The piece examines a provocative campaign ad from Nevada Democrat Zach Conine and places it in the context of recent, violent attacks against President Trump, arguing the political rhetoric from the Left has crossed dangerous lines and produced real-world consequences.
Zach Conine is running for Nevada attorney general and his new ad has drawn sharp criticism. The creative choice reads as tasteless at best and reckless at worst, especially in a raw political moment. Voters deserve to know what candidates think is acceptable rhetoric.
We are in a brutal messaging fight with the left over who fuels political violence. The left’s heated rhetoric has consequences, and many on our side believe their language contributes to the pattern of threats and attacks aimed at President Trump. This is not a debate about metaphors; it’s about whether words are pushing people toward real harm.
No serious Republican suggests Trump’s critics are immune from sharp language, but name-calling is not the same as urging violence. Calling someone “low-life” or “low IQ” is ugly, but not a roadmap to murder. The country has already seen how extreme language can radicalize an individual, and that makes the difference important.
Remember that Trump was nearly killed at Butler, Pennsylvania, in 2024, which is not ancient history. That incident proved political violence isn’t hypothetical and it isn’t confined to internet talk. With that in mind, an ad that stages or jokes about hitting a sitting president feels reckless and tone-deaf to public safety.
The same week Trump faced another ass*ssination attempt, Democrat Nevada AG candidate Zach Conine releases video showing himself smashing Trump’s head with a mallet https://t.co/RqonPkJA7l pic.twitter.com/BH00egkfAR
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) April 30, 2026
So when Conine appears to endorse smashing Trump’s face with a mallet, it’s impossible to read that as anything but inflammatory. The imagery and message land badly when the backdrop includes real assassination attempts and injured agents. Political figures should avoid normalizing violence, period.
There’s also a practical angle to consider: masked ICE agents and other federal officers are using extra safety measures because threats against them and their families are common now. Whether they are masked or not, the hostility aimed at federal law enforcement has forced new protocols. State officials can rail against federal actions, but they can’t override the Supremacy Clause or order federal agents to expose themselves when threats are credible.
This isn’t about treating opponents like caricatures or pretending every left-of-center voice is violent. It’s about recognizing a worrying pattern and calling it what it is. A campaign that flirts with violent imagery during a time of actual assassination attempts is more than tone-deaf — it risks normalizing behavior that endangers lives.
The behavior on display from some Democrats is increasingly abnormal compared with past norms, and that demands a response beyond rhetorical hand-wringing. Voters should weigh whether candidates are fit to serve when they choose shock value over restraint. Electability and public safety are legitimate factors in that judgment.
Smashing Trump’s head after this third assassination attempt, dear Lord, is the sort of messaging that escalates tensions instead of cooling them. It pushes civic discourse into a dangerous space where imitation and copycat behavior become likelier. Public figures must be held to a higher standard when their words and images can inspire real-world violence.
Accountability matters at every level — from local campaigns to national leaders. Conine’s ad is a reminder that political theater has costs, and voters should demand better judgment. Ultimately, campaigns that trade in violent symbolism while the nation counts the cost of actual attacks are asking for trouble they cannot control.




