When Insults Replace Argument in American Politics
By any conventional measure, the American presidency has long been associated with a certain rhetorical gravity. Even in moments of sharp disagreement, political leaders once tended to cloak their critiques in the language of principle â invoking constitutional interpretation, economic theory or competing visions of national identity. The clash was often fierce, but it was tethered to ideas.
In recent years, that tether has frayed.
The latest episode unfolded after ABC reportedly took Jimmy Kimmelâs late-night program off the air indefinitely. President Donald Trump weighed in swiftly and characteristically. He declared that Kimmel had been âfired for bad ratings,â dismissed him as ânot talented,â and accused him of saying âa horrible thingâ about Charlie Kirk. In the presidentâs telling, the matter was simple: lack of talent, not free speech, had sealed the comedianâs fate.

But the exchange that followed revealed something more than a dispute between a president and a television host. It illuminated a broader pattern in contemporary political life â the substitution of insult for argument.
For years, Mr. Trump has deployed the phrase âlow IQâ as a kind of rhetorical cudgel. He has aimed it at journalists, generals, political rivals and cultural figures. The insult is blunt, easily repeated and emotionally satisfying to supporters who relish its transgressive edge. It is also curiously revealing. To brand opponents as intellectually deficient is to sidestep engagement with what they are actually saying.
When Mr. Trump turned that phrase on Mr. Kimmel after a pointed monologue critiquing the administrationâs record, the expectation may have been familiar: that the comedian would parry with jokes, that the moment would dissolve into the usual late-night churn of punch lines and applause.
Instead, Mr. Kimmel chose a different register.
Walking onto his stage without his customary grin, he addressed the presidentâs remarks directly. He did not begin by listing his academic credentials or boasting of professional accolades. Rather, he pivoted to a question about presidential fitness â and to the presidentâs own words.
Behind him, a montage of Mr. Trumpâs recent unscripted rally speeches played. In the clips, the president veered off topic, stumbled over names and drifted into digressions about sharks, batteries and cinematic villains. The footage included Mr. Trumpâs repeated references to cognitive tests, which he has described as difficult and as proof of his acuity.
The juxtaposition was stark. A president asserting intellectual superiority appeared, at least in those moments, to struggle with coherence. The studio audience, primed for comedy, responded with a quiet that bordered on discomfort.
Mr. Kimmel then reframed the insult. âYou want to talk about the mind of a child?â he asked, describing behaviors more commonly associated with immaturity: the craving for constant praise, the tantrum when challenged, the susceptibility to flattery. He widened the lens to include what he described as authoritarian impulses â demands for loyalty from institutions designed to remain independent.
It was not merely a defense of personal reputation. It was an argument about character and power.
Perhaps most striking was Mr. Kimmelâs invocation of Jeffrey Epstein, the financier whose associations with powerful figures have shadowed public life for years. By reminding viewers of Mr. Trumpâs past social interactions and photographs with Epstein, Mr. Kimmel shifted the terrain from intellect to judgment â from IQ to integrity.
The applause that followed was not the easy laughter of a one-liner. It carried the cadence of recognition, as though the audience understood that something heavier than late-night banter was at stake.
The episode underscores a tension that has defined the Trump era. The presidentâs political style thrives on dominance displays â nicknames, superlatives, boasts of unmatched genius. It is a strategy that has proven effective in rally settings and on social media, where brevity and emotional punch often outweigh nuance.
But governance, unlike a rally, demands sustained reasoning. It requires engagement with complexity, patience with dissent and a willingness to confront inconvenient facts. When political discourse collapses into playground taunts, the cost is borne not only by the immediate target but by the public sphere itself.

Mr. Kimmelâs response, whatever one thinks of its tone, demonstrated an alternative approach. Rather than escalate the insult, he attempted to document and contextualize. He let video evidence speak. He suggested that intelligence cannot be measured solely by test scores or self-proclamation but by steadiness, humility and moral discernment.
The broader question is whether such moments can meaningfully recalibrate a political culture accustomed to spectacle. In an age when outrage fuels engagement and algorithms reward extremity, restraint can feel almost antiquated.
Yet the health of a republic depends on more than volume. It depends on the capacity to argue in good faith, to separate critique from caricature and to hold leaders accountable not through mockery alone but through facts.
If the exchange between President Trump and Jimmy Kimmel reveals anything, it is this: insults may command attention, but they do not settle arguments. In the end, the record â spoken words, documented actions, visible patterns of conduct â remains the most durable rebuttal.