Donald Trump

Trump Fires Off 150 Truth Social Posts in One Night: From Conspiracies to Praising Melania

President Donald Trump spent Monday night doing what most people do not do at midnight — posting more than 150 messages on Truth Social in just a few hours. It was loud and, honestly a little worrying to watch.

The posts began around 7 p.m. and continued nonstop until midnight. Every two minutes, another message popped up. Videos. Random screenshots. Attacks. Compliments to himself. Then memories of Christmas.

The final hour was the wildest. He posted about 100 times between 11 p.m. and midnight alone. I know teenagers who cannot type that fast.

Then, as if nothing happened, he woke up before 6 a.m. and returned with a bright, energetic, “TRUTH SOCIAL IS THE BEST! There is nothing even close!!!”

Most humans would still be recovering from posting that much. But Trump treats social media like a full-time sport.

The content was a mix of everything. Some posts attacked Democrats like Nancy Pelosi, Gavin Newsom, and Joe Biden. Others pushed conspiracy theories. Then suddenly he switched to Christmas videos. Then he praised Melania’s “elegance.” Then attacked veterans who warned troops not to follow illegal orders. The emotional roller-coaster was intense.

One nostalgic video declared, “Christmas is officially great again!” It included Trump’s cameo in Home Alone 2, Kamala Harris clips, and old footage of him with Melania near Christmas trees.

It felt like someone mashed together every video they found on a broken USB drive.

But not everyone found the late-night flood funny.

Trump went after Democratic lawmakers with military backgrounds who recently reminded troops that illegal orders should not be followed. He called them “unpatriotic,” which is ironic coming from someone who once said John McCain was “not a hero” because he was captured.

Rep. Jason Crow fired back quickly. He said Trump could post as much as he wanted, but he would never intimidate him. Crow reminded everyone he had taken oaths as a paratrooper, an Army Ranger, and now as a member of Congress. And he made it clear his loyalty was to the Constitution, not Trump.

It was a strong answer and a needed reminder.

Trump then jumped to Pelosi. He reposted a message telling people to “lock her up,” along with a false claim about her staffer being linked to the January 6 attack. It was a typical Trump move. If he is annoyed, he accuses people of crimes. No evidence required.

Between all the shouting and conspiracies, Trump sprinkled in compliments about Melania. He reposted a user calling her “Grace, elegance and beauty.” It felt like he was trying to squeeze in romance between political attacks. A strange combination, but not surprising.

MAGA allies also joined in. Trump reposted Byron Donalds thanking God that Kamala Harris didn’t win. Then, one minute later, he reposted someone calling him “the greatest president to ever live.”

Democratic influencer Harry Sisson posted that if anyone’s family member posted 150 times in one night, people would start asking serious questions. He even joked, “You’d host an intervention.”

And honestly, he is not wrong. Most people would get a wellness check for posting that much.

Another user said they had never seen anything like it. They described it as a massive dump of random screenshots and clips posted at high speed.

Some analysts think Trump’s posting sprees happen when he feels cornered. In the past, he has done this after bad news, upcoming investigations, or embarrassing headlines. When pressure builds, he grabs his phone and attacks everything in sight.

This time, the topics jumped too fast to follow. One moment he hated Democrats. The next, he loved Melania. Then he was furious at military officials. Then he celebrated Christmas. It felt like scrolling through five different people using the same account.

Featured image via X screengrab

Justen Blake

Fast writer. No fluff. Deadlines don’t scare me — they motivate me.

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