There are bad days at work.
Then there are days where the entire country watches an assassination attempt unfold and immediately starts asking what exactly the protection plan was supposed to be.
And that, friends, is how you land FBJ of the Week.
Because when the assignment is literally:
Protect the President. Neutralize threats. Prevent catastrophe.
ā¦and the internet comes away saying āthat looked chaotic,ā
that is not exactly glowing feedback.
People can debate procedures all day.
But what lit social media on fire was the perception of confusion, delayed response, and glaring questions that should never exist around presidential security.
Questions like:
- How did a threat get that close?
- Why did it appear so disorganized?
- Why did viewers at home seem to spot problems before professionals did?
Those arenāt minor critiques.
Thatās a flashing neon sign reading:
Somebody explain this immediately.
𤔠INTERNET REACTS
āThe response looked like everybody was waiting for somebody else to do something.ā
āWhen random people online are asking better security questions than the security detail⦠yikes.ā
āProtecting the president should not look like a group project nobody prepared for.ā
āThat wasnāt a response plan. That looked like panic with earpieces.ā
āYou had one mission. ONE.ā
- Public outrage ā
- Security questions everywhere ā
- Congressional scrutiny vibes ā
- Internet roast level: catastrophic ā
- FBJ of the Week trophy earned ā
If an assassination attempt leads millions to say:
āHow did that happen?ā
ā¦and the response itself becomes part of the controversyā¦
somebody earned this award.
The Response That Had America Asking Questions
Because this wasnāt judged by perfection.
It was judged by whether people felt protected.
And a whole lot of people didnāt.
When your whole job is making sure history doesnāt happen⦠you donāt get applauded for reacting after history almost does.








