The 2026 Winter Olympics delivered a harsh reality check to one of America's most outspoken anti-Trump athletes. Amber Glenn, the Team USA figure skater who proudly labeled herself a "woke b*tch" and spent months trashing President Trump's administration, crashed and burned on the world's biggest stage with a humiliating 13th place finish in the women's short program.
Glenn, who gained notoriety for her inflammatory social media posts attacking the Trump administration's policies and claiming to fight for America's LGBT community, was overcome with emotion after her disappointing performance in Milan. The skater's tears on the ice seemed to tell the story of an athlete more focused on political activism than athletic excellence.
When Woke Politics Meet Olympic Reality
While Glenn was busy virtue signaling and pushing leftist talking points, it appears she forgot to focus on what actually matters at the Olympics: winning for America. Her 13th place finish represents not just a personal failure, but a missed opportunity to bring glory to the United States on the world stage.
"Maybe if she spent less time being a 'woke b*tch' and more time perfecting her jumps, she'd have something to show for it," one social media user commented.
This disappointing result raises serious questions about the priorities of today's athletes. Are they more interested in pushing political agendas or actually competing for their country? Glenn's performance suggests the former.
The contrast is stark: while President Trump focuses on Making America Great Again and restoring American excellence, athletes like Glenn seem more concerned with woke virtue signaling than bringing home gold medals. Her failure on Olympic ice serves as a perfect metaphor for the broader failure of woke ideology.
As Americans watch their tax dollars fund Olympic teams, they deserve athletes who put country first, not political activism. Glenn's tears might have been for her poor performance, but they should really be for her misplaced priorities. When will these woke athletes learn that politics don't win medals – talent, dedication, and love of country do?
