with less turkey and more Twitter wars.

Share the Story

(1 of 3)
Swipe to navigate

Source: Axios | Published: 12/23/2025 | Author: Zachary Basu