Watching your favorite movies abroad? Don’t forget to get your Aeroshield smart DNS to access any geo-restricted content.

Photos via Kent Nishimura/Win McNamee/Getty Images
Politics, for better or worse, is never boring.
In her relentless pursuit of attention, the Georgia congresswoman has managed to cement her title as the reigning champion of saying things nobody asked for, at all the wrong times, in all the wrong ways. But thankfully, we have someone like Jasmine Crockett with a sharp tongue and zero tolerance for nonsense, to call it like it is.
The ongoing feud between Representatives Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Georgia) escalated yet again this week during Crockett’s appearance on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” Tuesday night. When Kimmel inquired if Greene still retained her unofficial title as “the dumbest person in the House” – an assessment Crockett first delivered on the same show last year – the Texas congresswoman confirmed with devastating certainty that Greene remains unchallenged in her intellectual vacancy.
“No, no, she’s still winning, honey,” Crockett assured Kimmel. She then referenced Greene’s recent controversial social media post following Pope Francis’ death, describing it as “cringey” – a word that could honestly be applied to about 90% of Greene’s public communications. The hostility between these two representatives dates back to their notorious clash during a 2024 House Oversight Committee meeting, where Greene bizarrely focused on Crockett’s appearance rather than addressing policy matters.
Crockett, however, wasn’t having it. She clapped back so hard that Greene probably had to Google “how to recover from congressional humiliation.” Since then, Crockett has become one of Greene’s loudest critics, and for good reason. Greene’s legislative record provides ample material for Crockett’s critiques. Despite introducing hundreds of bills during her tenure, Greene’s actual accomplishments could fit on a Post-it note with room to spare. Her congressional legacy largely consists of renaming a few post offices (yes, really) while spending considerably more energy promoting conspiracy theories than crafting workable policy solutions.
As for Greene’s constituents in Georgia’s 14th district, one has to wonder what they make of their representative becoming a national punchline. Political loyalty is one thing, but at some point, even the most dedicated supporters must question whether effective representation includes being repeatedly identified as Congress’s least intellectually equipped member. If history is any indication, Greene isn’t going to change. In the meantime, someone really ought to tell Marjorie Taylor Greene that Twitter isn’t a diary. Or a journal. Or a place to announce the imaginary deaths of religious leaders.
Published: Apr 28, 2025 04:30 pm