When washed-up comedian Jimmy Kimmel mocked America for having "a plumber protecting us from terrorism," he thought he was delivering a clever punchline about Senator Markwayne Mullin. Instead, the Hollywood elite accidentally confessed something far more damning about himself and his bubble of coastal snobs.
In those few seconds of late-night "comedy," Kimmel revealed the ugly truth about how cultural elites really view the backbone of America: good enough to fix their toilets when they overflow, but not worthy enough to have a voice in how this country is run.
Here's what Kimmel and his limousine liberal friends don't understand – or maybe they do, and that's what terrifies them. Senator Mullin didn't just fix pipes before coming to Washington. He built businesses, met payrolls, solved real problems for real people, and actually understands what it's like to work for a living instead of reading jokes off a teleprompter for Disney executives.
The Working Class Strikes Back
This is exactly the kind of elitist garbage that drove millions of Americans to vote for President Trump – twice. While Kimmel was perfecting his fake laugh and bowing to his corporate overlords, Mullin was learning the skills that actually matter: accountability, problem-solving, and serving customers who could fire him if he didn't deliver.
"These are the same people who lecture us about 'democracy' while sneering at democratically elected representatives who actually come from the communities they represent."
The beautiful irony? Kimmel's audience is shrinking faster than his relevance, while working-class Americans just delivered the most decisive political victory in decades. Turns out people prefer leaders who've actually built something over comedians who've spent decades tearing things down.
Every time these Hollywood hypocrites open their mouths, they remind us exactly why Trump won. They can't help themselves – the mask always slips, and we see their true contempt for the people who make this country work.
So thank you, Jimmy Kimmel, for reminding America why we need more plumbers in Washington and fewer failed comedians on late-night TV.
