The ladies of The View have officially lost their minds. This is beyond the pale for anyone.
And now The View’s Joy Behar went completely insane in this deranged rant caught on camera.
Joy Behar has a message for anyone who supported President Donald Trump—don’t count on her for help. During Thursday’s episode of The View on ABC, Behar made it clear that while she wouldn’t cut off a friendship over political differences, she wouldn’t lift a finger to assist a Trump supporter in need. And if they were hoping for a life-saving favor? Forget it.
“I won’t give them a kidney, but I could be friends with them,” Behar declared. Her tone left no room for doubt—Trump voters, in her eyes, have crossed a moral line that makes them unworthy of certain basic acts of kindness.
Behar doubled down, arguing that supporting Trump isn’t just a political choice—it’s a character flaw.
“It’s not just about politics, it’s about morality, ethics, it’s about cruelty, it’s about discrimination. It’s about a lot of things. So, those are personal human values,” she explained. In other words, if you back Trump, Behar sees it as a sign of poor moral judgment.
And according to Behar, it’s not just about tax policy or economic debates—it’s personal. “We’re not really just talking about a fiscal conservative who pays more taxes,” she added.
“We’re talking about you as a human being. So it’s hard to be friends with someone who signs on to something like that.”
Joy Behar claims she's friends with a Trump supporter but adds she wouldn't give them a kidney to save their life:
"I won't give them a kidney but I could be friends with them…the thing about it, it's not just about politics, it's about morality, ethics, it's about cruelty,… pic.twitter.com/TqMu3wzFXC— Nicholas Fondacaro (@NickFondacaro) March 6, 2025
Not surprisingly, her cohost Sunny Hostin enthusiastically agreed. Hostin claimed that Trump has transformed the Republican Party into something irredeemable.
“I agree with that because I think, you know, we’re in abnormal times. This is not the Republican Party of yesterday. I think it’s the Trumplican party in many respects,” she said, pushing the narrative that Trump and his supporters are “so extreme.”
Hostin went even further, blaming Trump voters for a long list of societal harms. “If someone is supporting or voting for someone who is hurting members of my family, members of my community, our elderly, our children, gutting our government, firing people; I do have a hard time being friends with that person,” she said, suggesting that anyone who votes for Trump is personally complicit in causing harm to society.
Cohost Sara Haines took a slightly softer approach but still implied that Trump supporters are out of step with modern values. Reflecting on her own background, she noted how much has changed in recent years.
“It’s very common to know people that vote differently,” Haines said, describing her shift from “Midwest conservative life to super liberal East Coast life.” The implication? What was once a routine difference of opinion is now a moral divide.
Throughout the discussion, the panel’s underlying message was crystal clear—if you support Trump, you’re either misguided or simply getting your information from the “wrong sources.” There was no consideration that millions of Americans might have valid, thoughtful reasons for backing Trump’s America First agenda. Instead, the cohosts dismissed those voters as uninformed at best and immoral at worst.
This kind of dismissive rhetoric is nothing new for The View. For years, the panel has openly displayed its contempt for Trump and his supporters. But Behar’s latest comments take that hostility to a new level—suggesting that supporting Trump not only makes someone politically incorrect but also undeserving of basic human decency.
The irony is hard to ignore. The same left-wing voices who constantly lecture Americans about tolerance and compassion seem to abandon those principles the moment someone dares to support a leader they despise. Behar’s refusal to help a Trump supporter in need lays bare the hypocrisy behind the left’s so-called message of kindness and inclusion.
For the millions of Americans who proudly supported Trump—not once, but twice—Behar’s words are yet another reminder of how detached Hollywood elites have become from the real world.
These are the same hardworking Americans who value faith, family, and freedom—values that are clearly lost on the out-of-touch television personalities preaching from their bubble.
And despite the panel’s smug certainty, Trump’s enduring popularity tells a different story.
The 2024 election made one thing clear: millions of Americans still stand behind a leader who puts their interests first. Whether Joy Behar approves or not, Trump’s movement is stronger than ever—and it’s not going away anytime soon.