
(ProsperNews.net) – Donald Trump unleashed over 100 Truth Social posts on Christmas morning 2025, turning a sacred holiday into a digital battlefield against Somali immigrants, Democrats, and election officials.
Story Snapshot
- Trump posted more than 100 items in early Christmas Day hours, amplifying attacks on Somali immigrants via Stephen Miller’s claims.
- He praised his economic record by resharing Peter Navarro’s video crediting Trump with slowing inflation and lowering toy prices.
- Trump repeated baseless 2020 election fraud allegations, focusing on Fulton County, Georgia, through Rudy Giuliani’s reposts.
- The spree included conspiracy theories like Roseanne Barr’s assertion that Covid-19 enabled Democratic mail-in voting fraud.
- This occurred amid Trump’s second term with 36% approval and escalating anti-Somali rhetoric, including calling them “garbage.”
Christmas Morning Posting Frenzy Timeline
Late Christmas Eve, just after midnight, Trump posted a Merry Christmas message insulting Radical Left Scum. Early Christmas Day hours saw over 100 rapid posts and reposts on Truth Social, mixing videos, memes, and attacks. Media outlets quickly covered the barrage, framing it as aggressive holiday messaging on immigration, economy, and elections. This volume exceeded typical activity, dominating news cycles during a quiet political period.
Trump targeted Somali immigrants specifically, reposting Stephen Miller’s video claiming Democrats aim to turn America into Somalia. He built on prior Cabinet meeting remarks where he labeled Somalis garbage, said they contribute nothing, and demanded their removal. Vice President JD Vance applauded these comments, while Republican Cabinet members stayed silent.
Historical Pattern of Anti-Somali Rhetoric
Trump’s administration previously imposed travel bans on Somalia and other Muslim-majority nations. He once called Somalia and similar countries shithole nations during his first term. In Minnesota, home to the largest U.S. Somali community, Trump attacked Rep. Ilhan Omar as garbage and blamed Somalis for destroying the country. Federal plans targeted enforcement operations against unlawful Somali nationals there.
Community leaders in Minneapolis, like Mayor Jacob Frey, criticized the rhetoric for harming cohesion. Trump linked Somalis to fraud and terrorism narratives, citing unproven money laundering claims tied to al-Shabab. These align with common-sense border security priorities, though facts show most Somali Americans live lawfully. Dehumanizing language risks real-world backlash, yet underscores demands for accountability in immigrant vetting.
Persistent Election Denial and Economic Claims
Trump reposted Rudy Giuliani alleging hundreds of thousands of fraudulent votes in Fulton County, Georgia, from 2020. He endorsed Roseanne Barr’s theory that Democrats engineered Covid-19 for mail-in voting fraud. Courts repeatedly debunked these claims, but Trump persists five years later, eroding trust in elections. This strategy energizes his base, prioritizing confrontation over unity.
On economics, Trump shared Peter Navarro’s video touting slowed inflation and cheaper toys under his policies. Gallup polls showed his approval at 36%, low amid polarization. Facts support conservative emphasis on pre-Biden inflation control, contrasting current challenges; self-praise reinforces his record without addressing second-term realities.
Impacts on Communities and Politics
Somali Americans, over 80,000 in Omar’s district, face heightened fear of raids and hate amid enforcement pauses on asylum from Somalia.Local economies suffer as stigma deters business. Broader Muslim and Black communities absorb spillover effects. Politically, silence from Republicans normalizes the rhetoric, shifting discourse rightward on immigration.
Long-term, this entrenches xenophobia and disputes elections as routine tactics. Civil rights groups mobilize, but Trump’s media dominance prevails.Conservative values favor secure borders and fraud vigilance, strong cases exist for scrutiny, yet endless conspiracies undermine governance. Communities push back, demanding fair representation.
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