Rogan blames assassination attempts on 'Trump derangement' from media
Podcaster Joe Rogan blamed the 'mainstream media' for radicalizing people to the point they have attempted to assassinate President Donald Trump.
Podcaster Joe Rogan spoke to Rep. Tim Burchett Thursday about the multiple attempts on President Donald Trump’s life, arguing the media’s "Trump Derangement Syndrome" is partially to blame.
While the recent purported attempt on Trump’s life at the WHCA dinner was shocking in its own right, it is now the latest of a series of attempts going back to the incident in Butler, Pennsylvania, in 2024. Much like how some commentators are claiming the WHCA incident was done to push Trump’s vision of a White House ballroom, some skeptics are still questioning the first assassination attempt.
"There's a lot of people running around out there saying that that first Trump assassination was a setup, and that it was a hoax, and that Trump did it to try to get people to be more sympathetic to him," Rogan said as he spoke to Burchett. "Anybody who says that doesn't know anything about guns."
The bullet had grazed the president’s ear rather than his brain, and only did so because Trump had swiveled his head to look at a chart about immigration. Rogan mocked the idea that Trump would have arranged to have come within a hair’s breadth of death, saying, "There is not a person on Earth that could nick your ear at 140 yards reliably."

Former President Donald Trump is whisked away by the Secret Service after shots were fired at a campaign rally at Butler Farm Show Inc. in Butler, Pa., on July 13, 2024. (Jeff Swensen/Getty Images)
Burchett argued the catastrophic security failures during the first assassination attempt should be viewed as an intentional "capitulation," not a "breakdown" of security.
"If Tim Burchett sneaks into the back of a Lynyrd Skynyrd concert and gets close to the stage, that's a ‘breakdown,’" Burchett quipped, arguing what happened in Butler, Pennsylvania, was "a complete capitulation."
"They put Trump out there, and there's people that don't like him," the congressman warned. "You can say what you want to about programming and things, I just think it's out there. I think it is a reality, and I think we better — people had better wake up."
Rogan specifically called out the media, arguing they radicalize people who lack the time to actually see the nuanced truth of various people and events themselves.
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Podcaster Joe Rogan blasted the way the media talk about President Donald Trump, arguing many people can be radicalized because they lack the time and energy to go out and seek the nuance on issues and people. (Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)
"People hate him so much and the narrative in the media, this Trump Derangement narrative that you see in the media is so strong and people are so programmed by it," Rogan said. "And for the average person that has a very involved job, you're working all day, and then you have a family, and you have a life, and you have been – you don't have time to really go into depth about what's real and what's not real."
Rogan continued to blast the media for how they talk about Trump, arguing they radicalize people to the point "you got that Russia collusion stuff shoved down your throat by mainstream media for years, and you believe all of it 100%. And, so, you really believed he's a terrible person, Russian agent — all these different — so you want someone to kill him."
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Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., argued that him sneaking into a concert would be a security "breakdown," but he argued what happened to Trump in Butler, Pa., was a "capitulation." (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)








































