Liberal commentators predictably hammered Sarah Palin, Ted Nugent, and Kid Rock over their trolling photo in front of Hillary Clinton’s White House portrait on Wednesday.
The left’s reaction on Twitter to the dinner guests of President Donald Trump varied from a lecturing tone to straight fire-breathing.
Take your fucking hats off https://t.co/elt5iatojm
— Justin Miller (@justinjm1) April 20, 2017
CNN’s Ana Navarro asserted on Friday that the trio’s pose was “immature, childish, foolish, and to be expected from that crowd.”
The pundit warned that “one day, there’s going to be a picture of Melania Trump…and a picture of Donald Trump hanging on those walls; and folks are going to go and stick their tongue out at it. And people are going to say, well, but do you remember when Sarah Palin posed in front of Hillary Clinton, making fun of her?”
Navarro also underlined that “there’s this…gravitas to the White House. There’s this respect for the place. There’s
Certainly, the three entertainers are open for criticism for their carefree attitude in the historical residence. However, they were not the first to indulge in such raffishness. Surprise, surprise, it was leftist activists who set the precedent, and they did much more than “stick their tongue” at an official White House portrait.
Back in June 2012, then-President Barack Obama held the first-ever gay pride event at the White House. Philadelphia magazine reported at the time that two of the invited guests for the reception — Matthew Hart and Zoe Strauss — shamelessly made their feelings known about former President Ronald Reagan by flipping off his portrait.
Hart maintained a defiant attitude in his interview with the magazine:
“Yeah, fuck Reagan,” reiterates Hart one week after the reception. “Ronald Reagan has blood on his hands. The man was in the White House as AIDS exploded, and he was happy to see plenty of gay men and queer people die. He was a murderous fool, and I have no problem saying so. Don’t invite me back. I don’t care.”
To their credit, the Obama administration issued a statement condemning Hart and Strauss’s vulgar conduct: “We certainly expect that all attendees conduct themselves in a respectful manner….These individuals clearly did not. Behavior like this doesn’t belong anywhere, least of all in the White House.”
Nugent admitted to the New York
[image via screengrab]