Hate ads?! Subscribe for just $5 a month!

Democrats Mercilessly Mocked for ‘Thank You, Stephen Colbert’ Social Media Tribute

Listen to Article

The Democratic Party’s official social-media salute to Stephen Colbert the morning after his show was canceled landed like a tone-deaf eulogy, and the internet’s recoil was swift and merciless. What was meant as a gracious nod to a reliable late-night ally instead underscored how out of step the party’s messaging machine remains with an electorate that has grown weary of celebrity sermonizing. For Second Amendment supporters, the moment crystallized a larger pattern: the same cultural gatekeepers who spent years framing gun owners as existential threats are now themselves being treated as yesterday’s punchline, their influence visibly eroding in real time.

Colbert’s decade-long tenure at CBS was defined less by comedy than by nightly reinforcement of the coastal consensus on guns, from ritualistic outrage after every defensive-use story the mainstream ignored to unchallenged repetition of “assault weapon” talking points. That the party’s digital team still viewed him as a prize worth publicly thanking reveals how little the institutional left has adjusted to a post-2020 landscape where record firearm sales, constitutional-carry victories, and state-level permitless reforms have shifted both culture and law. The mockery that followed wasn’t merely schadenfreude; it signaled that audiences increasingly recognize when political messaging is scripted by the same echo chamber that once dismissed armed self-defense as paranoia.

For the 2A community, the episode is a reminder that cultural momentum is shifting faster than legacy media or party operatives can recalibrate. Every time a late-night host or official account doubles down on yesterday’s gun-control liturgy, it hands pro-rights creators fresh material and accelerates the migration of viewers toward platforms where defensive-gun-use statistics and constitutional history are discussed without apology. The Colbert tribute may have been intended as a fond farewell, but it inadvertently advertised how disconnected the old guard has become—and how durable the grassroots defense of the right to keep and bear arms remains.

Share this story