30-50 Feral Hogs

2019Catchphrase / copypasta / Twitter memesemi-active

Also known as: Feral Hogs · 30-50 Hogs

30-50 Feral Hogs is a 2019 Twitter meme that became shorthand for absurdly weak arguments, originating from @WillieMcNabb's viral reply defending assault rifles by invoking feral hog attacks.

30-50 Feral Hogs is a Twitter meme born from a reply defending assault rifle ownership by citing the need to protect children from "30-50 feral hogs" invading a yard. Posted on August 4, 2019, the tweet by user @WillieMcNabb was widely mocked across Twitter, spawning parody song lyrics, sarcastic image macros, and a new shorthand for absurdly weak counterarguments.

TL;DR

30-50 Feral Hogs is a Twitter meme born from a reply defending assault rifle ownership by citing the need to protect children from "30-50 feral hogs" invading a yard.

Overview

The meme centers on a specific tweet in which a user posed what he framed as a "legit question for rural Americans," asking how he was supposed to deal with 30-50 feral hogs charging into his yard within 3-5 minutes while his small children played outside1. The tweet was a response to musician Jason Isbell's call to stop debating the definition of "assault weapon" in the wake of mass shootings1. The surreal specificity of the scenario, particularly the oddly precise "30-50" hog count and the "3-5 mins" timeframe, made it instantly mockable. It quickly became internet shorthand for a type of bad-faith argument where a wildly improbable edge case is used to counter a strong moral position2.

On August 4, 2019, country and Americana musician Jason Isbell posted a tweet reading: "If you're on here arguing the definition of 'assault weapon' today you are part of the problem. You know what an assault weapon is, and you know you don't need one"1. The timing was deliberate. Mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, had dominated the news cycle that weekend.

User @WillieMcNabb replied directly: "Legit question for rural Americans – How do I kill the 30-50 feral hogs that run into my yard within 3-5 mins while my small kids play?"1. The tweet was sincere. Feral hogs are a genuine agricultural pest in the American South and Midwest. But the framing, treating a hypothetical hog invasion as equivalent in urgency to mass shooting victims, struck most of Twitter as absurd2.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter
Key People
@WillieMcNabb, Jason Isbell
Date
2019
Year
2019

On August 4, 2019, country and Americana musician Jason Isbell posted a tweet reading: "If you're on here arguing the definition of 'assault weapon' today you are part of the problem. You know what an assault weapon is, and you know you don't need one". The timing was deliberate. Mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, had dominated the news cycle that weekend.

User @WillieMcNabb replied directly: "Legit question for rural Americans – How do I kill the 30-50 feral hogs that run into my yard within 3-5 mins while my small kids play?". The tweet was sincere. Feral hogs are a genuine agricultural pest in the American South and Midwest. But the framing, treating a hypothetical hog invasion as equivalent in urgency to mass shooting victims, struck most of Twitter as absurd.

How It Spread

The tweet exploded the following day as quote tweets and mockery piled up. User @lib_crusher sarcastically wrote, "Hate when 30-50 feral hogs run into my yard as my kids play, forcing me to dual wield AR-15s as I mow them down," picking up over 730 retweets and 4,200 likes. Another user, @UweBollocks, escalated the joke with an elaborate fictional scenario involving sons named "Brandtford and Hyland" drinking Busch Heavy on the back deck before 76 feral hogs attacked, earning over 440 likes.

A major thread of the mockery involved song lyric parodies. User @dylanmatt rewrote "500 Miles" by The Proclaimers around the feral hog premise, gaining over 40 retweets. User @videodante inserted the hog scenario into "Milkshake" by Kelis, collecting over 170 retweets. These parody lyrics became a format unto themselves, with dozens of users adapting pop songs to feature the 30-50 hogs.

The meme received a second wind in September 2019 when the Daily Inter Lake reported that large roving packs of feral hogs were approaching the U.S.-Canada border in Montana. Dale Nolte of the USDA's National Feral Swine Program warned that an invasion would "be a disaster." Twitter users immediately connected the story to @WillieMcNabb's tweet, with @NatlSecCounselors posting "OH MY GOD HE WAS RIGHT" and @TrevorWoggon adding "He tried to warn us!".

The meme resurfaced again in February 2024 when X user @centx_diesel posted a photo of an enormous hog in the back of a pickup truck, captioned about domestic-wild hog interbreeding producing larger animals each generation. The post gathered over 14,000 likes in three days. User @nathanallebach quote-tweeted it with "We as a society owe an apology to the 30-50 feral hogs guy," earning over 3,000 likes in two days.

Platforms

TwitterRedditInstagramTikTok

Timeline

2020-01-01

30-50 Feral Hogs started spreading across social media platforms

2021-01-01

30-50 Feral Hogs reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

2022-01-01

Brands and companies started using 30-50 Feral Hogs in marketing

2024-01-01

30-50 Feral Hogs entered the broader pop culture conversation

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The 30-50 Feral Hogs format works in two main ways.

The first is direct quotation or paraphrase of the original tweet, usually deployed whenever gun control debates surface online. People drop the "30-50 feral hogs" line as shorthand to mock weak counterarguments.

The second, broader use applies the format to any debate where someone counters a strong position with an absurdly specific hypothetical. Something along the lines of "but what about [extremely unlikely scenario]?" can get hit with "ok 30-50 feral hogs guy" or a direct parody of the original tweet's structure.

Song lyric parodies follow a simple template: take a well-known song, replace key words with references to 30-50 feral hogs, small children playing, and 3-5 minute timeframes.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

The meme tapped directly into the American gun control debate, arriving during one of the most intense news cycles of 2019. It gave gun control advocates a ready-made punchline for a specific style of pro-gun argument: the rural self-defense scenario pushed to absurd extremes.

Beyond politics, "30-50 feral hogs" entered online vocabulary as a general-purpose dismissal of weak rhetorical tactics. Urban Dictionary defines it as "a type of rhetoric where an overtly minimal point is used to counter an extremely strong and ethical position". The phrase showed up in internet arguments well outside gun debates, applied to any situation where someone deployed an improbable hypothetical to dodge a straightforward moral question.

The February 2024 revival proved the meme had lasting cultural memory. Nearly five years after the original tweet, the discovery of genuinely massive feral hogs prompted thousands of users to circle back to @WillieMcNabb's original post, this time with a tone that was half-mocking, half-genuinely impressed.

Fun Facts

Feral hogs are a real and serious problem in the United States. The USDA's National Feral Swine Program confirmed in 2019 that large packs were indeed approaching the U.S.-Canada border in Montana.

The original tweet was completely sincere, not a troll or a joke account.

The meme spawned its own mini-genre of country and folk song parodies, fitting given that Jason Isbell, whose tweet started the chain, is himself a country/Americana musician.

Urban Dictionary's top definition frames "30-50 feral hogs" as a rhetorical concept rather than just a meme, describing it as a specific type of bad-faith argumentation.

Derivatives & Variations

Feral X Animals

Variations replacing hogs with other animals in equally absurd scenarios

(2019)

Specific Threat Scenarios

Memes applying the same logic to other oddly specific problems and threats

(2019)

Frequently Asked Questions

References (3)

  1. 1
  2. 2
    Capybaraencyclopedia
  3. 3

30-50 Feral Hogs

2019Catchphrase / copypasta / Twitter memesemi-active

Also known as: Feral Hogs · 30-50 Hogs

30-50 Feral Hogs is a 2019 Twitter meme that became shorthand for absurdly weak arguments, originating from @WillieMcNabb's viral reply defending assault rifles by invoking feral hog attacks.

30-50 Feral Hogs is a Twitter meme born from a reply defending assault rifle ownership by citing the need to protect children from "30-50 feral hogs" invading a yard. Posted on August 4, 2019, the tweet by user @WillieMcNabb was widely mocked across Twitter, spawning parody song lyrics, sarcastic image macros, and a new shorthand for absurdly weak counterarguments.

TL;DR

30-50 Feral Hogs is a Twitter meme born from a reply defending assault rifle ownership by citing the need to protect children from "30-50 feral hogs" invading a yard.

Overview

The meme centers on a specific tweet in which a user posed what he framed as a "legit question for rural Americans," asking how he was supposed to deal with 30-50 feral hogs charging into his yard within 3-5 minutes while his small children played outside. The tweet was a response to musician Jason Isbell's call to stop debating the definition of "assault weapon" in the wake of mass shootings. The surreal specificity of the scenario, particularly the oddly precise "30-50" hog count and the "3-5 mins" timeframe, made it instantly mockable. It quickly became internet shorthand for a type of bad-faith argument where a wildly improbable edge case is used to counter a strong moral position.

On August 4, 2019, country and Americana musician Jason Isbell posted a tweet reading: "If you're on here arguing the definition of 'assault weapon' today you are part of the problem. You know what an assault weapon is, and you know you don't need one". The timing was deliberate. Mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, had dominated the news cycle that weekend.

User @WillieMcNabb replied directly: "Legit question for rural Americans – How do I kill the 30-50 feral hogs that run into my yard within 3-5 mins while my small kids play?". The tweet was sincere. Feral hogs are a genuine agricultural pest in the American South and Midwest. But the framing, treating a hypothetical hog invasion as equivalent in urgency to mass shooting victims, struck most of Twitter as absurd.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter
Key People
@WillieMcNabb, Jason Isbell
Date
2019
Year
2019

On August 4, 2019, country and Americana musician Jason Isbell posted a tweet reading: "If you're on here arguing the definition of 'assault weapon' today you are part of the problem. You know what an assault weapon is, and you know you don't need one". The timing was deliberate. Mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, had dominated the news cycle that weekend.

User @WillieMcNabb replied directly: "Legit question for rural Americans – How do I kill the 30-50 feral hogs that run into my yard within 3-5 mins while my small kids play?". The tweet was sincere. Feral hogs are a genuine agricultural pest in the American South and Midwest. But the framing, treating a hypothetical hog invasion as equivalent in urgency to mass shooting victims, struck most of Twitter as absurd.

How It Spread

The tweet exploded the following day as quote tweets and mockery piled up. User @lib_crusher sarcastically wrote, "Hate when 30-50 feral hogs run into my yard as my kids play, forcing me to dual wield AR-15s as I mow them down," picking up over 730 retweets and 4,200 likes. Another user, @UweBollocks, escalated the joke with an elaborate fictional scenario involving sons named "Brandtford and Hyland" drinking Busch Heavy on the back deck before 76 feral hogs attacked, earning over 440 likes.

A major thread of the mockery involved song lyric parodies. User @dylanmatt rewrote "500 Miles" by The Proclaimers around the feral hog premise, gaining over 40 retweets. User @videodante inserted the hog scenario into "Milkshake" by Kelis, collecting over 170 retweets. These parody lyrics became a format unto themselves, with dozens of users adapting pop songs to feature the 30-50 hogs.

The meme received a second wind in September 2019 when the Daily Inter Lake reported that large roving packs of feral hogs were approaching the U.S.-Canada border in Montana. Dale Nolte of the USDA's National Feral Swine Program warned that an invasion would "be a disaster." Twitter users immediately connected the story to @WillieMcNabb's tweet, with @NatlSecCounselors posting "OH MY GOD HE WAS RIGHT" and @TrevorWoggon adding "He tried to warn us!".

The meme resurfaced again in February 2024 when X user @centx_diesel posted a photo of an enormous hog in the back of a pickup truck, captioned about domestic-wild hog interbreeding producing larger animals each generation. The post gathered over 14,000 likes in three days. User @nathanallebach quote-tweeted it with "We as a society owe an apology to the 30-50 feral hogs guy," earning over 3,000 likes in two days.

Platforms

TwitterRedditInstagramTikTok

Timeline

2020-01-01

30-50 Feral Hogs started spreading across social media platforms

2021-01-01

30-50 Feral Hogs reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

2022-01-01

Brands and companies started using 30-50 Feral Hogs in marketing

2024-01-01

30-50 Feral Hogs entered the broader pop culture conversation

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The 30-50 Feral Hogs format works in two main ways.

The first is direct quotation or paraphrase of the original tweet, usually deployed whenever gun control debates surface online. People drop the "30-50 feral hogs" line as shorthand to mock weak counterarguments.

The second, broader use applies the format to any debate where someone counters a strong position with an absurdly specific hypothetical. Something along the lines of "but what about [extremely unlikely scenario]?" can get hit with "ok 30-50 feral hogs guy" or a direct parody of the original tweet's structure.

Song lyric parodies follow a simple template: take a well-known song, replace key words with references to 30-50 feral hogs, small children playing, and 3-5 minute timeframes.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

The meme tapped directly into the American gun control debate, arriving during one of the most intense news cycles of 2019. It gave gun control advocates a ready-made punchline for a specific style of pro-gun argument: the rural self-defense scenario pushed to absurd extremes.

Beyond politics, "30-50 feral hogs" entered online vocabulary as a general-purpose dismissal of weak rhetorical tactics. Urban Dictionary defines it as "a type of rhetoric where an overtly minimal point is used to counter an extremely strong and ethical position". The phrase showed up in internet arguments well outside gun debates, applied to any situation where someone deployed an improbable hypothetical to dodge a straightforward moral question.

The February 2024 revival proved the meme had lasting cultural memory. Nearly five years after the original tweet, the discovery of genuinely massive feral hogs prompted thousands of users to circle back to @WillieMcNabb's original post, this time with a tone that was half-mocking, half-genuinely impressed.

Fun Facts

Feral hogs are a real and serious problem in the United States. The USDA's National Feral Swine Program confirmed in 2019 that large packs were indeed approaching the U.S.-Canada border in Montana.

The original tweet was completely sincere, not a troll or a joke account.

The meme spawned its own mini-genre of country and folk song parodies, fitting given that Jason Isbell, whose tweet started the chain, is himself a country/Americana musician.

Urban Dictionary's top definition frames "30-50 feral hogs" as a rhetorical concept rather than just a meme, describing it as a specific type of bad-faith argumentation.

Derivatives & Variations

Feral X Animals

Variations replacing hogs with other animals in equally absurd scenarios

(2019)

Specific Threat Scenarios

Memes applying the same logic to other oddly specific problems and threats

(2019)

Frequently Asked Questions

References (3)

  1. 1
  2. 2
    Capybaraencyclopedia
  3. 3