- by foxnews
- 09 Apr 2026
On Tuesday morning, Trump critics rushed to social media to denounce the president's threat against Iran that an entire "civilization will die tonight," with many suggesting he wanted to commit "genocide" and others calling for the 25th Amendment.
By that evening, Trump agreed to a two-week ceasefire with Iran, allowing both sides to continue to negotiate without further military action. But rather than celebrating that a "genocide" wouldn't take place, various Trump critics dusted off the TACO acronym.
"So, all day today, everyone, most notably the people of Iran, were wondering if their civilization was going to die tonight. Well, good news, it didn't. It was the Taco Tuesday of all Taco Tuesdays," Kimmel said.
"He decided not to drop the chalupa for at least another two weeks," Kimmel continued. "This is how it goes, every single time. Trump says something insane… we all freak out, and then he backs [off]."
MeidasTouch editor Ron Filipowski called Trump a "madman" over his Tuesday morning threat but managed to share a TACO meme after the ceasefire was announced. The about-face promoted conservative attorney Will Chamberlain to respond, "Wait, did you want him to end Iranian civilization?"
Like many others, liberal pundit Malcom Nance shared several TACO memes hours after reposting messages condemning Trump's threat.
RedState contributor Bonchie responded, "So you guys are jokingly mocking someone for not doing something you find morally depraved? Do you see the issue? It's either morally depraved and you're happy he didn't, or you don't actually care and TACO hahaha or something."
The contradicting narratives were enough that Sam Stein, of the anti-Trump site The Bulwark, slammed people using the TACO jab.
Media Research Center associate editor Nicholas Fondacaro feels many journalists and pundits were "exposed" by the hypocritical talking points.
"Either they knew their claims of a pending genocide were a lie meant to scare people, and it was all an act," he continued, "or they really wanted to goad Trump into committing one."
Fox News Digital's Andrew Mark Miller contributed to this report.
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