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đŸ’„ BREAKING NEWS: James Carville OBLITERATES Trump on live TV, calling his signature bill “the most immoral in modern history” ⚡.CT

James Carville OBLITERATES Donald Trump on Live TV With a Brutal Reality Check

The segment started with a harmless-sounding question.
It ended like a political demolition.

James Carville — the “Ragin’ Cajun” architect of past Democratic victories — sat in the studio looking tired, sharp, and absolutely done with pretending. What began as a question about Donald Trump’s MRI quickly turned into one of the most savage, unfiltered reality checks ever delivered on live television.

The host asked about Trump’s health, referencing reports of an MRI. Trump’s own explanation — that it was just part of his routine physical and “very simple” — never sat right with Carville. He invoked a legendary cardiologist who kept a patient alive through multiple heart attacks and a transplant, and said even he would be puzzled by such a test on a supposedly “perfectly healthy” man.

It was clear: Carville wasn’t buying the story.

But that was just the warmup.


“He’s going to pardon everybody”

Carville shifted from health to something far more explosive:
pardons.

The host asked Trump whether he’d consider pardons or commutations for people in his orbit. Trump gave a characteristically vague answer — “it’s something I haven’t thought about” — but Carville wasn’t having it.

He cut in with the ferocity of someone who’s seen too many endgames:

“You ain’t seen nothing yet.
Before he leaves, he is going to pardon everybody in his administration.”

He didn’t say maybe.
He said of course he is.

Pete Navarro? Jared Kushner? Anyone in Trump’s circle?
Carville insisted Trump would wipe the slate clean on his way out the door — and quite possibly even try to pardon himself.

It didn’t sound like speculation. It sounded like a diagnosis.


“A pack of buffoons — led by a bigger buffoon”

From there, Carville zoomed out to the administration itself.

He described Trump’s inner circle as “a pack of buffoons” — people utterly out of their depth, fumbling through crises they were never prepared to handle. Then he added the kicker:

“He’s a big enough buffoon that he may

Carville’s concern wasn’t just that Trump had chosen incompetent people.
It was that Trump himself was too arrogant and too oblivious to recognize how dangerous that incompetence had become.

And for Carville, this wasn’t abstract. It was urgent:

“I am just worried sick about the next three years

He’s not going to get better. Age is like an elevator that doesn’t go down.”

The best you can hope for is staying where you are. Carville’s point? Trump isn’t staying. He’s sliding.


“The single most immoral piece of legislation
”

Then came the policy indictment.

Carville went after Trump’s legislative legacy with a comparison that stunned the panel. He called one of Trump’s signature bills — the “big beautiful” package touted as a triumph — potentially:

“The single most immoral piece of legislation to pass Congress since Jim Crow laws.”

He wasn’t joking.

He broke it down:
– A tax code tilted toward the rich and the already comfortable.
– A system that leaves 40–45% of Americans unable to pay basic bills.
– Young people who can’t imagine buying a house or affording college.
– Debt exploding by trillions while the wealthy scoop up more.

Carville’s voice stayed level, but inside the calm was fury. He painted a picture of a country split into two kinds of people:

  1. Those who have it made: savings, home, health insurance, financial cushion.
  2. And everyone else: drowning in costs, wondering how they got left behind.

He made it clear: this wasn’t “the market.”
It was political choices — Trump’s choices.


Chaos as a governing style

Carville then laid into Trump’s temperament.

He said Trump is facing adversaries like Russia and China who have something he absolutely doesn’t: patience. They plan in years. Trump reacts in minutes.

He described Trump as impulsive, chaotic — a man who improvises his way through crises and then watches everything blow up around him. Carville used humor like a scalpel, painting Trump pacing, flailing, and trying to defend decisions he barely understands himself.

The result?
Trump doesn’t look like a strongman.
He looks like a man in over his head.

Carville argued that Trump’s inability to handle pressure, criticism, or complex problems isn’t just embarrassing — it’s dangerous. It makes the country vulnerable.


Corruption, betrayal, and the “goddamn idiots”

Then Carville went for the deeper rot: corruption.

He predicted that by 2028, the dominant issue in American politics would be corruption, because what we’re seeing now is just the first whiff. He framed Trump not as a lone figure, but as the center of a network built on self-dealing and self-protection — the kind of system that needs mass pardons to survive.

Finally, he turned to Trump voters and wealthy backers who now claim to be “surprised” by what Trump has done.

His verdict was brutal:

“To the 10% who say, ‘I voted for change, I didn’t vote for this’ —
you are a goddamn idiot.”

And to the Wall Street Trump fans clutching their pearls?

“What has he ever done in his life that’s been thought out?
Nothing.”

That was the closing punch.

Carville didn’t just criticize Trump.
He dismantled him — from his health narratives to his policies, his judgment, his temperament, his corruption, and the illusions of those who enabled him.

It wasn’t a rant.
It was a full, televised autopsy of Trumpism.

And when it was over, viewers weren’t asking, “Did he go too far?”
They were asking, “How long have we ignored this?”

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