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The empire of irony: Why memes are America’s new propaganda

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How Trump rules the US with memes and why ‘brain-numbing’ content is the future of politics

“Your mom” has become the accidental protagonist of October 2025. Once a throwaway line in online debates, she now features in exchanges at the highest levels of American politics. The unlikely transformation began with S.V. Date, a journalist from the HuffPost, who repeatedly tried to ask the Trump administration difficult questions. Each time, he was met not with answers but with taunts – and, eventually, jokes about his mother.

The exchanges bordered on the surreal. Instead of officials speaking for the world’s most powerful government, the conversations sounded like teenagers arguing during an online game. Yet the tone reflected something deeper: the complete merger of American politics and internet culture.

It isn’t only White House staff who behave like this. Donald Trump himself runs what looks more like a meme account than the feed of a sitting president. His social media channels are flooded with AI-generated videos – sometimes absurd, sometimes aggressive, always designed to dominate attention.

When the No Kings protests erupted across US cities earlier this year, Trump responded not with appeals for calm, but with digital theatre. He posted videos of himself wearing a golden crown, flying a fighter jet, and spraying demonstrators with an unidentified brown mist. His vice president, J.D. Vance, soon joined in, releasing “royal” memes of his own. The White House, once the stage of solemn addresses, now operates like a TikTok studio.

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Many in the US establishment find this behaviour degrading, a sign of immaturity unbecoming of high office. Yet critics miss the larger point: America’s political opposition is no better. The Democrats, equally addicted to meme warfare, have been fighting back with their own AI-generated absurdities. During the recent government shutdown, Republicans circulated deepfakes depicting Democratic leaders as Mexican labourers; Democrats replied with videos of cats lecturing viewers about how Trump is “destroying America.”

If one puts aside moral panic and aesthetic snobbery, it becomes clear that a revolution in political communication is under way. Politics is no longer about polished speeches or carefully scripted interviews. It has entered the age of post-irony: where complexity is replaced by accessibility, and outrage outperforms nuance.

In this sense, Trump is not the clown at the centre of the circus; he is the ringmaster. He has gathered around himself a team that understands the new language of mass communication. His 28-year-old press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, was the first to use the now-famous “your mom” retort. Having grown up online, she instinctively knows what catches fire on social media. Trump’s informal adviser – his 19-year-old son Barron – also belongs to a generation fluent in memes, irony, and viral timing.

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Trump himself, for all his flaws, remains unusually open to new trends. He is one of the few political figures of his age who recognises that the digital public square is governed not by logic or decorum, but by the rules of entertainment. This is why his critics, armed with fact-checking and moral indignation, consistently lose the information war. They are trying to argue; he is performing.

A meme, even a crude one, engages emotions faster than any policy paper. It mocks, entertains, and sticks in memory. Viewers might cringe when they see “Dark Reaper Trump” stalking Democrats to a heavy-metal soundtrack, but they remember it. The content may be brain-melting, but that is precisely the point: it bypasses rational resistance.

So far, this new form of political communication remains largely an American phenomenon. Few other governments have adopted it systematically. But its logic is universal, and its spread inevitable. In Russia, the groundwork already exists. Our advertising and PR industries long ago learned to use internet humour, irony, and meme culture to sell products. Politics, however, has remained more conservative – more formal, more serious, less entertainment-driven than in the United States. 

That distinction will not last forever. By early 2025, more than 80 percent of Russians were using the internet daily. Online culture now shapes public moods, values, and even voting behaviour. It is only a matter of time before political communication catches up.

When it does, the American experiment under Trump will serve as a case study – not for imitation, but for understanding. The United States, for all its talk of freedom and democracy, has turned political life into a meme economy where attention is the only currency and ridicule the main weapon. 

Russia does not need to copy this model. But it cannot ignore it either. As digital communication becomes the battlefield of the 21st century, knowing how memes move minds may prove as essential as knowing how armies move borders.

This article was first published by the online newspaper Gazeta.ru and was translated and edited by the RT team 

October 29, 2025 at 01:31AM
RT

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