
BREAKING: JD Vance ADMITS to being the “conspiracy theorist” that White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles called him.
Vice President J.D. Vance had a full-blown meltdown in Pennsylvania this week after White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles dared to say the quiet part out loud — calling him a “conspiracy theorist” whose MAGA transformation looked suspiciously like political expediency.
Instead of denying it, Vance leaned in.
“Sometimes I am a conspiracy theorist,” Vance told reporters, before insisting he only believes the ones that are “true.” That defense went about as well as you’d expect. In one breath, Vance recast public health measures during COVID as a “crazy conspiracy,” and in the next, accused President Joe Biden of plotting to jail political opponents — an unproven claim that just happens to be a staple of right-wing grievance politics.
In other words: Susie Wiles nailed it.
Rather than reckon with the substance of her critique, Vance waved her off as just a “staffer,” reminding the audience that “the American people didn’t elect any staffer.” It was a revealing swipe at one of the most powerful figures inside Trump’s White House — and a sign that the administration’s internal unity may be fraying fast.
The moment only got uglier when someone in the crowd shouted that Democrats were “traitors.”
“They are!” Vance shouted back, casually endorsing rhetoric that would have once disqualified a politician from national office. No pushback. No call for calm. Just red-meat applause.
And if that wasn’t enough, Vance wrapped up by blaming the entire mess on — what else? — the media.
“If any of us have learned a lesson from that Vanity Fair article,” he sneered, “we should be giving fewer interviews to mainstream media outlets.”
Translation: when the press reports uncomfortable truths, stop talking to the press.
This is the same J.D. Vance who once styled himself as a thoughtful critic of Trumpism, now publicly agreeing that political opponents are traitors and proudly wearing the “conspiracy theorist” badge. Susie Wiles may have intended her Vanity Fair comments as a warning. Vance turned them into a campaign slogan.
If this is the vice president’s idea of leadership—attacking colleagues, demonizing half the country, and redefining conspiracy theories as “truth”—then the chaos isn’t a bug of this White House. It’s the feature.
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