Vice President JD Vance absolutely demolished Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) on Tuesday after the radical socialist congresswoman made a complete fool of herself—and America—at the Munich Security Conference over the weekend.
During a Fox News interview, Vance didn't mince words about AOC's bumbling performance when asked about U.S. support for Taiwan in the event of a Chinese invasion. "It was embarrassing," Vance said bluntly, before delivering the knockout punch: AOC should "go read a book" before stepping onto the global stage again.
And he's absolutely right. Patriots across America watched in horror as Ocasio-Cortez stumbled through basic questions about one of the most critical national security issues facing our nation. This is the same woman who thinks she knows better than President Trump about foreign policy?
"When you're representing the United States of America at an international forum, you better come prepared. This wasn't a Twitter thread—this was real diplomacy," Vance continued during the interview.
The Vice President's brutal assessment highlights exactly why the American people chose the Trump-Vance ticket over the radical left's amateur hour approach to governing. While AOC was busy embarrassing our nation in Munich, President Trump and his team are working around the clock to restore America's strength and credibility on the world stage.
China is watching every move we make, folks. They're looking for signs of weakness, for cracks in our resolve. And what do they see? A Democrat congresswoman who can't even articulate basic American foreign policy without stumbling over her own words.
This is precisely why we need serious adults in charge—not Instagram influencers masquerading as legislators. The Trump-Vance administration understands that America's enemies don't care about your social media following when they're planning their next move against freedom.
How many more international humiliations will Democrats inflict on America before they finally step aside and let the adults handle foreign policy?
