Hunter Biden says he is ‘100% in’ for cage match with Trump sons
Hunter Biden said he is 100% in for a proposed fight with Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, while organizers said the event is not yet arranged.
- On Thursday, Hunter Biden challenged Donald Trump's sons Donald and Eric Trump to a cage match. "I'd do it 100% in if he can pull it off," Biden stated in a video shared on social media commentator Andrew Callaghan's Channel.
- Social media commentator Andrew Callaghan contacted Hunter Biden about organizing the bout. Biden confirmed he remains committed to the match regardless of whether Callaghan can successfully arrange it.
- Trump spokesman Steven Cheung questioned Hunter Biden's ability to "pass a p--- test," while Democratic strategist Chris Jackson claimed, "Hunter would beat the brakes off of them."
- Separately, The White House plans to host a fight night featuring professional UFC fighters on June 14 for America's 250th birthday celebrations. The Trump Organization did not respond to requests for comment.
- Historical precedents include the 1804 duel between Vice President Aaron Burr and Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton, which ended in Hamilton's death. Similar cage match proposals, like one between Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk, never materialized.
124 Articles
124 Articles
Hunter Biden was surprised to post a video where he claims to be willing to confront Donald Trump's children in a cage fight
Hunter Biden said on Thursday that he would be willing to face the older sons of President Donald Trump, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, in a possible cage fight, in what is becoming unusual statements that went viral on social media. In an Instagram video, Joe Biden’s son detailed that the idea arose after being contacted by youtuber Andrew Callaghan, who raised the possibility of organizing the fight between Hunter and Trump’s two sons as one…
Biden Junior vs Trump Junior. One of the most bizarre and unusual challenges in American history could take place on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the United States: a meeting of arts...
America’s political past makes Hunter Biden’s cage fight challenge seem tame
On May 22, 1856, as most other lawmakers and guests had left the Senate floor for lunch, former Sen. Charles Sumner, R-Mass., stayed behind at his desk to finish some writing. Two days earlier, Sumner had finished a lengthy, two-day speech attacking the Kansas-Nebraska Act passed two years earlier. The speech attacked the bill’s authors, including former Sen. Andrew Butler, D-S.C. Sumner said Butler had “chosen a mistress to whom he has made his…
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