Ryan Clark has never been afraid to speak his mind, so it was no shock that he would have something to say about Donald Trump.
Congressional leaders expressed surprise at Trump’s announcement he had ordered a U.S. attack on three Iranian nuclear sites, with some Republicans praising the move and some Democrats questioning him.
Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York posted that President Trump’s strike on Iran constitutes “ground for impeachment,” saying he was “in grave violation of the Constitution” without first receiving congressional authorization.
New York Liberty guard Natasha Cloud posted a few times on social media after the strikes were announced.
“A sad, sad day, Cloud wrote on X.
“Grounds for impeachment,” she added about Donald Trump.
Ryan Clark also disliked what was going on with Trump.
“Y’all wanted this!” the Super Bowl champion exclaimed. “Groceries still high than a bih too!!”
Groceries still high than a bih too!!
— Ryan Clark (@Realrclark25) June 22, 2025
In the meantime, President Donald Trump on Monday announced a ceasefire between Israel and Iran after a nearly two-week war between the two countries.
Trump, in a post on Truth Social, said that the ceasefire will take effect just after midnight, with the war slated to officially end 12 hours later.
Ryan Clark speaking ill of the President is not shocking.
Clark, a Super Bowl champion defensive back and ESPN NFL analyst, riffed about Trump last November after his general election win over Vice President Kamala Harris.
Clark posted a video onto his X account, recalling Trump’s first presidency. He said his initial post about the election result reminded him of how “divisive” the country had become.
“It reminded me how divisive this country had gotten,” Clark said at the time.
“How divisive this election had gotten. When did the side that candidate feel like they won the Super Bowl? When did they brag about it? When did they boast about it? When did they throw it in your face? Because it was just their guy, not our guy. Or, on the other side, the sadness, the depression. People truly think this not being a place that they could live.”
“It started when we wanted to make America great again, but wasn’t it before? I felt it was the greatest it had ever been,” Clark said. “For eight years, President Obama represented us with class and with grace and with elegance and with decency. There were no scandals. There were no impeachments. There were no felony charges. There were no indictments. There were none of these things that were unbecoming of the office. And we elected someone that ran a campaign based in bigotry and based in hate. And for those four years, it wasn’t great.
“In (2016), I remember someone sitting in that office calling people that peacefully protested sons of b—-es and in 2020, in his last year, it wasn’t about just...