When late-night comedian Jimmy Kimmel sneered that America now has "a plumber protecting us from terrorism," he thought he was delivering a clever punchline about Senator Markwayne Mullin. Instead, he accidentally confessed something far more revealing about the elitist mindset that's been poisoning our institutions for decades.
In those few seconds of Hollywood smugness, Kimmel perfectly captured how the cultural elite really see working Americans: good enough to fix their pipes and unclog their toilets, but God forbid they should have a voice in running the country they built with their own hands.
Here's what these out-of-touch celebrities and their Deep State allies don't understand: Senator Mullin didn't just wake up one day and decide to play politician. The Oklahoma Republican built a successful plumbing business from the ground up, creating jobs and serving his community long before he ever set foot in Washington. That's called real-world experience – something that's in desperately short supply among the Ivy League failures who've been driving America into the ground.
The Swamp's Worst Nightmare: Competence
The establishment's panic over Mullin isn't really about his background – it's about what he represents. They're terrified of leaders who understand how the real economy works, who've met payrolls, dealt with regulations, and actually created value instead of just shuffling government papers around.
"These are the same people who think a community organizer was qualified to be President, but a successful business owner somehow isn't qualified to serve in the Senate," one conservative commentator noted.
The irony is delicious. While Kimmel and his Hollywood bubble mock the "plumber," Mullin is helping President Trump drain the swamp and restore common-sense leadership to Washington. He's part of a new generation of America First conservatives who understand that government should serve the people, not the other way around.
Patriots across the country are seeing through this elitist nonsense. They know that someone who's actually built something, who's worked with their hands and solved real problems, brings exactly the kind of perspective Washington desperately needs.
Maybe it's time we had more "plumbers" in Congress and fewer career politicians who've never held a real job in their lives. What do you think, America?
