Even some of Donald Trump’s most loyal online cheerleaders are starting to lose it over his war rhetoric—and one prominent MAGA influencer just went nuclear.
The backlash started after Trump posted a chest-thumping message on Truth Social boasting about the destruction of Iran’s military and celebrating the escalating conflict.
“Iran’s Navy is gone, their Air Force is no longer, missiles, drones and everything else are being decimated, and their leaders have been wiped from the face of the earth,” Trump wrote, insisting the United States has “unparalleled firepower, unlimited ammunition, and plenty of time.”
Then the president made the post even more personal: “Now I, as the 47th President of the United States of America, am killing them. What a great honor it is to do so!”
That line didn’t just raise eyebrows—it detonated inside Trump’s own MAGA base.
The account behind The Patriot Voice—a self-described “America First icon” followed by many in Trump’s online movement—responded with a blunt assessment that would have been unthinkable from MAGA influencers not long ago.
“Trump now sounds like a full blown warmongering PSYCHOPATH,” the account wrote. “Totally the OPPOSITE of the man I thought I voted for. It’s like he has been demonically possessed.”

That kind of language highlights a growing crack inside Trump’s political coalition as the war with Iran drags on and the president’s rhetoric becomes increasingly aggressive.
For years, Trump’s supporters praised him as the guy who would keep America out of endless wars. Now some of those same voices are watching him brag about destroying another country’s military—and they’re not sure what happened to the “America First” message they signed up for.
The influencer’s reaction didn’t stop there.
When another user commented, “You might not believe in Satan, but your government sure does,” the MAGA account fired back with an even darker claim:
“Absolutely TRUE. Many in our government worship Satan.”
It’s the kind of conspiracy-laden rhetoric that thrives in the online MAGA ecosystem—but the real headline here is who it’s aimed at.
Trump himself.
The president’s language about the war has shifted noticeably in recent days. Early messaging focused on national security and military objectives. But more recent statements have leaned heavily into personal boasting and dramatic declarations about wiping out enemies.
That shift appears to be rattling even some of his die-hard supporters.
For a political movement that once rallied around Trump as the anti-war outsider who would end “forever wars,” watching their leader celebrate bombing campaigns is proving difficult for some to square.
And when your own MAGA influencers start accusing you of being a “demonically possessed warmongering psychopath,” it’s a pretty good sign the messaging isn’t landing the way the White House hoped.




