February 6, 2026
Benny Hunna is trending — and not in a good way.
The outspoken artist and media personality lit a match on social media Thursday morning after posting a tweet that many fans say shows support for Donald Trump just hours after Trump shared a highly controversial video that critics described as racially offensive toward the Obamas.
In his now-viral post, Benny Hunna wrote:
“🥷 is crazy
I ain’t mad at Trump
#makeamericagreatagain”
The tweet, posted at 11:10 AM on February 6, 2026, immediately sent shockwaves across X, with users accusing Hunna of being tone-deaf at best — and deliberately provocative at worst.
The timing is what really set people off.
Earlier the same day, Trump shared a video on social media that sparked widespread backlash, with viewers saying the imagery appeared to depict the Obamas in a dehumanizing way. While Trump did not directly comment on the interpretation, the post was quickly condemned by critics, civil rights advocates, and social media users who called it “disgusting” and “racist.”
That context made Benny Hunna’s “I ain’t mad at Trump” comment feel explosive.
Comment sections quickly filled with reactions like:
“So this is the hill you’re dying on?” “He’s trying to get canceled on purpose.” “This isn’t edgy — it’s reckless.”
Others, however, rushed to Hunna’s defense, arguing that he never explicitly endorsed the video itself and was simply exercising free speech — a move that has become part of his increasingly polarizing public persona.
Still, critics say the silence speaks louder than words.
Whether Benny Hunna was trolling, signaling political alignment, or intentionally pouring gasoline on a cultural fire, one thing is clear: he knew exactly what he was doing.
And if the goal was attention?
Mission accomplished.



