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What the bleep? | Fox News

“Blasphemy is a sort of fool.” – President Teddy Roosevelt

“On time. Don't criticize your teammates. Don't use blasphemy.” – UCLA 10 Time NCAA Basketball Champion Head Coach John Wood

“I'm being accused of being vulgar. I say it's a bull –” – Film director Mel Brooks

Will members of the Congress place a curse?

GOP officials returned to Congress after eight years of break

House of Representatives. (Chip Somode Villa)

of course.

Democrats have not made a fuss about President Trump and Elon Musk.

They are cussing President Trump and Elon Musk.

It is customary for members of Congress to express their opinions about the President of the United States.

They may demand concrete steps on domestic policy. Healthcare issues. We propose an approach to dealing with China or the Middle East. It could be an initiative to improve the economy, strengthen employment, and increase productivity.

But Congressional Democrats have very specific ideas about President Trump – and what should happen to him. And in some cases musk.

Comer, Lee will deploy bilateral bills to quickly tackle Trump's government reorganization plan through Congress

“f — Donald Trump and Elon Musk,” said Capitol Hill Larry Rep. Mark Pokan, for the union representing many federal employees.

Rep. Donald Norcross, Dn.J., spoke about working as a construction worker and electrician for international election workers in Atlantic City.

Rep. Donald Norcross (D-NJ) listens at hearings called "Seeking accountability: Stopping anti-Semitic college chaos" Before the House Committee on Education at Capitol Hill and the Workforce on May 23, 2024 in Washington, DC.

Rep. Donald Norlos (D-NJ) told the House of Representatives Board of Education and the workforce in Washington, D.C. on May 23, 2024, “Announcement of Accountability: Stop Anti-Semitic College Chaos.” He listens at this hearing. (Michael A. McCoy)

“There was a guy called Donald Trump. We fought him for 10 years,” Norcross said. “I'm from Jersey, so we'll talk a little differently. I say I'm f— Trump!”

Rep. Maxine Dexter, D-ore. is a freshman and a pulmonary surgeon.

“I don't swear very well in public,” Dexter admitted.

But lawmakers have proven that she can scream like a sailor.

“We're f—trump!” Fulminated Dexter.

It is unclear what Rubric Dexter relied on to determine whether he had vowed “very well” or failed his lexical mission. But just six weeks after his first term in Congress, Dexter ousted the US president. It is her predecessor, former MP Earl Brumenauer. is a feat that never coincided in nearly 30 years in Congress.

Rep. Maxine Dexter, D-RORE. will speak at a press conference with Capitol Visitor Center's Congressional Progressive Caucus on Thursday, February 6, 2025, in opposition to Elon Musk's availability to access the Treasury's federal payment system.

Rep. Maxine Dexter, D-RORE. will speak at a press conference with Capitol Visitor Center's Congressional Progressive Caucus on Thursday, February 6, 2025, in opposition to Elon Musk's availability to access the Treasury's federal payment system. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc, Getty Images)

Cheese and crackers!

Rep. Linda Sanchez, D-Calif. took a slightly different approach. She did not speak of any oral nature to the President. She issued a slightly sanitized call for action.

“It's time to push the bullies back. Are you all ready to fight? Let's go!” cried Sash in protest with federal employees.

D-Penn. , Senator Brendan Boyle did not direct the president to lewd him. Instead, Boyle was more common in his characterization of what waned in the first month of the Trump administration.

“I'm from the Super Bowl Champion Eagles home,” Boyle boasted. “The Great Super Bowl Run was actually a distraction for me and us all from the Philadelphia bulls. That's what's going on.”

Fried Eagles, fry.

But for the record, Boyle gave the President no birds.

Rep. Maxwell Frost, D-Fla. , the blasphemy of a parrotted Boyle.

Rep. Maxwell Frost, D-FLA

D-FLA. Rep. Maxwell Frost arrives for a House Democrats meeting at the Democratic National Committee on Tuesday, July 9, 2024. (Getty Images)

“Bulls–. “We cannot allow this unelected billionaire to come in and do what we fought so hard to get right. It's not about protecting the system.”

The son of a biscuit eater!

I don't know where you went to school, but where I grew up in rural Ohio, if teachers use salty language, they might threaten to wash students' mouths with soap. Hey. It was the 1970s. It is unclear whether there is a remedy to pasteurize vulgar language directed at the president from Congressional Democrats.

But apparently for Democrats, the times of hopelessness are #*&@? +&! I'm looking for it! countermeasure.

In fact, if Democrats maintain their “vowed,” their regular contributions could potentially offset some of the cuts proposed by Doge.

Major League Baseball players have returned to Diamond for a season shortened in the summer of 2020. It's been shortened by the pandemic. The game, which unfolds within a cave-like empty stadium without fans cheering on, really picked up the “game's sound.” This experience puts a whole new spin on “Color Commentary.”

It turns out that national entertainment was more than a foul ball.

Elon Musk

Elon Musk will speak at an event in Washington with President Donald Trump on Tuesday, February 11, 2025. (Alex Brandon)

So for Democrats, curse is probably a new slang term. It may be helpful to release steam. Language can break the base. It may even annoy a crowd of government workers who fear their work under the doge. Does that make a difference to your policy? Probably not. Do you want to convince the president? no. Does that attract the attention of those allies with President Trump who need Democrats to bring into their fight? i doubt it.

You are hired! This is what people passed the Trump Cabinet test in Congress and how stormy their hearing was

Democrats might think that's a Balder dash.

“We have to start liberating politicians to tell the truth,” says D-Minn, former Democratic presidential candidate at Fox. Rep. Dean Phillips said.

Phillips left Congress last month. The Democrats certainly talk. It is unclear whether they will boost the message.

Or, oath message. That might underscore how unhappy Democrats are with what President Trump is doing.

The language replicates what Democrats did during Trump's first term in 2017.

Gillibrand leaves the Senate

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of Dn.Y. will leave Senate Democrats lunch at Capitol's Mansfield Room on Wednesday, March 15, 2023. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc.)

“We should go to the f—home,” said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand eight years ago if Democrats weren't specifically helping people.

Certainly, President Trump's exptive shifted the political language paradigm when he first campaigned in 2015 and 2016. Part of the president's political appeal was that he spoke “everyday” language. It resonated with a large number of voters who were exhausted by sterile bromide, hoping to answer their problems.

Clean languages ​​were usually the default for civil servants until recently. Now it appears that everyone has a political toilet mouth case.

However, politicians have long relied on let's.

Former President Biden was captured by the microphone in stages whispers when he leaned in 2010 to tell President Obama that passing Obamacare was a “big deal.”

President Joe Biden speaks on Podium

The CNN reporter was accused of promoting the products of President Joe Biden's campaign on Wednesday. (Kevin Lamarck)

When he visited Capitol in 2004, then-President Dick Cheney told former Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) to “Go F —Yourself.”

In 2000, President George W. Bush spotted the late New York Times political reporter Adam Climer in the crowd during a campaign in Naperville, Illinois. The future president observed to Cheney that the climbers were “Major League a-Hall.”

So for now, Democrats are trying to coordinate their response to President Trump.

“We can't always be 10,” said D-FLA Rep. Jared Moskowitz. “We have to find the degree of anger here.”

Representative Jared Moskovitz during a hearing to the House of Representatives' Oversight and Accountability Committee

Representative Jared Moskowitz, a Democrat from Florida, during a hearing to the House Oversight and Accountability Committee in Washington, D.C., USA on Monday, July 22, 2024. (Tierney L. Cross/Bloomberg)

That's the elusive Democrat recipe. President Trump, Musk and Congressional Republicans do a lot of work for Democrats. But they have not yet had a major impact on the contrary.

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As Phillips suggests, Democrats must understand this.

Otherwise, they are f — ed.

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