Donald Trumps Nambla Donation Hoax

2016Satirical hoax / copypasta / Reddit botdead

Also known as: Trump NAMBLA Meme · Bot Trumps Trump

Trump's NAMBLA Donation Hoax was a 2016 Reddit satire weaponizing Trump's "many people say" rhetoric against him, falsely claiming his tax returns hid NAMBLA donations in an absurdist feedback loop.

Donald Trump's NAMBLA Donation Hoax was a satirical rumor campaign launched on Reddit in July 2016, falsely claiming that presidential candidate Donald Trump refused to release his tax returns because they would reveal donations to the North American Man/Boy Love Association (NAMBLA). The joke deliberately mimicked Trump's own rhetorical habit of attributing unsubstantiated claims to unnamed "many people," turning his favorite tactic against him in an absurdist feedback loop that spread across social media and confused some news outlets into covering it as a real story.

TL;DR

Donald Trump's NAMBLA Donation Hoax was a satirical rumor campaign launched on Reddit in July 2016, falsely claiming that presidential candidate Donald Trump refused to release his tax returns because they would reveal donations to the North American Man/Boy Love Association (NAMBLA).

Overview

The NAMBLA Donation Hoax was a coordinated satire campaign built around a simple premise: if Donald Trump could spread baseless insinuations by saying "many people are saying," then anyone could use the same technique against him. The meme took the form of a block of text written in Trump's distinctive speaking style, complete with self-referential qualifiers like "the best sources, the most tremendous sources" and circular logic that simultaneously denied and reinforced the accusation2. An automated Reddit bot spread the copypasta every time someone mentioned "tax returns," and the joke quickly escaped Reddit to confuse real journalists and public figures.

On July 29, 2016, Reddit user RIPrince posted an article titled "Trump Suggests Nothing Will Prompt Him to Release Tax Returns" to the /r/politics subreddit3. In the comments, another user speculated that Trump was hiding his returns because they'd reveal donations to NAMBLA. The comment was eventually deleted, but the idea stuck3.

The joke gained traction because it was built on a real pattern in Trump's rhetoric. Throughout his 2016 campaign, Trump regularly cited anonymous "many people" as the source for inflammatory claims. In June 2016, he suggested President Obama might have some hidden connection to the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, saying "there's something going on" without providing evidence2. He used the same approach when pushing Obama birther conspiracy theories and when questioning the circumstances of Vince Foster's death1.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit (/r/politics, /r/EnoughTrumpSpam)
Key People
"J. Peterman", "Faiz", RIPrince
Date
2016
Year
2016

On July 29, 2016, Reddit user RIPrince posted an article titled "Trump Suggests Nothing Will Prompt Him to Release Tax Returns" to the /r/politics subreddit. In the comments, another user speculated that Trump was hiding his returns because they'd reveal donations to NAMBLA. The comment was eventually deleted, but the idea stuck.

The joke gained traction because it was built on a real pattern in Trump's rhetoric. Throughout his 2016 campaign, Trump regularly cited anonymous "many people" as the source for inflammatory claims. In June 2016, he suggested President Obama might have some hidden connection to the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, saying "there's something going on" without providing evidence. He used the same approach when pushing Obama birther conspiracy theories and when questioning the circumstances of Vince Foster's death.

How It Spread

Within days of the original comment, Reddit user "J. Peterman" (a possible Seinfeld reference) programmed the /r/EnoughTrumpSpam AutoModerator bot to respond to any comment containing the words "tax return" with a Trump-style copypasta about NAMBLA donations. The bot's message read: "Speaking of tax returns, did you hear Donald Trump is refusing to release them because Donald Trump has donated to NAMBLA? That's what all the best sources, the most tremendous sources are saying".

On August 2, Redditor dannylanduf posted "<-----Amount Trump has donated to NAMBLA" to /r/EnoughTrumpSpam, pulling in over 9,600 upvotes and 300 comments within two weeks. On August 4, someone created a fake Fox News page on Clonezone.link with the headline "NAMBLA neither confirms nor denies Trump's donation allegations".

The meme jumped platforms on August 9, 2016. NY Mag published an article titled "Many People Are Saying Donald Trump Gives Money to Pedophiles, According to a Very Reputable Robot". That same day, comedian Patton Oswalt tweeted at Fox News host Sean Hannity: "Look into this disgusting Trump/NAMBLA nonsense. So gross how the left lies. Trump. NAMBLA. Say that every night". Google Trends registered a spike in searches for "Trump and NAMBLA" during this period.

Snopes published a fact-check titled "Bot Trumps Trump," rating the donation claim as false. They also pointed out an ironic detail that most people missed: NAMBLA is not a nonprofit organization, so even if Trump had donated to them, it wouldn't appear on his tax returns.

A moderator called "Faiz," who helped launch the bot, told the Daily Beast the joke worked because "you really can't tell the difference between some of the text in the meme and some things Trump wrote during Obama's birther conspiracy". J. Peterman said he was surprised by how much press attention the bot received: "I cannot take credit for creating the meme, that was around for a week or so before I did the bot, and it was everyone else who kept the meme going".

How to Use This Meme

The NAMBLA hoax meme typically follows a specific formula:

1

Start with a reference to Trump's tax returns

2

Introduce the NAMBLA donation claim using hedging language ("many people are saying," "I've heard from very smart people")

3

Deny making the accusation while restating it multiple times

4

Use Trump-style superlatives ("the best sources," "tremendous sources," "excellent sources")

Cultural Impact

The NAMBLA hoax was a case study in how internet satire can blur the line between joke and misinformation. Multiple news outlets covered the story, and some readers genuinely believed the accusations. NY Mag's coverage explicitly framed the meme as a mirror of Trump's own approach to spreading conspiracy theories, arguing that "the same can be said, just as fairly, about Trump's alleged ties to NAMBLA in 2016" as Trump had said about Obama's birth certificate in 2011.

Faiz, the /r/EnoughTrumpSpam moderator, told the Daily Beast that the ultimate goal was forcing Trump's campaign to respond, which would theoretically require releasing tax returns to disprove the claim. "The only logical conclusion would really be Trump releasing his tax returns but he would never do that because he's hiding donations to NAMBLA," Faiz said, staying in character. "That's what I've heard from some very smart people anyway".

The meme also highlighted a structural weakness in Trump's "many people are saying" technique: the same rhetorical trick that made his claims feel plausible to supporters made the NAMBLA satire feel plausible to his opponents.

Fun Facts

The bot included a disclaimer that it was auto-generated, but many users either missed it or ignored it.

Patton Oswalt's tweet about the hoax was itself written as satire, pretending to be outraged on Trump's behalf while amplifying the meme.

NAMBLA isn't a nonprofit, so charitable donations to it would never appear on anyone's tax returns, making the entire premise logically impossible from the start.

J. Peterman didn't invent the NAMBLA joke text. He built the bot using a copypasta that another anonymous Reddit user had written about a week earlier.

The meme's name "Bot Trumps Trump" (coined by Snopes) was a triple pun on the bot, the verb "to trump," and the candidate's name.

Frequently Asked Questions

Donald Trumps Nambla Donation Hoax

2016Satirical hoax / copypasta / Reddit botdead

Also known as: Trump NAMBLA Meme · Bot Trumps Trump

Trump's NAMBLA Donation Hoax was a 2016 Reddit satire weaponizing Trump's "many people say" rhetoric against him, falsely claiming his tax returns hid NAMBLA donations in an absurdist feedback loop.

Donald Trump's NAMBLA Donation Hoax was a satirical rumor campaign launched on Reddit in July 2016, falsely claiming that presidential candidate Donald Trump refused to release his tax returns because they would reveal donations to the North American Man/Boy Love Association (NAMBLA). The joke deliberately mimicked Trump's own rhetorical habit of attributing unsubstantiated claims to unnamed "many people," turning his favorite tactic against him in an absurdist feedback loop that spread across social media and confused some news outlets into covering it as a real story.

TL;DR

Donald Trump's NAMBLA Donation Hoax was a satirical rumor campaign launched on Reddit in July 2016, falsely claiming that presidential candidate Donald Trump refused to release his tax returns because they would reveal donations to the North American Man/Boy Love Association (NAMBLA).

Overview

The NAMBLA Donation Hoax was a coordinated satire campaign built around a simple premise: if Donald Trump could spread baseless insinuations by saying "many people are saying," then anyone could use the same technique against him. The meme took the form of a block of text written in Trump's distinctive speaking style, complete with self-referential qualifiers like "the best sources, the most tremendous sources" and circular logic that simultaneously denied and reinforced the accusation. An automated Reddit bot spread the copypasta every time someone mentioned "tax returns," and the joke quickly escaped Reddit to confuse real journalists and public figures.

On July 29, 2016, Reddit user RIPrince posted an article titled "Trump Suggests Nothing Will Prompt Him to Release Tax Returns" to the /r/politics subreddit. In the comments, another user speculated that Trump was hiding his returns because they'd reveal donations to NAMBLA. The comment was eventually deleted, but the idea stuck.

The joke gained traction because it was built on a real pattern in Trump's rhetoric. Throughout his 2016 campaign, Trump regularly cited anonymous "many people" as the source for inflammatory claims. In June 2016, he suggested President Obama might have some hidden connection to the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, saying "there's something going on" without providing evidence. He used the same approach when pushing Obama birther conspiracy theories and when questioning the circumstances of Vince Foster's death.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit (/r/politics, /r/EnoughTrumpSpam)
Key People
"J. Peterman", "Faiz", RIPrince
Date
2016
Year
2016

On July 29, 2016, Reddit user RIPrince posted an article titled "Trump Suggests Nothing Will Prompt Him to Release Tax Returns" to the /r/politics subreddit. In the comments, another user speculated that Trump was hiding his returns because they'd reveal donations to NAMBLA. The comment was eventually deleted, but the idea stuck.

The joke gained traction because it was built on a real pattern in Trump's rhetoric. Throughout his 2016 campaign, Trump regularly cited anonymous "many people" as the source for inflammatory claims. In June 2016, he suggested President Obama might have some hidden connection to the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, saying "there's something going on" without providing evidence. He used the same approach when pushing Obama birther conspiracy theories and when questioning the circumstances of Vince Foster's death.

How It Spread

Within days of the original comment, Reddit user "J. Peterman" (a possible Seinfeld reference) programmed the /r/EnoughTrumpSpam AutoModerator bot to respond to any comment containing the words "tax return" with a Trump-style copypasta about NAMBLA donations. The bot's message read: "Speaking of tax returns, did you hear Donald Trump is refusing to release them because Donald Trump has donated to NAMBLA? That's what all the best sources, the most tremendous sources are saying".

On August 2, Redditor dannylanduf posted "<-----Amount Trump has donated to NAMBLA" to /r/EnoughTrumpSpam, pulling in over 9,600 upvotes and 300 comments within two weeks. On August 4, someone created a fake Fox News page on Clonezone.link with the headline "NAMBLA neither confirms nor denies Trump's donation allegations".

The meme jumped platforms on August 9, 2016. NY Mag published an article titled "Many People Are Saying Donald Trump Gives Money to Pedophiles, According to a Very Reputable Robot". That same day, comedian Patton Oswalt tweeted at Fox News host Sean Hannity: "Look into this disgusting Trump/NAMBLA nonsense. So gross how the left lies. Trump. NAMBLA. Say that every night". Google Trends registered a spike in searches for "Trump and NAMBLA" during this period.

Snopes published a fact-check titled "Bot Trumps Trump," rating the donation claim as false. They also pointed out an ironic detail that most people missed: NAMBLA is not a nonprofit organization, so even if Trump had donated to them, it wouldn't appear on his tax returns.

A moderator called "Faiz," who helped launch the bot, told the Daily Beast the joke worked because "you really can't tell the difference between some of the text in the meme and some things Trump wrote during Obama's birther conspiracy". J. Peterman said he was surprised by how much press attention the bot received: "I cannot take credit for creating the meme, that was around for a week or so before I did the bot, and it was everyone else who kept the meme going".

How to Use This Meme

The NAMBLA hoax meme typically follows a specific formula:

1

Start with a reference to Trump's tax returns

2

Introduce the NAMBLA donation claim using hedging language ("many people are saying," "I've heard from very smart people")

3

Deny making the accusation while restating it multiple times

4

Use Trump-style superlatives ("the best sources," "tremendous sources," "excellent sources")

Cultural Impact

The NAMBLA hoax was a case study in how internet satire can blur the line between joke and misinformation. Multiple news outlets covered the story, and some readers genuinely believed the accusations. NY Mag's coverage explicitly framed the meme as a mirror of Trump's own approach to spreading conspiracy theories, arguing that "the same can be said, just as fairly, about Trump's alleged ties to NAMBLA in 2016" as Trump had said about Obama's birth certificate in 2011.

Faiz, the /r/EnoughTrumpSpam moderator, told the Daily Beast that the ultimate goal was forcing Trump's campaign to respond, which would theoretically require releasing tax returns to disprove the claim. "The only logical conclusion would really be Trump releasing his tax returns but he would never do that because he's hiding donations to NAMBLA," Faiz said, staying in character. "That's what I've heard from some very smart people anyway".

The meme also highlighted a structural weakness in Trump's "many people are saying" technique: the same rhetorical trick that made his claims feel plausible to supporters made the NAMBLA satire feel plausible to his opponents.

Fun Facts

The bot included a disclaimer that it was auto-generated, but many users either missed it or ignored it.

Patton Oswalt's tweet about the hoax was itself written as satire, pretending to be outraged on Trump's behalf while amplifying the meme.

NAMBLA isn't a nonprofit, so charitable donations to it would never appear on anyone's tax returns, making the entire premise logically impossible from the start.

J. Peterman didn't invent the NAMBLA joke text. He built the bot using a copypasta that another anonymous Reddit user had written about a week earlier.

The meme's name "Bot Trumps Trump" (coined by Snopes) was a triple pun on the bot, the verb "to trump," and the candidate's name.

Frequently Asked Questions