During the vice presidential debate Thursday evening, Republican Paul Ryan cited the death of U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens in Libya as evidence that foreign policy is unraveling.
Joe Bidenâs rebuttal to Ryan caught the online audienceâs attention, due to his unique choice of word. âWith all due respect, thatâs a bunch of malarkey, because not a single thing was accurate,â the vice president claimed.
Sure enough, the Twitter hashtag #malarkey began to trend in the U.S. quickly after the comment.
Most used it as humor, while others are firing back at Biden with his own outdated term. Here are a couple things Twitter users had to say.
Raise a glass every time Biden says âmalarkey,â âoh godâ or gives us a big toothy grin.
â" Arianna Huffington (@ariannahuff) October 12, 2012
Malarkey. DRINK THE WHOLE BOTTLE.
â" LOLGOP (@LOLGOP) October 12, 2012
Biden on Romney âHe changes his mind so often I could be wrong.â#malarkey
â" Stephanie Cutter (@stefcutter) October 12, 2012
Nothing like a cold dis from 1937. #VPDabate #malarkey twitter.com/RogerSmith2012â¦
â" Roger Smith (@RogerSmith2012) October 12, 2012
BOOM, YOU JUST GOT BIDENED. #malarkey
â" Joe Muto (@JoeMuto) October 12, 2012
Ryan: âIâll see your âmalarkeyâ and raise you a âGosh yes.â â
â" Richard Roeper (@richardroeper) October 12, 2012
Joe just dropped an M bomb. #Malarkey #VPdebate
â" Rafalca Romney (@RafalcaRomney) October 12, 2012
Shortly after the trend picked steam, the Obama administration turned malarkey into a marketing opportunity. Anyone searching the word on Twitter will see an advertisement from Joe Bidenâs official account at the top.
RT if you agree: Our economy grows from the middle out and the bottom upâ"not from the top down. twitter.com/JoeBiden/statuâ¦
â" Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) October 12, 2012
Image courtesy of Tumblr
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