J.D. Vance booed by audience at Kennedy Center

By 
 March 17, 2025

The audience attending a performance of the National Symphony Orchestra on Thursday booed for 30 seconds when Vice President J.D. Vance and his wife, Second Lady Usha Vance, took their seats to enjoy the show.

Guardian global affairs correspondent Andrew Roth posted a video of the "angry leftists" booing as well as Vance's great response.

Vance looked at his wife, then took a sip of his drink and made himself comfortable. The couple stayed until the performance was over, not in the least disturbed by the reaction.

"Crybaby leftists"

Breitbart's John Nolte called the booers "a bunch of crybaby leftists" in a piece about the incident.

"Anyone who is at all familiar with Vance’s background, anyone who knows what this guy went through to get to where he is, knows that boos coming from The Worst People In The World mean less than nothing to him and are probably a badge of honor," Nolte pointed out.

"How can you not like a guy cheered at NASCAR and booed at the foofoo Kennedy Center?" he added.

Indeed.

As usual, Nolte puts the situation firmly into its proper perspective.

"Boo away, losers"

Trump was voted chairman of the Kennedy Center and got rid of all 18 board members appointed by former President Joe Biden, as he was legally allowed to do.

As Nolte so aptly wrote, the audience of leftists was "angry that the Kennedy Center will no longer be grooming children with musicals like Finn that seek to queer little kids."

It's nothing different than the leftists themselves do when they have the power to do it, but of course it sticks in their craw that Trump and Vance's agenda is opposite of theirs.

Nolte's final words aimed at the audience of booers pretty much say it all.

He wrote,

Boo away, losers. JD Vance will be your vice president for four more years. Better still, he has a beautiful wife, adorable kids, a fortune he accumulated before age 40, and a future so bright you can only look at it through a welding helmet.

" A free people [claim] their rights, as derived from the laws of nature."
Thomas Jefferson