million hardworking Americans. We pay their salaries, fund their perks, and yet they act like kings
dictating terms to the rest of us.
They've forgotten—or never cared—that they're public servants, not rulers. Every tax dollar we send,
every law they pass, every border they leave wide open, it's all on our dime while they ignore our
voices and push agendas that hurt families, communities, and the nation.
It's time we remind them who really runs this country. We the People built it, we sustain it, and we
have every right—and duty—to hold them accountable before it's too late
swearing-in ceremony on the House floor — members standing with hands raised to take the oath
— with a headline asking how much longer “we the people” will let “535 people tell 330 million
what to do,” adding “They work for us!! We pay them. Do your job!” The photo is an authentic
House Chamber scene from a new Congress (the 119th convened January 3, 2025), and the math in
the headline is the standard civic shorthand: 100 senators + 435 representatives = 535 federal
legislators who write national laws for roughly 330 million Americans. It’s a populist expression of
principal-agent frustration, not a news report of a specific event. No new bill or procedure
accompanies the card; rather, it repurposes a real, solemn moment — members pledging to support
and defend the Constitution — as a backdrop for voter anger about gridlock, earmarks, or culture-
war stalemates. The sentiment echoes longstanding third-party and reform rhetoric. Read it as
genuine political emotion mounted on a real photograph: the oath is real, the numbers are
standard, the grievance is rhetorical and durable.
Fox News contributor Joey Jones on set, with a headline quoting him calling Donald Trump a “bully for the people” and a sub-headline dismissing “typical liberal” critics. The photo is a real Fox News clip, and Jones has used the phrase “bully for the people” more than once in on-air commentary to argue that Trump’s abrasive style shields supporters from powerful institutions. The card’s second line — “Typical liberal can’t recognize when they’re being defended” — is campaign-trail editorializing layered onto Jones’s actual punditry. It’s not a news report of a new event, but a media-meme recasting a defender’s soundbite as a partisan clap-back. Jones’s commentary exists; the “liberal” swipe is the poster’s spin. The image is authentic, the label is advocacy: real contributor, real phrase, new partisan caption.

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