In a moment that clearly shows the mess, poor judgment, and big risk of Donald Trump’s second term as president, America saw the 79-year-old leader accidentally push a post calling for his own impeachment—while at the same time blaming members of Congress for “sedition” and sharing posts that called for their execution.
Yes, this really happened.
Dementia Don really messed up big time.
Trump, already deep into a crazy meltdown on his social media platform, was getting really worked up about six Democratic lawmakers who made a video reminding military and intelligence workers that they don’t have to follow illegal orders.
That’s just basic law, but Trump, who thinks loyalty means doing whatever he says, saw it as a personal attack.
So he tried to attack them, but instead, he wrongly promoted an account named “Impeach Trump a 3rd Time.”
You can’t make this up.
The president posted a jumbled mix of screenshots attacking Senator Mark Kelly, but the image he uploaded clearly showed the name of the account calling for his own impeachment.
Worse, by sharing a clip where Kelly said, “You can refuse illegal orders,” Trump ended up spreading the exact message he was trying to stop.
If he had looked closer, he would have seen the account had posts with burning MAGA hats and pro-Gavin Newsom memes.
But no—Grandpa just posted in anger and hit “send.”
X users jumped on it immediately: “Uh oh.
Trump accidentally boosted an anti-Trump account called ‘Impeach Trump a 3rd Time!’” one user wrote. Another said, “Grandpa has trouble reading.”
But while Trump was making a mess online, his words weren’t harmless at all.
Last week, Trump called Kelly and five other Democrats “seditionists,” saying their actions were “punishable by death.”
He even shared a message saying “hang them.” That’s not just talk. That’s a real threat of violence.
Even now, Trump claims he wasn’t calling for their execution, while still saying they’re in “serious trouble.”
And his supporters are rushing to show they’re loyal.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, one of Trump’s most extreme picks, made things worse by threatening to call Mark Kelly back for active duty and charge him with “sedition,” a crime that could lead to the death penalty under military law.
Kelly found out about it the same way we did: through Trump’s social media rants.
“Arrested, hanged, and put to death,” Kelly said, repeating exactly what Trump had said.
That’s what the U.S. president has publicly suggested for a sitting senator and former astronaut.
Let that sink in.
And because one crazy moment wasn’t enough, Trump spent the rest of the morning attacking his own party.
But first, he praised Rep. Tim Burchett for being “GREAT today on Fox & Friends!”
Except Burchett wasn’t even on the show. Fox replayed an old clip—and Trump didn’t notice.
Critics called it another “confused senior moment” from a man already showing signs of losing it.
Then he turned on Senator Rand Paul, calling him a “sick Wacko” and a “nasty little guy.”
Nothing says “strong leadership” like turning your own party into a list of targets.
Meanwhile, the White House stays quiet.
Maybe because even they can’t spin this away.
The bottom line is that a confused and angry Trump accidentally spread his own impeachment message, threatened elected officials with death, gave the green light for military action, and mixed up old TV clips with real news—all before lunch.
America deserves better than a man who can’t tell friend from foe, lawful dissent from sedition, or a rerun from the day’s news.
This isn’t just being bad at his job.
It’s a real danger—and the whole world is watching.
