'Trump Baby' blimp coming to US to torment Trump at his weekend getaway
After humiliating Trump in England, the ‘Trump Baby’ blimp will float in the air near Trump’s golf course in New Jersey to shame him for his bigotry.

The “Trump Baby” blimp is coming to New Jersey to haunt Trump when he spends weekends relaxing at one of his properties.
During his recent trip to England, Trump said the presence of the blimp, which depicts him as a diaper-wearing baby yelling into a cell phone, made him feel “unwelcome” in London.
He avoided capital city, where thousands marched alongside the Trump blimp to protest his toxic racism and vile personal character.
Now Trump might feel “unwelcome” at his own club in Bedminster, New Jersey, where he often spends weekends during the summer.
Activists in New Jersey set up an online fundraiser to build a replica “Trump Baby” blimp. They asked for $4,500 and have now raised over $23,693 in an ongoing testament to Trump’s unpopularity and the strong resistance to his presidency.
Activists Didier Jiminez-Castro and Jim Girvan told NPR they will use the surplus to buy multiple blimps “so we can go coast-to-coast, border-to-border.”
The first deployment stateside will be at Trump’s National Golf Club in Bedminster.
“The baby Trump is not just a piece of humor, but it is also a symbol of the administration,” Jiminez-Castro said. “It’s symbolic of the children that are in cages, it’s a symbol of racism, and we know that he hates to be ridiculed.”
The deployment of the blimp on American soil will demonstrate that despite Trump’s attempts to disrupt the historic friendship between the United Kingdom and America, the “special relationship” continues.
Shaming, mocking, and ridiculing Trump is an activity that extends across the Atlantic Ocean, uniting those who oppose hate and bigotry.
Trump Baby is coming.
Published with permission of The American Independent Foundation.
Recommended

Government shutdown averted after Biden signs funding bill
Congress came to agreement on a stopgap funding bill on Saturday, hours before the government was set to run out of money.
By Associated Press - October 02, 2023
White House warns that GOP shutdown would cut off key disaster relief funds
The Biden administration said if a shutdown occurs, nearly 2,000 projects would experience delays.
By Oliver Willis - September 29, 2023
UAW president rejects Trump visit to Michigan, citing his anti-worker record
President Joe Biden became the first sitting president to join striking union workers on the picket line on Tuesday.
By Oliver Willis - September 28, 2023