Kyle Gass, the lesser-known half of the washed-up rock duo Tenacious D, is finally admitting what patriots knew all along – his disgusting "joke" about assassinating President Donald Trump was completely out of line.
In a desperate attempt to salvage his destroyed career, the 65-year-old rocker told Rolling Stone that cracking wise about the attempted murder of our Commander-in-Chief was a "mistake." You think?
This comes over a year after Gass made his vile comment during a concert, when his bandmate Jack Black presented him with a birthday cake and asked him to make a wish. Gass's response? He wished for another attempt on Trump's life. Absolutely sickening.
The backlash was swift and merciless. Tenacious D's tour got canceled faster than you can say "Trump Derangement Syndrome," and their band went on indefinite hiatus. Even Hollywood liberal Jack Black couldn't stomach being associated with such hatred.
Too Little, Too Late
Now that President Trump is back in the White House serving his second term, Gass apparently thinks a weak apology will fix everything. But patriots have long memories, and we don't forget when celebrities openly fantasize about political violence against our President.
"It was a mistake," Gass admitted to Rolling Stone, probably while his publicist held a gun to his head.
This is exactly the kind of unhinged hatred that the radical left normalized during Trump's first presidency. Remember when Kathy Griffin posed with a bloody Trump head? Or when Johnny Depp "joked" about assassinating presidents? The double standard is nauseating.
While Gass scrambles to rebuild his irrelevant career, President Trump continues delivering on his America First agenda with mass deportations and government efficiency reforms. That's the difference between a patriot and a has-been rocker with Trump Derangement Syndrome.
Do you think Americans should forgive celebrities who joked about assassinating our President, or should they face permanent consequences for their hatred?
