The Daily BS • Bo Snerdley Cuts Through It!
The Daily BS • Bo Snerdley Cuts Through It!

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Kelsey Grammer: ‘Now they’re after us … Trump can’t protect us anymore’

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In an industry terrified of stepping out of line, Kelsey Grammer is doing what few in Hollywood dare to do—telling the truth as he sees it, unapologetically and without a handler.

The Frasier star has long been one of the rare, open conservatives in entertainment—a Republican, a Trump supporter, and a man unafraid to stand alone in a town dominated by progressive groupthink. And during a recent appearance on Tomi Lahren’s podcast, Grammer delivered a warning that hit like a thunderclap.

This wasn’t celebrity grandstanding. It was a sober message to conservatives everywhere.

Grammer didn’t mince words about what he sees as the modern left’s playbook—especially when they lose power.

“The habits of the left when they are out of power is to just keep throwing lawnmowers, or throwing rocks at glass houses, or whatever you want to say,” Grammer said.

According to Grammer, facts no longer matter—labels do.

“They know it’s not true. They know I’m not a racist, but they’d call me one. They know I’m not a fascist, but they’d call me one,” he explained. “But it’s more important that I know I’m not one.”

For years, Donald Trump absorbed the fury—every insult, every investigation, every institutional ambush. Grammer framed Trump as a human shield, standing between ordinary Americans and a radicalized political movement.

But that era, he warned, is over.

“Donald Trump’s not standing in the gap anymore. He can’t protect us anymore.”

Grammer recounted, in stark terms, what Trump endured—impeachments, prosecutions, and even assassination attempts, as Grammer himself described them—emphasizing Trump’s resilience rather than criticizing him. “They dished out everything they could give him. They tried to kill him. They tried to kill him twice. They tried to imprison him for life. They tried to impeach him twice,” Grammer said. “He stood there bravely and took everything of it.”

And now? “Now they’re after us.”

Grammer pointed to a shocking example from Virginia, where a Democrat was elected despite remarks about wanting to kill a Republican colleague and that colleague’s children—an incident Grammer cited as evidence of how far political hostility has escalated.

The actor’s message was blunt: the rage didn’t disappear when Trump survived—it metastasized.

Grammer argued that Trump’s rise wasn’t an accident but a reaction. People voted for Trump, he said, because of the left—and now that effort has backfired, delivering what he described as “their own desserts.”

Online, conservatives responded with relief and gratitude. Many praised Grammer for risking his career to say what millions feel but are afraid to voice—especially in Hollywood. “This man gave us 20 years of comedy with almost zero politics,” one user wrote. “It CAN be done.”