Obama’s response lands with a calm weight that feels heavier than outrage. He refuses to center himself as the victim, insisting he’s a “fair target” as a public figure. But when his wife and daughters are dragged into dehumanizing imagery, he calls it what it is: a violation of a boundary that should exist even between the fiercest political enemies. That line, he suggests, is not about partisanship but about decency.
He also widens the lens beyond his own family. Obama’s concern over Trump’s AI videos isn’t just their racism, but the way they turn war and human suffering into spectacle, like a grotesque video game. When excrement is digitally dumped on civilians for laughs, he warns, something essential erodes: our ability to see other people as human, rather than props in a never-ending political show.
