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Horror has longed warned us about abusive power, performative cruelty, and gaslighting; America is witnessing a chilling real-life example.

Zelensky and Trump 2025

“The first casualty of war is innocence.” But what happens when innocence isn’t just lost — it’s deliberately shredded, paraded, and mocked by those who were once its guardians?

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What unfolded yesterday at the White House wasn’t just a press conference. It was a scene from a horror film—a slow, stomach-turning descent into the kind of moral rot that only comes when a nation decides to side with the monster.

President Zelensky, a man who has stood on the frontlines of democracy, walked into a room expecting diplomacy. What he got was something out of The Invitation—smiling faces masking sharpened knives, cruelty hidden under the thin veil of state decorum.

The sequence unfolded like this for those who missed it: Zelensky, poised and earnest, addressed reporters. He spoke with the measured calm of a man who has already stood in the rubble of bombed-out hospitals and mass graves. Meanwhile, Donald Trump and JD Vance sat nearby—sneering, scoffing, treating a wartime president like a naughty child begging for candy. Zelensky’s crime? Asking America to uphold its promises. To honor its role in NATO. To act like the democracy it once claimed to be.

This wasn’t a clash of political ideologies. This was bullying as statecraft. America, once the self-proclaimed champion of freedom, stood shoulder-to-shoulder with authoritarianism and gaslit its own ally for daring to believe the old myths about liberty and justice.

It would be easy to call what happened surreal. But surreal doesn’t capture the horror of seeing a respected leader like Zelensky treated like an inconvenient stray dog begging for scraps. It doesn’t capture the way gaslighting became state policy in real time or how the country that once claimed to stand as the beacon of freedom demanded to be thanked for throwing its allies into the fire.

This isn’t politics. This is The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, where the good guys knock politely on the door and are met with a sledgehammer to the skull. It was The Invisible Man by way of Hostel—a public spectacle of cruelty, entitlement, and authoritarian gaslighting. It was a trap designed not to negotiate but to humiliate, mutilate, and extract one final scream.

When the Good Guys Become the Monster

Horror has always understood this transformation—the moment the protector becomes the predator. In The Thing, the trusted friend is the alien in disguise. In Rosemary’s Baby, the kindly neighbors are part of the coven. This is where America now finds itself: the monster we feared has been living inside us all along.

We forget, but history remembers: the only time NATO invoked Article 5—the principle that an attack on one is an attack on all—was after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. The world stood with us without hesitation. Ukraine stood with us. And now, when Ukraine is the one under siege, when its people are dying daily to hold the line between freedom and authoritarianism, America shrugs and asks, “But what’s in it for us?”

Even that could have been framed as cold pragmatism. Instead, Trump and Vance turned it into something uglier: demanding gratitude like an abusive parent demanding affection after a beating. The message was clear: grovel, kiss the ring, thank us for the scraps, or suffer the consequences.

There’s also the deeper, existential horror of betrayal—when the force you thought would protect you becomes the threat itself. This is the twist at the heart of Night of the Living Dead, where help never comes, or worse, the ones in power pull the trigger themselves. It’s The Mist, where the military’s mistakes birth the apocalypse, and by the time they arrive, it’s too late for anything but devastation.

This isn’t metaphorical anymore; this is literal geopolitics. The betrayal isn’t symbolic. It’s happening in real time.

Gaslighting on a Global Scale

That gaslighting reached peak absurdity when, after the fact, American leaders began rewriting the script. In video clips circulating widely, Trump and his allies painted Zelensky as the rude one—the disrespectful guest, the impudent foreigner who dared ask the wealthiest nation on earth to honor its own commitments.

This is a familiar script for horror fans. It’s The Invisible Man (2020), where the abuser rewrites reality so thoroughly that the victim begins to question their own sanity. It’s The Girl Next Door, where cruelty is justified as discipline, and every scream is treated like ingratitude. It’s Get Out and Speak No Evil, where the tormentors use language, manipulation, and psychological cruelty to break their victims down while pretending to be benevolent.

Zelensky, to his credit, didn’t scream. He held the line. He was composed and calm, refusing to break even as the walls closed in. If this were a horror film, he’d be our final girl—battered, bloodied, but unwilling to give his tormentors the satisfaction of seeing him beg.

The Authoritarian Horror Show

The most terrifying thing about yesterday wasn’t the specific insults hurled at Zelensky. It was the normalization of authoritarian gaslighting, live-streamed to the world.

This is how fascism wins—not through sudden coups, but through these smaller humiliations, these daily recalibrations of what’s acceptable. The horror isn’t just what they said. It’s that millions of Americans nodded along, conditioned to see cruelty as strength and compassion as weakness.

Horror has been warning us about this for decades. From They Live, which exposed propaganda’s insidious grip, to The Purge, which imagined a nation so desensitized to violence that it made cruelty a civic holiday. Even more recently, films like The Platform laid bare the logic of the powerful: those at the top are owed everything, those below deserve nothing, and gratitude is mandatory no matter how brutal the conditions.

Films like Martyrs and The Girl Next Door show us the horrors that unfold when power and cruelty are normalized to the point that those in power forget their moral duty and view their victims as subhuman.

What Trump and Vance performed yesterday was political torture porn.

It was the smug extraction of dignity for the pleasure of an audience primed to see suffering as entertainment. This wasn’t just policy; this was Saw, with foreign policy as the trap.

Gratitude as a Weapon

That demand for gratitude from Zelensky—the insistence that Ukraine should bow and scrape for every bullet and Band-Aid—is one of the ugliest threads in this story. It’s the language of abusive parents, toxic partners, and cult leaders. “Look what I do for you,” they say, “and you still dare to ask for more?”

This is Hereditary, where love comes with a knife behind the back. This is Misery, where adoration curdles into captivity. This is Mother!, where the house burns down because the guests demanded too much.

The Final Girl Won’t Save Us This Time

In horror films, the final girl survives because she sees the truth—because she recognizes the monster for what it is and refuses to pretend otherwise. But what happens when the audience roots for the monster? What happens when half the crowd cheers as the final girl is dragged back inside the house?

That’s where we are. Zelensky can hold the line, but he can’t save us from ourselves. This is America’s horror story now. The question is: Do we recognize the monster at the podium or hand it the knife?

Dystopian narratives have long warned of the dangers of unchecked power. We are now living in a time when those who hold power manipulate the narrative, gaslight the public, and turn injustice into a spectacle for entertainment. Just as horror films have shown us the dangers of fascist power, we’re witnessing the systematic unraveling of democratic principles, where the oppressed are blamed and the oppressors are celebrated.

If horror teaches us anything, it’s this: The scariest monster isn’t the one outside the door. It’s the one we invited in.

The Horror We’re Living: A Call to Action

Photo credit: Ted Eytan. Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Yesterday’s press conference wasn’t just a diplomatic failure; it was a deliberate act of political sadism, a scene straight from the bleakest corners of horror cinema, where power feeds on suffering, and truth is twisted until the victim becomes the villain.

We’ve seen it before in every film that dared to show us what unchecked malevolence really looks like when power meets impunity. But horror also teaches us something else: Monsters only win when we let them. Silence is complicity. Inaction is consent.

The credits haven’t rolled yet. And if horror has taught us anything, it’s that the final girl survives not because she’s lucky but because she fights like hell. So, consider this your call to arms. If you’re outraged by what you saw, if you refuse to let gaslighting and authoritarian bullying become the new normal, let your voice be louder than their lies.

Because the real horror story isn’t what happened yesterday; it’s what happens if we pretend it didn’t.

2 Comments

2 Records

  1. on March 1, 2025 at 4:13 pm
    Dan Bowhers wrote:
    YES Thank you for this.
    Reply
    • on March 1, 2025 at 4:16 pm
      Stephanie Malone wrote:

      Thank you so much for taking the time to read and comment.

      Reply

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