Donald Trumps Wall

2015Political catchphrase / exploitable template / image macrosemi-active

Also known as: Build the Wall · Build That Wall · Trump's Border Wall · The Wall

Donald Trump's Wall is a 2015 political meme born from Trump's campaign promise to build a US-Mexico border wall, defined by call-and-response chants ("Who's going to pay?" / "Mexico!") and the 2019 "Wall Is Coming" Instagram post.

"Donald Trump's Wall" is a political catchphrase meme originating from Donald Trump's June 2015 presidential campaign announcement, where he pledged to build a massive wall along the US-Mexico border and make Mexico pay for it12. The promise spawned years of internet satire, exploitable meme templates, and call-and-response rally chants ("Who's going to pay for it?" / "Mexico!"), peaking during the 2018-2019 government shutdown when Trump himself posted a Game of Thrones-inspired "The Wall Is Coming" meme on Instagram2. The gap between the grandiose promise and its practical realities made it one of the most memed political proposals of the 2010s.

TL;DR

"Donald Trump's Wall" is a political catchphrase meme originating from Donald Trump's June 2015 presidential campaign announcement, where he pledged to build a massive wall along the US-Mexico border and make Mexico pay for it.

Overview

"Donald Trump's Wall" refers to the sprawling meme ecosystem that grew around Trump's signature 2016 campaign promise to construct a physical barrier along the entire US-Mexico border. The proposal itself was specific enough to mock ("30 feet high," "beautiful," must "look good from the US side") and vague enough to satirize endlessly (who pays, how it works, what it's made of). The meme took multiple forms: the "Build the Wall" rally chant became a cultural shorthand, the wall's listed requirements became exploitable templates, and Trump's own meme posts about the wall blurred the line between politics and shitposting. Both supporters who saw it as a symbol of border security and critics who saw it as absurd political theater fueled its spread.

On June 16, 2015, Donald Trump descended the escalator at Trump Tower to announce his presidential candidacy. Among his first promises was the construction of a border wall. "I would build a great wall. And nobody builds walls better than me, believe me," he told the crowd. "I will build a great great wall on our southern border and I'll have Mexico pay for that wall"12. The proposal was tied to inflammatory rhetoric about Mexican immigrants, and the wall quickly became the single most recognizable policy pledge of his campaign6.

The promise had a built-in meme structure from day one. At rallies, Trump would ask the crowd "Who's going to pay for it?" and supporters would shout back "Mexico!" in a call-and-response format18. Mexican leaders pushed back immediately and consistently. Former Mexican President Vicente Fox Quesada tweeted "Mexico is not going to pay for that f*g wall," and sitting President Enrique Peña Nieto repeated that Mexico would never fund the project18.

Origin & Background

Platform
Trump Tower campaign announcement (source), Twitter / Facebook / Instagram (viral spread)
Key People
Donald Trump, White House social media team, community-created
Date
2015
Year
2015

On June 16, 2015, Donald Trump descended the escalator at Trump Tower to announce his presidential candidacy. Among his first promises was the construction of a border wall. "I would build a great wall. And nobody builds walls better than me, believe me," he told the crowd. "I will build a great great wall on our southern border and I'll have Mexico pay for that wall". The proposal was tied to inflammatory rhetoric about Mexican immigrants, and the wall quickly became the single most recognizable policy pledge of his campaign.

The promise had a built-in meme structure from day one. At rallies, Trump would ask the crowd "Who's going to pay for it?" and supporters would shout back "Mexico!" in a call-and-response format. Mexican leaders pushed back immediately and consistently. Former Mexican President Vicente Fox Quesada tweeted "Mexico is not going to pay for that f*g wall," and sitting President Enrique Peña Nieto repeated that Mexico would never fund the project.

How It Spread

The wall meme moved through several distinct phases across platforms.

2015-2016: Campaign Season Memes. As Trump's candidacy gained traction, the wall became prime material for both pro-Trump meme accounts and satirical commentary. In March 2016, John Oliver dedicated a full segment of *Last Week Tonight* to dismantling the wall's feasibility, pointing out that Trump's own cost estimates kept climbing from $4 billion to $12 billion, while independent estimates put the real number at $25 billion or more. Oliver joked that a 50-foot wall being defeated by "maybe a rope" meant Trump's "brilliant plan has been undone by mankind's third invention". The segment went viral and became one of the most-shared political comedy clips of the cycle.

2017: The "Look Good" Requirements. After Trump took office, the White House released official design requirements for the wall. Among them: it had to be 30 feet high, "difficult to climb or cut through," and had to "look good" from the United States side. Fox News aired the requirements in a chyron that read like satire but wasn't. Twitter users immediately turned the list into an exploitable template, photoshopping elaborate and absurd wall designs that technically met the specifications. NY Magazine's Select All column documented the meme wave, noting that the "hot and tall wall" requirements were irresistible to the internet.

Also in January 2017, White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer suggested paying for the wall through a 20% tax on Mexican imports, sparking the "avocado tax" meme controversy. Spicer later walked back the statement as merely "illustrative," but the damage was done. Senator Lindsey Graham tweeted: "Simply put, any policy proposal which drives up costs of Corona, tequila, or margaritas is a big-time bad idea. Mucho Sad". Economists pointed out that such a tax would ultimately fall on American consumers, not Mexico.

2018-2019: Government Shutdown and "The Wall Is Coming." The meme reached peak intensity during the 35-day government shutdown, the longest in US history, triggered by Trump's demand for $5.7 billion in wall funding. On the 12th day of the shutdown, Trump posted a meme on Instagram showing his face looming over the desert with a rendering of the wall, captioned "The Wall Is Coming" in the Game of Thrones font. The New York Times noted it appeared to be "a White House original" and was the second Game of Thrones meme the president had shared in two months. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer responded on Twitter with what the Times described as the energy of "an exasperated high school teacher": "Enough with the memes".

2019: The $100 Saw. In late 2019, the Washington Post reported that Mexican smuggling gangs had been sawing through new wall sections using commercially available reciprocating saws costing about $100. This came shortly after Trump had boasted the wall was "virtually impenetrable" and compared it to "the Rolls-Royce" of walls, and that even professional mountain climbers couldn't scale it. The story generated a wave of mocking memes, as did Trump's gaffe about "building a wall in Colorado," which he later claimed was a joke.

How to Use This Meme

The wall meme takes several common forms:

- "Build the Wall" chant format: Used sincerely at political rallies or ironically online to mock any proposed simple solution to a complex problem. People sometimes apply it to trivial situations ("My roommate keeps eating my food. Build the wall between our shelves").

- "The Wall Is Coming" template: Borrowed from Game of Thrones' "Winter Is Coming" format. Typically used to announce something ominous, overhyped, or perpetually delayed.

- Wall requirements exploitable: Take the real design requirements (30 feet high, hard to climb, must "look good") and photoshop an absurd design that technically meets them. Common versions include ornate castle walls, decorative fences, and famous architectural landmarks.

- "Who's going to pay for it?" call-and-response: Used as a punchline structure for any expensive, dubious proposal.

- Avocado/consumer price jokes: Reference the idea that American shoppers would end up paying for the wall through higher prices on Mexican imports like avocados, tequila, and margaritas.

Cultural Impact

The wall meme was unusual because it was driven from the top down. A sitting president was posting memes about his own policy. The New York Times' 2019 magazine piece "All the President's Memes" called it "impossible to overstate how peculiar it is that the most powerful man in the world, who will turn 73 in June, posts memes". Trump's 2016 campaign had united "message-board trolls and Facebook boomers" who believed their "meme magic" helped win the election.

The wall also generated serious policy journalism that itself became viral content. John Oliver's *Last Week Tonight* segment was one of the most-shared political comedy pieces of 2016. Vox's explainer on the border adjustment tax reached audiences far beyond typical policy readership. Engineer Amy Patrick's structural analysis went viral on Facebook, reaching people who would never normally read engineering assessments.

The Urban Dictionary entry for "Donald Trump's Wall" reflected the internet's verdict with definitions like "a waste of time, effort, and money".

Full History

The wall proposal did not emerge in a vacuum. By 2016, the US-Mexico border already had extensive infrastructure. Border Patrol had quintupled from 4,000 to over 21,000 agents, and the annual budget for border and immigration enforcement had ballooned from $1.5 billion to $19.5 billion. Existing fencing and barriers covered hundreds of miles. But Trump's campaign rhetoric treated the border as if it were wide open, and the "Build the Wall" chant captured a political mood that existing policy details couldn't.

The engineering community weighed in early. Amy Patrick, a court-accepted wall expert and structural engineer, wrote a viral Facebook post in December 2018 detailing why the wall was "a disaster of numerous types waiting to happen" from architectural, logistical, and ecological perspectives. Her post broke down issues ranging from foundation requirements in desert terrain to the wall's threat to a butterfly reserve and border town communities. The post was shared hundreds of thousands of times and became a go-to reference for wall skeptics.

The question of payment generated its own meme sub-genre. When Trump met with President Peña Nieto in September 2016, he claimed they discussed the wall but not who would pay. Peña Nieto tweeted that he had made it clear "at the start of my conversation" that Mexico would not pay. By October 2016, Trump was already softening the language, saying Mexico would "reimburse" the US rather than pay directly. Economists Donald Marron and others explained that neither a tariff nor the proposed destination-based cash flow tax could logically "make Mexico pay," since tariff costs are passed to consumers and the DBCFT treats all countries identically. The Vox explainer on the avocado controversy became one of the most-read policy articles of early 2017.

The national emergency angle added another layer of political meme material in early 2019. When Trump threatened to bypass Congress by declaring a national emergency, legal experts debated whether the National Emergencies Act of 1976 even allowed wall construction. NPR reported that Congress had the power to terminate an emergency declaration but would need a two-thirds majority to override a presidential veto. Democrats warned of legal challenges, and Senator Jack Reed called it "a phony national emergency" used "as a pretext to take billions of dollars away from our troops". George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley suggested the court fight could "give Trump an exit ramp from the current government shutdown" by letting him blame judges.

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough compared Trump's doubling down on wall rhetoric after the 2018 midterm losses to the New Coke disaster of 1985, but worse. "It would be as if the board of directors said, 'New Coke didn't work, so we're going to add cat urine to it,'" Scarborough told viewers. A Reuters/Ipsos poll found that 47% of Arizona residents considered the wall "a waste of money," while only 34% called it an "effective barrier." Nationally, 49% saw it as wasteful.

Throughout 2019, news of smugglers breaching the wall with saws and makeshift ladders kept the meme alive. Former US Border Patrol chief Ronald Vitiello told the Washington Post: "The cartels will continue to innovate, and they're not just going to leave San Diego because the wall gets better. That's life on the border". By that point, taxpayers had spent approximately $10 billion on wall construction, despite Trump's original promise that Mexico would foot the bill.

Fun Facts

Trump's "The Wall Is Coming" Instagram post was confirmed by the New York Times to be a White House original, not a retweet from a supporter.

Senator Lindsey Graham's tweet calling an import tax "Mucho Sad" became its own minor meme, blending policy criticism with Trump's signature "Sad!" tweet sign-off.

The Congressional Budget Office estimated wall maintenance costs would exceed initial construction costs within seven years. John Oliver compared this to "getting a pet walrus".

There were more than two dozen active national emergencies in the US at the time Trump considered declaring one for the wall, including some dating back to the 1979 Iran hostage crisis.

Trump's cost estimate for the wall steadily tripled over the course of his campaign, from $4 billion to $12 billion, before independent analysts pegged it at $25 billion or higher.

Derivatives & Variations

"The Wall Is Coming" memes:

Game of Thrones crossover format posted by Trump himself during the government shutdown, spawning parodies and remixes[2].

Wall requirements photoshops:

Exploitable template based on the official White House design specs, with users creating absurd walls that "look good" from the US side[15][16].

Avocado price memes:

Jokes about Americans paying for the wall through inflated avocado, tequila, and margarita prices after Spicer floated the import tax idea[14][11].

$100 saw memes:

Mockery of the wall's "impenetrability" claims after reports of smugglers cutting through it with cheap hardware store tools[7].

"Build the Wall" ironic applications:

The chant repurposed for any trivial territorial dispute (office fridges, property lines, sibling bedroom divisions).

Colorado wall memes:

Jokes based on Trump's statement about building a wall in Colorado, a state that does not border Mexico[7].

Frequently Asked Questions

References (19)

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  4. 4
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  6. 6
  7. 7
  8. 8
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  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
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  14. 14
  15. 15
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  17. 17
  18. 18
  19. 19

Donald Trumps Wall

2015Political catchphrase / exploitable template / image macrosemi-active

Also known as: Build the Wall · Build That Wall · Trump's Border Wall · The Wall

Donald Trump's Wall is a 2015 political meme born from Trump's campaign promise to build a US-Mexico border wall, defined by call-and-response chants ("Who's going to pay?" / "Mexico!") and the 2019 "Wall Is Coming" Instagram post.

"Donald Trump's Wall" is a political catchphrase meme originating from Donald Trump's June 2015 presidential campaign announcement, where he pledged to build a massive wall along the US-Mexico border and make Mexico pay for it. The promise spawned years of internet satire, exploitable meme templates, and call-and-response rally chants ("Who's going to pay for it?" / "Mexico!"), peaking during the 2018-2019 government shutdown when Trump himself posted a Game of Thrones-inspired "The Wall Is Coming" meme on Instagram. The gap between the grandiose promise and its practical realities made it one of the most memed political proposals of the 2010s.

TL;DR

"Donald Trump's Wall" is a political catchphrase meme originating from Donald Trump's June 2015 presidential campaign announcement, where he pledged to build a massive wall along the US-Mexico border and make Mexico pay for it.

Overview

"Donald Trump's Wall" refers to the sprawling meme ecosystem that grew around Trump's signature 2016 campaign promise to construct a physical barrier along the entire US-Mexico border. The proposal itself was specific enough to mock ("30 feet high," "beautiful," must "look good from the US side") and vague enough to satirize endlessly (who pays, how it works, what it's made of). The meme took multiple forms: the "Build the Wall" rally chant became a cultural shorthand, the wall's listed requirements became exploitable templates, and Trump's own meme posts about the wall blurred the line between politics and shitposting. Both supporters who saw it as a symbol of border security and critics who saw it as absurd political theater fueled its spread.

On June 16, 2015, Donald Trump descended the escalator at Trump Tower to announce his presidential candidacy. Among his first promises was the construction of a border wall. "I would build a great wall. And nobody builds walls better than me, believe me," he told the crowd. "I will build a great great wall on our southern border and I'll have Mexico pay for that wall". The proposal was tied to inflammatory rhetoric about Mexican immigrants, and the wall quickly became the single most recognizable policy pledge of his campaign.

The promise had a built-in meme structure from day one. At rallies, Trump would ask the crowd "Who's going to pay for it?" and supporters would shout back "Mexico!" in a call-and-response format. Mexican leaders pushed back immediately and consistently. Former Mexican President Vicente Fox Quesada tweeted "Mexico is not going to pay for that f*g wall," and sitting President Enrique Peña Nieto repeated that Mexico would never fund the project.

Origin & Background

Platform
Trump Tower campaign announcement (source), Twitter / Facebook / Instagram (viral spread)
Key People
Donald Trump, White House social media team, community-created
Date
2015
Year
2015

On June 16, 2015, Donald Trump descended the escalator at Trump Tower to announce his presidential candidacy. Among his first promises was the construction of a border wall. "I would build a great wall. And nobody builds walls better than me, believe me," he told the crowd. "I will build a great great wall on our southern border and I'll have Mexico pay for that wall". The proposal was tied to inflammatory rhetoric about Mexican immigrants, and the wall quickly became the single most recognizable policy pledge of his campaign.

The promise had a built-in meme structure from day one. At rallies, Trump would ask the crowd "Who's going to pay for it?" and supporters would shout back "Mexico!" in a call-and-response format. Mexican leaders pushed back immediately and consistently. Former Mexican President Vicente Fox Quesada tweeted "Mexico is not going to pay for that f*g wall," and sitting President Enrique Peña Nieto repeated that Mexico would never fund the project.

How It Spread

The wall meme moved through several distinct phases across platforms.

2015-2016: Campaign Season Memes. As Trump's candidacy gained traction, the wall became prime material for both pro-Trump meme accounts and satirical commentary. In March 2016, John Oliver dedicated a full segment of *Last Week Tonight* to dismantling the wall's feasibility, pointing out that Trump's own cost estimates kept climbing from $4 billion to $12 billion, while independent estimates put the real number at $25 billion or more. Oliver joked that a 50-foot wall being defeated by "maybe a rope" meant Trump's "brilliant plan has been undone by mankind's third invention". The segment went viral and became one of the most-shared political comedy clips of the cycle.

2017: The "Look Good" Requirements. After Trump took office, the White House released official design requirements for the wall. Among them: it had to be 30 feet high, "difficult to climb or cut through," and had to "look good" from the United States side. Fox News aired the requirements in a chyron that read like satire but wasn't. Twitter users immediately turned the list into an exploitable template, photoshopping elaborate and absurd wall designs that technically met the specifications. NY Magazine's Select All column documented the meme wave, noting that the "hot and tall wall" requirements were irresistible to the internet.

Also in January 2017, White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer suggested paying for the wall through a 20% tax on Mexican imports, sparking the "avocado tax" meme controversy. Spicer later walked back the statement as merely "illustrative," but the damage was done. Senator Lindsey Graham tweeted: "Simply put, any policy proposal which drives up costs of Corona, tequila, or margaritas is a big-time bad idea. Mucho Sad". Economists pointed out that such a tax would ultimately fall on American consumers, not Mexico.

2018-2019: Government Shutdown and "The Wall Is Coming." The meme reached peak intensity during the 35-day government shutdown, the longest in US history, triggered by Trump's demand for $5.7 billion in wall funding. On the 12th day of the shutdown, Trump posted a meme on Instagram showing his face looming over the desert with a rendering of the wall, captioned "The Wall Is Coming" in the Game of Thrones font. The New York Times noted it appeared to be "a White House original" and was the second Game of Thrones meme the president had shared in two months. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer responded on Twitter with what the Times described as the energy of "an exasperated high school teacher": "Enough with the memes".

2019: The $100 Saw. In late 2019, the Washington Post reported that Mexican smuggling gangs had been sawing through new wall sections using commercially available reciprocating saws costing about $100. This came shortly after Trump had boasted the wall was "virtually impenetrable" and compared it to "the Rolls-Royce" of walls, and that even professional mountain climbers couldn't scale it. The story generated a wave of mocking memes, as did Trump's gaffe about "building a wall in Colorado," which he later claimed was a joke.

How to Use This Meme

The wall meme takes several common forms:

- "Build the Wall" chant format: Used sincerely at political rallies or ironically online to mock any proposed simple solution to a complex problem. People sometimes apply it to trivial situations ("My roommate keeps eating my food. Build the wall between our shelves").

- "The Wall Is Coming" template: Borrowed from Game of Thrones' "Winter Is Coming" format. Typically used to announce something ominous, overhyped, or perpetually delayed.

- Wall requirements exploitable: Take the real design requirements (30 feet high, hard to climb, must "look good") and photoshop an absurd design that technically meets them. Common versions include ornate castle walls, decorative fences, and famous architectural landmarks.

- "Who's going to pay for it?" call-and-response: Used as a punchline structure for any expensive, dubious proposal.

- Avocado/consumer price jokes: Reference the idea that American shoppers would end up paying for the wall through higher prices on Mexican imports like avocados, tequila, and margaritas.

Cultural Impact

The wall meme was unusual because it was driven from the top down. A sitting president was posting memes about his own policy. The New York Times' 2019 magazine piece "All the President's Memes" called it "impossible to overstate how peculiar it is that the most powerful man in the world, who will turn 73 in June, posts memes". Trump's 2016 campaign had united "message-board trolls and Facebook boomers" who believed their "meme magic" helped win the election.

The wall also generated serious policy journalism that itself became viral content. John Oliver's *Last Week Tonight* segment was one of the most-shared political comedy pieces of 2016. Vox's explainer on the border adjustment tax reached audiences far beyond typical policy readership. Engineer Amy Patrick's structural analysis went viral on Facebook, reaching people who would never normally read engineering assessments.

The Urban Dictionary entry for "Donald Trump's Wall" reflected the internet's verdict with definitions like "a waste of time, effort, and money".

Full History

The wall proposal did not emerge in a vacuum. By 2016, the US-Mexico border already had extensive infrastructure. Border Patrol had quintupled from 4,000 to over 21,000 agents, and the annual budget for border and immigration enforcement had ballooned from $1.5 billion to $19.5 billion. Existing fencing and barriers covered hundreds of miles. But Trump's campaign rhetoric treated the border as if it were wide open, and the "Build the Wall" chant captured a political mood that existing policy details couldn't.

The engineering community weighed in early. Amy Patrick, a court-accepted wall expert and structural engineer, wrote a viral Facebook post in December 2018 detailing why the wall was "a disaster of numerous types waiting to happen" from architectural, logistical, and ecological perspectives. Her post broke down issues ranging from foundation requirements in desert terrain to the wall's threat to a butterfly reserve and border town communities. The post was shared hundreds of thousands of times and became a go-to reference for wall skeptics.

The question of payment generated its own meme sub-genre. When Trump met with President Peña Nieto in September 2016, he claimed they discussed the wall but not who would pay. Peña Nieto tweeted that he had made it clear "at the start of my conversation" that Mexico would not pay. By October 2016, Trump was already softening the language, saying Mexico would "reimburse" the US rather than pay directly. Economists Donald Marron and others explained that neither a tariff nor the proposed destination-based cash flow tax could logically "make Mexico pay," since tariff costs are passed to consumers and the DBCFT treats all countries identically. The Vox explainer on the avocado controversy became one of the most-read policy articles of early 2017.

The national emergency angle added another layer of political meme material in early 2019. When Trump threatened to bypass Congress by declaring a national emergency, legal experts debated whether the National Emergencies Act of 1976 even allowed wall construction. NPR reported that Congress had the power to terminate an emergency declaration but would need a two-thirds majority to override a presidential veto. Democrats warned of legal challenges, and Senator Jack Reed called it "a phony national emergency" used "as a pretext to take billions of dollars away from our troops". George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley suggested the court fight could "give Trump an exit ramp from the current government shutdown" by letting him blame judges.

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough compared Trump's doubling down on wall rhetoric after the 2018 midterm losses to the New Coke disaster of 1985, but worse. "It would be as if the board of directors said, 'New Coke didn't work, so we're going to add cat urine to it,'" Scarborough told viewers. A Reuters/Ipsos poll found that 47% of Arizona residents considered the wall "a waste of money," while only 34% called it an "effective barrier." Nationally, 49% saw it as wasteful.

Throughout 2019, news of smugglers breaching the wall with saws and makeshift ladders kept the meme alive. Former US Border Patrol chief Ronald Vitiello told the Washington Post: "The cartels will continue to innovate, and they're not just going to leave San Diego because the wall gets better. That's life on the border". By that point, taxpayers had spent approximately $10 billion on wall construction, despite Trump's original promise that Mexico would foot the bill.

Fun Facts

Trump's "The Wall Is Coming" Instagram post was confirmed by the New York Times to be a White House original, not a retweet from a supporter.

Senator Lindsey Graham's tweet calling an import tax "Mucho Sad" became its own minor meme, blending policy criticism with Trump's signature "Sad!" tweet sign-off.

The Congressional Budget Office estimated wall maintenance costs would exceed initial construction costs within seven years. John Oliver compared this to "getting a pet walrus".

There were more than two dozen active national emergencies in the US at the time Trump considered declaring one for the wall, including some dating back to the 1979 Iran hostage crisis.

Trump's cost estimate for the wall steadily tripled over the course of his campaign, from $4 billion to $12 billion, before independent analysts pegged it at $25 billion or higher.

Derivatives & Variations

"The Wall Is Coming" memes:

Game of Thrones crossover format posted by Trump himself during the government shutdown, spawning parodies and remixes[2].

Wall requirements photoshops:

Exploitable template based on the official White House design specs, with users creating absurd walls that "look good" from the US side[15][16].

Avocado price memes:

Jokes about Americans paying for the wall through inflated avocado, tequila, and margarita prices after Spicer floated the import tax idea[14][11].

$100 saw memes:

Mockery of the wall's "impenetrability" claims after reports of smugglers cutting through it with cheap hardware store tools[7].

"Build the Wall" ironic applications:

The chant repurposed for any trivial territorial dispute (office fridges, property lines, sibling bedroom divisions).

Colorado wall memes:

Jokes based on Trump's statement about building a wall in Colorado, a state that does not border Mexico[7].

Frequently Asked Questions

References (19)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
  6. 6
  7. 7
  8. 8
  9. 9
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
  13. 13
  14. 14
  15. 15
  16. 16
  17. 17
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  19. 19