Did America Just Walk Away From World AIDS Day While Pretending To Care About Health?

Written by on December 4, 2025

 

Did America Just Walk Away from World AIDS Day While Pretending To Care About Health?

#GoRightNews Shared by Peter Boykin

American Political Commentator / Citizen Journalist / Activist / Constitutionalist for Liberty

 

Did America Just Walk Away from World AIDS Day While Pretending To Care About Health?

 

Imagine that you walk into a clinic waiting room. On the wall is a faded red ribbon poster from the early AIDS years, the kind with solemn faces and bold promises. Someone cared enough to hang it. Someone cared enough not to take it down.

For decades, World AIDS Day has been one of those rare moments when the world stops arguing long enough to admit that a virus has killed tens of millions of human beings and is still infecting more than a million people a year. It was the first global health day, born in the late 1980s when AIDS was a death sentence and stigma was as deadly as the virus itself.

The United States did not just participate. It led. Presidents of both parties issued proclamations. The White House hung a massive red ribbon from the North Portico. Federal agencies rolled out new data, strategies, and funding every December.

And now, under the current Trump administration, for the first time since World AIDS Day was created, the United States government has formally stepped back and told its own employees not to publicly acknowledge it.

So, what happened, and what does that say about how our Constitutional Republic chooses whose lives get remembered?

 

How World AIDS Day Started

World AIDS Day was conceived in 1987 by James Bunn and Thomas Netter, two public information officers at the World Health Organization’s Global Program on AIDS. They pitched the idea to Dr Jonathan Mann, who agreed that December 1st would become a yearly day of remembrance, education, and global solidarity. The first observance took place in 1988 and has continued every year since.

It was the first international health day of its kind, adopted by the United Nations system and marked by governments, NGOs, and community groups across the world.

The goals were simple and radical at the same time:

  • Tell the truth about the AIDS pandemic.

  • Push back against stigma and myths.

  • Mobilize money, science and political will.

Over time, World AIDS Day became the yearly checkpoint for the global response, tracking progress and failure in the fight against HIV.

 

The U.S. Role: From Red Ribbon on the White House to Silence

From the early 1990s onward, presidents from both parties issued formal World AIDS Day proclamations. Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Donald Trump in his first term, and Joe Biden all used the day to talk about treatment access, prevention and the fight against stigma.

In 2007, the White House began hanging a giant red ribbon on the North Portico, symbolizing national commitment to fight AIDS at home and through PEPFAR, the huge global AIDS program launched under President Bush.

Under President Trump’s first administration, the pattern continued:

  • He issued World AIDS Day proclamations in 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020. 

  • In 2019, he publicly announced the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative, a plan to cut new HIV infections in the United States by 90 percent by 2030, focusing on 57 high burden counties and jurisdictions.

  • His proposed budgets requested hundreds of millions of dollars for that initiative, even while cutting other health programs.

Trump 1.0 followed the long-standing bipartisan model of federal recognition for World AIDS Day and attached his name to one of the most ambitious domestic HIV reduction goals in U.S. history.

In other words, Trump 1.0 did what presidents normally do on World AIDS Day, and even attached his name to a bold plan to end the epidemic domestically.

That is what makes Trump 2.0’s reversal in office now so striking.

That is what makes the current reversal so significant.

 

What Changed: Why the U.S. Is Not Officially Marking World AIDS Day

This year, internal State Department guidance instructed U.S. diplomats, staff and grantees not to use government resources to promote or commemorate World AIDS Day. They are told to avoid social media posts, speeches or public events framed around the observance. Participation in outside events is technically allowed, but only on a quiet, individual basis.

Officials framed the change as part of a broader shift away from recognizing “awareness days,” claiming that symbolic observances are not public health strategy. Yet the same administration continues to promote and recognize numerous other health themed months, law enforcement observances, and ideologically favorable commemorations.

At the same time, significant funding freezes and reductions have impacted USAID, PEPFAR, and international HIV programs. Clinics abroad have already reported service disruptions, medication rationing, and reduced outreach. Domestically, future cuts to CDC prevention and community programs remain under discussion.

Taken together, the decision does not appear neutral. HIV programs intersect with LGBTQ communities, international cooperation, and public health equity. All three have been frequent political targets under the current administration.

Whether labeled DEI, globalism, or identity politics, the outcome is the same. HIV loses visibility and resources while other diseases retain their full federal platforms.

Multiple reports describe this as a policy shift driven from the political level, not the career health experts:

  • The State Department framed the change as part of a broader move to avoid “recognizing commemorative days,” with a spokesperson quoted saying that “an awareness day is not a strategy.”

  • At the exact same time, the administration has continued or added other symbolic observances that match its ideological priorities: anti-communism weeks, Columbus Day re emphasis, energy dominance, and nationalism themed anniversaries.

  • Outside the symbolism, the administration has cut or frozen major HIV related funding, including foreign aid through USAID and support for PEPFAR programs in Africa and elsewhere, leading to clinic closures and drug rationing.

So what is the real reason?

When you put the pieces together, there are several overlapping motives:

  1. Bureaucratic excuse
    The official line is that “awareness days” are not a strategy, and that the government should focus on concrete actions instead of symbolic observances.

  2. Ideological sorting of which diseases get attention
    This administration is still happy to mark things like Cancer Control Month or Opioid Awareness, especially when they can be tied to talking points about crime, drugs, or patriotic narratives.
    HIV, by contrast, is heavily associated with LGBTQ communities, marginalized groups, and international institutions like UNAIDS and WHO, all framed as “globalist” or “woke” enemies.

  3. Budget cutting and foreign aid hostility
    Cuts to USAID and PEPFAR have been justified as part of an “America First” reordering of priorities, even though these programs arguably offered some of the clearest proof that American leadership saves human lives.

  4. Cultural war against anything labeled DEI or LGBTQ adjacent
    Several of the HIV programs that have seen funding or political attacks are exactly the ones that work with queer communities, sex workers, or trans women.
    Even if the directive never says “gay” out loud, the pattern is obvious to anyone who has been awake the last decade.

So is the no World AIDS Day decision “because of DEI” or “because of gays”? Officially, no. In practice, it lands in the same bucket of moves designed to signal to a certain base that this administration is done honoring anything that looks like global health, LGBTQ advocacy or multilateral cooperation.

 

Trump’s Support for People with AIDS and the Losses He Has Spoken About

Trump’s connection to the AIDS crisis is not theoretical or distant. He has spoken for years about losing people he personally knew to AIDS in the 1980s and 1990s, including builders, designers, and professionals he worked closely with in New York’s real estate and hospitality worlds. He has described that era as devastating to entire creative industries and social circles.

Trump’s long time lawyer and mentor Roy Cohn died of AIDS related complications in the 1980s.

Beyond statements, Trump’s financial and personal involvement with people suffering from AIDS has been referenced in media portrayals of that period. This includes dramatized accounts in television and cultural productions centered on the AIDS era within the drag and transgender community in New York, where Trump is depicted as quietly assisting with medical costs and access to care at a time when few people of power would publicly associate themselves with AIDS patients. These portrayals reflect long standing accounts from that era of Trump being willing to help behind the scenes when stigma made public support politically and socially dangerous.

Trump consistently framed AIDS as a human tragedy rather than a lifestyle issue. His World AIDS Day proclamations explicitly honored the people who died, acknowledged the suffering of families and communities, and emphasized the need to end stigma alongside advancing treatment. His administration’s Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative was built on the premise that HIV could be reduced through science, testing, and treatment access rather than moral judgment.

Politically, Trump has repeatedly stated that he supports the gay community and wants to see HIV eliminated entirely. While critics argue about tone and broader cultural battles, the record shows he took concrete steps on HIV policy beyond rhetoric. His public comments about losing people to AIDS, his willingness to fund treatment quietly in earlier decades, and his later national policy initiatives all point to a long running awareness of the human cost of the epidemic.

This history makes the current refusal to recognize World AIDS Day at the federal level even more contradictory, because it clashes directly with Trump’s own past statements and initiatives on HIV and AIDS.

 

Trump’s HIV/AIDS record: the complicated truth

If we are going to criticize honestly, we have to tell the whole story, not just the latest headline.

The positive side of the record

During his first term, Trump did some real things on HIV:

  • He launched the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative with a clear numerical goal, timelines and a focus on the counties with the highest transmissions. Public health experts like Anthony Fauci publicly backed the plan.

  • His budgets requested additional domestic HIV funding, including hundreds of millions for CDC prevention, Ryan White care, and community health centers, even while cutting other parts of HHS.

  • His World AIDS Day proclamations explicitly talked about ending stigma, supporting people living with HIV, and honoring those who died.

You can disagree with him on a thousand other issues and still admit that this part of the record was serious, especially on the domestic side.

The darker side: foreign aid and mixed signals

The same record has some major problems:

  • Internationally, his budgets proposed deep cuts to PEPFAR and global AIDS programs, although Congress often restored much of the funding.

  • New reporting this year shows that his renewed term has brought much harsher aid cuts and freezes, hitting HIV programs in Africa and elsewhere, closing clinics and creating drug shortages.

  • Officials inside HHS and CDC are now quietly warning that domestic HIV prevention funding is being considered for cuts as well, directly conflicting with the original “end HIV by 2030” promise.

 

Madonna vs Trump: Activism, Anger, and Contradiction

Into this political storm walks Madonna.

Madonna has been outspoken about AIDS since the earliest years of the epidemic. She lost close friends during its deadliest phase and used her platform to raise awareness and funding when few artists were willing to touch the topic publicly.

She has been talking about AIDS since the earliest years, has lost friends to the disease, and has used her tours and platforms to raise money and attention. That part is real and documented.

This year she lit up social media by calling out Trump’s decision to drop World AIDS Day as “ridiculous” and “unthinkable,” accusing him of ordering not just the federal government but the public to pretend the day never existed.

She also added a personal punch line: claiming that Trump has never watched a best friend die of AIDS and contrasting that with her own experience holding friends as they took their last breath.

Here is where the irony gets thick. Trump’s mentor Roy Cohn did die of AIDS, and Trump very likely knew it, even if both men publicly denied the disease at the time.

So, Madonna’s specific guess about his life is probably wrong, even if her anger at the policy is understandable.

And this is the same Madonna who, at the Women’s March after Trump’s first inauguration, said in a speech that she had “thought an awful lot about blowing up the White House,” later claiming it was a metaphor and insisting she was not calling for violence.

The angry pop icon and the angry president

So, we have:

  • A president who once proclaimed World AIDS Day and pledged to end HIV, now canceling the observance and cutting funding.

  • A pop star who once talked about “blowing up the White House” now demanding moral authority over which days America is allowed to remember.

Neither of these people is a saint. Both have said and done things that deserve criticism. But pretending that World AIDS Day is just a vanity project for Madonna or a “woke” cause misses the bigger picture.

World AIDS Day is not a celebrity project. It is a global public health institution built on the graves of millions.

 

Is HIV a “Gay Disease”? The Myth That Helped the Virus Spread

HIV is not and has never been a “gay disease.” It is a human disease transmitted through blood and bodily fluids across all populations.

Globally, more than 40 million people currently live with HIV. Over 40 million have already died since the epidemic began. Most new infections today occur through heterosexual transmission in sub Saharan Africa. Women and children now represent the majority of new cases worldwide.

In the United States, gay and bisexual men account for the highest percentage of new infections, but heterosexual transmission, injection drug use, and perinatal transmission remain significant contributors. Women, men, children, and entire communities continue to be affected.

The early labeling of AIDS as a “gay plague” delayed government response, delayed funding, discouraged testing, and replaced science with fear. That stigma allowed the virus to spread faster and farther than it ever should have.

Stigma has always been one of HIV’s most reliable allies.

Meanwhile, the laziest take that still floats around is the idea that HIV/AIDS is a “gay disease,” and therefore somehow less deserving of national attention.

The numbers burn that myth to the ground.

Global reality

Globally, about 40.8 million people were living with HIV in 2024, with roughly 630,000 deaths from AIDS related illnesses that year alone.

Since the start of the epidemic, more than 90 million people have been infected and over 40 million have died.

Most of those infections are in sub Saharan Africa, where the primary mode of transmission is heterosexual contact. Women and girls in many countries now make up more than half of people living with HIV.

Gay and bisexual men and other men who have sex with men are a key population worldwide and face a much higher risk, but they are a minority of the total world population and of global infections:

  • In 2022 there were about 210,000 new infections globally among gay and other men who have sex with men.

  • Their risk of acquiring HIV was about 23 times higher than that of the general population, underscoring both vulnerability and stigma.

So, HIV is absolutely not a “gay disease.” It is a human disease that hits different communities at different times, depending on behavior, biology, inequality and politics.

U.S. numbers

In the United States, gay and bisexual men are the group most affected by new infections, but they are far from the only group:

  • In 2022, gay and bisexual men accounted for about 67 percent of estimated new HIV infections in the U.S., even though they are a small fraction of the population.

  • Heterosexual transmission accounted for about 22 percent of new infections, including significant numbers of women. People who inject drugs accounted for about 7 percent.

So the stigma that paints HIV as exclusively gay does two destructive things at once:

  • It encourages some straight people to think they are “safe” and do not need testing or prevention.

  • It turns gay and trans people into political punching bags instead of partners in public health.

Public health experts have been saying for decades that stigma is one of the biggest drivers of the epidemic because it keeps people from getting tested, treated or even talked to honestly.

The myth did not just hurt the gay community. It helped the virus spread across the world.

 

Why the World AIDS Day Decision Matters

Some will say: “Who cares about a symbolic day. We should focus on real policy.”

Here is why the symbolism matters:

  1. World AIDS Day is the accountability moment
    It is when governments usually roll out new data, strategies and commitments. Dropping the day is also dropping a natural checkpoint for Congress and the public.

  2. It signals who counts and who does not
    The same government that is still happy to issue proclamations for cancer, heart disease, police week, manufacturing month and a long list of culture war holidays is now deliberately refusing to say the words “World AIDS Day.”

  3. It feeds the old stigma with new fuel
    If HIV is quietly removed from the official calendar while other health issues keep their platforms, people notice. People living with HIV notice. Teens at risk notice. The rest of the world notices.

  4. It undermines decades of U.S. moral authority
    For years, American conservatives and liberals alike could point to PEPFAR and World AIDS Day leadership as proof that our country cared about human life beyond our borders. That moral capital is now being burned for short term political applause.

If you can carve out whole awareness months and sports themed campaigns for other diseases, it is hard to argue that a single day for HIV is suddenly “too much symbolism.”

Symbolic days are accountability mechanisms. They provide yearly benchmarks where governments must show results, funding priorities, and progress.

Removing federal recognition sends a message about whose lives are publicly valued and whose are not.

The federal government continues to recognize cancer awareness months, opioid campaigns, law enforcement memorials, and countless other causes. To remove HIV specifically signals ideological avoidance rather than neutral policy.

It also weakens decades of American leadership in global HIV response. Programs like PEPFAR saved millions of lives and represented one of the strongest bipartisan moral accomplishments in U.S. foreign policy.

Silence is not neutrality. Silence reshapes priority.

 

 

Is America Afraid to Look in the Mirror on HIV Anymore?

#GoRight with Peter Boykin Commentary

Let us be honest. This is not really about a calendar. This is about a country that no longer wants to look in the mirror when the mirror shows something uncomfortable. That said let’s speak plainly without slogans and without safe talking points. What is happening with World AIDS Day is not about politics as usual. It is about whether our Constitutional Republic still has the courage to acknowledge pain when that pain does not fit neatly into campaign branding.

World AIDS Day is not trendy. It is not easy. It is not a pink ribbon slapped on a football field with a corporate sponsor logo. It is a red ribbon that reminds people of hospital rooms, lost lovers, divided families, and a time when politicians literally laughed or looked away while people died.

Our Constitutional Republic has made unbelievable progress on HIV. Medicine turned a death sentence into a chronic condition. PEPFAR helped save tens of millions of lives around the globe. Science gave us PrEP, antivirals, and the tools to drive new infections down to almost zero if we choose to use them.

So why, right when the finish line is in sight, are we pulling up?

I do not buy the excuse that “awareness days are not a strategy.” That is spin. This administration has no problem cutting a proclamation for Columbus Day, for energy dominance, for half a dozen symbolic culture war moments that poll well with the base. Awareness is apparently just fine when it is about gas stoves or statues.

HIV gets singled out because it sits at the intersection of everything the political class wants to avoid:

  • Sex, including gay sex, in a country that still cannot have an adult conversation about it.

  • Racial inequality, because the burden of HIV in America lands heavy on Black and Brown communities.

  • Global responsibility, because most of the people living with HIV are not Americans at all, they are poor and far away.

And in this moment, instead of using conservative principles to say “we care about life, we care about honesty, we care about fulfilling our promises,” the easy move is to pretend the whole thing is just a woke party we no longer need to attend.

I say this as someone who is both queer and conservative leaning on policy: it is possible to hate the insanity of DEI bureaucracy, to criticize the alphabet soup politics that hijacked the gay rights movement, and still believe that HIV is a serious human issue that deserves one day out of the year and real money in the budget.

We should be the people who say:

  • Ending HIV is not a left wing cause, it is a moral obligation.

  • Telling the truth about who is at risk is not bigotry, it is science.

  • Protecting kids means teaching them reality, not leaving them to TikTok myths about sex and disease.

World AIDS Day was never about parties or celebrities. It was born from hospital rooms, from handwritten death notices, from friends burying friends while society looked away. It exists because once upon a time millions of people were dying and leaders decided their lives were inconvenient.

We swore we would never repeat that mistake.

Science gave us miracles. What was once a death sentence became a manageable condition. Prevention became powerful. Testing became routine. Humanity now stands at the edge of truly ending an epidemic that once terrified the world.

And now we go quiet.

We are told awareness days are not strategy. Yet symbolism remains extremely useful when it suits other agendas. We hang banners and light buildings for countless causes. So this is not really about symbolism.

This is about discomfort.

HIV still forces hard conversations about sex, poverty, addiction, race, healthcare access, and the lives of gay Americans. And instead of leading that conversation with courage, the federal government chose silence.

Silence is not neutral. Silence is a message.

It tells people living with HIV that their lives are now politically awkward. It tells at risk youth their struggle is no longer worth naming. It tells the world that America would rather avoid the subject than confront it honestly.

This country once led the global fight against AIDS. PEPFAR became one of the greatest humanitarian efforts in modern history. Millions lived because American taxpayers and leadership chose to care. That legacy did not belong to one party. It belonged to the people.

Now it is being eroded clinic by clinic, budget line by budget line, proclamation by proclamation.

It is possible to reject ideological excess while still defending human life. It is possible to criticize bureaucratic DEI while still protecting gay Americans. It is possible to be conservative and still believe disease does not care how you vote.

Trump promised to end HIV in America. That promise created hope. That promise recognized science and accountability. Today that promise now exists beside policies that erase public recognition and weaken global prevention. Those two truths stand together. Responsible citizens confront both.

Madonna is not the moral authority or the moral compass of this nation. She is a pop star who once talked about blowing up the White House into a microphone. She is also someone who sat beside friends in hospital rooms while AIDS took them. Both things can be true. She is allowed to be angry that America is pretending World AIDS Day never existed.

Trump is not Satan or final villain or its redeemer, and he is not a savior

He is a man with a mixed record on HIV who once promised to end the epidemic and now presides over policies that move us in the opposite direction. He deserves credit for backing the Ending the HIV Epidemic plan, and he deserves criticism for undercutting World AIDS Day and global AIDS programs that saved lives overseas.

Grown-ups should be able to hold both of those truths in their head at the same time.

The real issue is whether a country that claims to value life is willing to speak the name of a disease that still claims hundreds of thousands of lives every year.

The myth that HIV was a gay disease nearly destroyed early response. That ignorance delayed funding, delayed compassion, and turned patients into political inconveniences. Lies killed people.

We do not correct old lies with new silence.

World AIDS Day is not about lifestyle or ideology. It is about recognition. It is about accountability. It is about telling every person living with HIV that they have not been erased from the national conscience.

If we can dedicate months to cancer and weeks to opioids, we can dedicate one day to HIV without pretending it is radical.

If we cannot do even that, then the problem is not the calendar. The problem is who we have become.

A Constitutional Republic exists to protect all citizens, especially when protection is inconvenient. Silence in the face of disease is not leadership. Silence is retreat.

So where does that leave us?

It leaves us with a choice. Do we let World AIDS Day disappear from our national life because it is politically inconvenient, or do we keep observing it anyway?

Every church, every community center, every podcast, every local group has the ability to say: we will not drop this. We will remember the people we lost, stand with the people living with HIV, and keep pushing for an actual end to this epidemic.

If our federal government wants to act scared of a red ribbon, then the rest of us need to wear it louder.

Because in a Constitutional Republic, the government does not own the calendar. The people do.

So, if the federal government will not speak the words World AIDS Day, the people must speak to them. Remembrance belongs to the living.

The mirror is still there.

The question is whether we still have the courage to look.

#GoRight with Peter Boykin

 

 

#GoRight Call to Action

To all readers and listeners:

  • Share real facts about HIV in your circles, especially that it is not and has never been only a “gay disease.”

  • Support local HIV testing, prevention and care organizations, especially those serving marginalized communities.

  • Hold every politician to their own words about ending the epidemic, no matter what party they belong to.

It is time to Go Right.

Subscribe and follow for more commentary from a Constitutionalist for Liberty.

FOLLOW ON ALL PLATFORMS

👉 Listen to the Full Podcast

Turn it up. Please share it. Use it as a soundtrack for unity, clarity, and purpose.

#GoRight with Peter Boykin

 Listen and Subscribe: Rumble | YouTube | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Amazon | Truth Social | X | Facebook | GAB | TikTok

SUPPORT THE PLATFORM

Cash App: $GoRightNews

#GoRightNews, #PeterBoykin, #WorldAIDSDay, #HIVAwareness, #EndTheEpidemic, #ConstitutionalRepublic, #LGBTQConservative, #HIVAintAGayDisease, #PublicHealth, #PEPFAR, #StopTheStigma, #Madonna, #DonaldTrump, #AIDSPolicy, #HumanRights, #GlobalHealth, #FaithAndReason, #GayConservative, #AmericaFirstMeansEndingAIDS, #GoRight, #TrumpRecord, #AmericaFirstHealth

 

 

 

 

 

Call to Action

For daily commentary grounded in liberty, justice, and constitutional values, visit GoRightNews.com
Subscribe at Rumble.com/GoRightNews and Go Right with Peter Boykin Podcast – YouTube

📢 Listen and Subscribe:

Rumble | YouTube | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Amazon | Truth Social | X | Facebook | GAB | TikTok

Follow #GoRight with Peter Boykin on

Spreaker

Go Right with Peter Boykin GoRightNews.com | Podcast on Spotify

Apple

Amazon

 Facebook

X | Twitter

and every major platform

 

SUPPORT THE PLATFORM

If you support independent media that holds power accountable, consider a donation at Cash App $GoRightNews.

Help us stay fiercely independent.

Donate at Cash App $GoRightNews 

$GoRightNews

All donation links are at GoRightNews.com and PeterBoykin.com

 

Stay informed. Stay free. It is time to #GoRight.

At Go Right News, we know most critics won’t even read past the headline. Quick to judge, quicker to dismiss, just like the very bureaucrats we expose. Sure, we expect that from the Left. But too often, even conservatives skip the facts, shouting “fake news” without a second thought.

We’re not here to play into false binaries. Go Right News always stands to defend the Constitution, truthfully, unapologetically, and without fear of offending either side. We lean right, but we’re not afraid to call out extremism, hypocrisy, or double standards wherever they hide.

We give you the facts, the contrast, and the Constitutional context, because this is more than politics. It’s a movement.

It’s Time To #GoRight
#GoRight: More Than Politics: A Way of Life

 

#GoRight: More Than Politics, A Way of Life

#GoRight isn’t just about politics: it’s about doing what’s right in every aspect of life.

It’s about making choices that uplift, strengthen, and unite our communities.

It means:
✅ Doing Right: Standing for truth, integrity, and accountability.
✅ Thinking Right: Using logic, common sense, and fairness in decision-making.
✅ Being Right: Living with honor, respect, and responsibility.
✅ Voting Right: Electing leaders who put We the People first.

#GoRight is a direction: a call to action for all who believe in building, not destroying.

It’s about working toward a better future, together.

 

This Article is brought to you by Go Right News and edited by Peter Boykin

Visit GoRightNews.com for More Articles, and visit PeterBoykin.com to Learn more about Peter Boykin

 

📢 At Go Right News, we stand for facts, not fear. We believe in preserving our history, focusing on real policy, and cutting through the noise. The truth doesn’t need to be edited—it just needs to be heard. And if we’re going to win for America, it’s time to stop running to the sidelines and start charging down the field toward unity, prosperity, and liberty for all.

 

Web:

https://GoRightNews.com

https://GoRightNc.com

https://PeterBoykin.com

https://GaysForTrump.org

 

Kick:

http://Kick.com/PeterBoykin

https://Kick.com/GoRightNews

https://Kick.com/LuckyNLoose

https://Kick.com/GaysForTrump

 

Rumble: 

https://rumble.com/c/GoRightNews

https://rumble.com/c/GoRightNewsVideos

https://rumble.com/c/GoRightNewsPodcast

https://rumble.com/c/GaysForTrump

https://rumble.com/c/PeterBoykin

YouTube:

https://youtube.com/@PeterBoykinForAmerica

https://www.youtube.com/@GoRightNews

https://www.youtube.com/@GoRightNewsChannel

https://www.youtube.com/@gorightnewsvideos

https://www.youtube.com/@gorightnc

https://www.youtube.com/@PeterBoykinForLiberty

https://www.youtube.com/@gaysfortrumporganization

https://www.youtube.com/@QiewNews

https://www.youtube.com/@GoForwardNews

Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/boykin4congress

https://www.facebook.com/groups/gorightnews

https://www.facebook.com/GoRightNewsOfficial

https://www.facebook.com/PeterRBoykin

https://www.facebook.com/BoykinForNC

https://www.facebook.com/Boykin4NC

https://www.facebook.com/groups/boykinfornc

https://www.facebook.com/groups/PeterBoykinForCongress

https://www.facebook.com/groups/boykin4nc

 

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/peterboykin/

https://www.instagram.com/gorightnews/

https://www.instagram.com/boykin4congress/

https://www.instagram.com/march4trump/

https://www.instagram.com/peterboykinsings/

Twitter:

https://x.com/GoRightNews

https://x.com/BoykinForNC

https://x.com/Boykin4Congress

https://x.com/Boykin4NC

 

Telegram:

http://t.me/realpeterboykin

https://t.me/GoRightNews

https://t.me/NorthCarolinaRedWave

https://t.me/GoRightNC

https://t.me/GoRight

https://t.me/AmericansFirst

https://t.me/GaysForTrump

https://t.me/MagaOneNews

https://t.me/BoykinForHouse

https://t.me/BoykinForCongress

https://t.me/NorthCarolinaFirst

https://t.me/PeterRBoykin

https://t.me/VoteForTrump

https://t.me/FuckTheLeft

https://t.me/MagaFirstNews

https://t.me/GaysGoRight

 

Reddit

https://www.reddit.com/r/GoRightNews/

https://www.reddit.com/r/GoRight/

https://www.reddit.com/r/Peter_Boykin/

https://www.reddit.com/r/PeterBoykin/

https://www.reddit.com/r/MagaFirstNews/

https://www.reddit.com/r/GayConservatives/

https://www.reddit.com/r/GaysForTrump_Org/

https://www.reddit.com/r/AskGayConservatives/

 

Each Month, Go Right News Spends Hundreds of Dollars and Hours to Run This Site and Podcast,

with no sponsors or ads. This comes out of our pockets. If you like what you see, consider donating to the podcast. Thanks!

Like the Content? Please Support!

Stripe: https://gorightnews.com/donations/support-gorightnews/

Cash App: https://cash.app/$GoRightNews

 

 

 

 

 

Tags:

#GoRightNews, #GoRight, #PeterBoykin, #ConservativeVoice, #LibertyPodcast, #MakeAmericaRightAgain, #GOPPodcast, #RightWingTalk, #ConservativeTalk, #ConstitutionalTalk, #NewsForTheRight, #RightSideOfHistory, #AmericaFirstPodcast, #ConservativeCommentary, #PatriotPodcast, #FreedomOfSpeech, #RightViews, #TrumpSupportersPodcast, #ConservativeInsider, #RightSideNews

#ncpol #NCpolitics #Boykin4NC #BoykinFor2024 #BoykinForNC

#Android #Apple #Trump #trumptrain #Trump2024 #TRUMP2024ToSaveAmerica #2024Election #election #election2023 #electionchallenge #ElectionIntegrity #ElectionsMatter #ElectionCommission #GoRightNews #GaysForTrump #tuesday #GoRight #ihatemondays #applemusic #applewatch #applepodcasts #ApplePay #appleiphone #bidenisnotmypresident #BIDENSAMERICA #BidenBorderCrisis #Bidenflation #Biden #BidenCrimeFamily #northcarolina #government #Governor #politics #political #politicians #politicalchallenge #politicalmeme

#MakeAmericaHealthyAgain, #RFKJr, #HealthFreedom, #TransparencyInHealthcare, #BigPharmaWatch, #TrumpHealthAgenda, #VaccineSafety, #HealthReform, #EndTheCorruption, #GoldStandardScience, #J6Pardon, #TrumpJustice, #EqualJusticeUnderLaw, #PoliticalPrisoners, #CapitolCases, #LegalDelay, #TrumpInauguration, #PardonPower, #JusticeForJ6, #AwaitingJustice, #FloridaVsFEMA, #PoliticalDiscrimination, #DisasterReliefBias, #HurricaneVictims, #EqualAid, #FEMAControversy, #NoPoliticalAid, #JusticeForAllFloridians, #FEMAInvestigation, #TrumpSupportersRights

Shared by

#GoRightNews https://GoRightNews.com

 

 


Reader's opinions

Leave a Reply


[There are no radio stations in the database]