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When the Hill Gets Loud: Screens Show Candidate Anthony Constantino Going Full Barn-Burner on the Public

When the Hill Gets Loud: Screens Show Candidate Anthony Constantino Going Full Barn-Burner on the Public
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Well folks, grab yer coffee and pull up a stump, because this one’s got more sparks than a busted campfire on a windy night.

Congressional candidate Anthony Constantino, known for running the Sticker Mule company and recently making headlines for saying Charlie Kirk helped inspire his new album, is now finding himself at the center of a different kind of attention. Not for music. Not for policy. But for a long trail of screenshots showing him verbally going off on regular people online.

And when we say “going off,” we mean the kind of talk that makes a raccoon cover its ears.

Across multiple posts and dates, the public record shows Constantino using heavy profanity, personal insults, and scorched-earth language toward voters, critics, and even casual commenters. Words like “moron,” “scumbag,” “stupid,” “political filth,” and far rougher language show up more than once. In one exchange he told a commenter that every time he calls someone an idiot, his polls go up.

Now that’s either campaign strategy… or a barn door flapping in a tornado.

When some folks questioned whether that kind of mouth belongs on someone trying to represent the people, Constantino doubled down. In his own words:

“I call people the names they deserve.”

That right there is the quote that lit the lanterns across the county.

Supporters argue he’s just speaking plain, refusing to be muzzled, and pushing back against years of political name-calling from the other side. Critics fire back that leadership means knowing when to lower your voice, not raise it.

What makes this different from your average political dust-up is this:
nobody’s alleging anything.
nobody’s spinning anything.
these are his own public posts, under his verified name, for the whole world to see.

Whether you love his style or can’t stomach it, one thing’s clear. This campaign isn’t being fought with quiet speeches and folded hands. It’s being fought loud, raw, and out in the open.

And as 2026 creeps closer, voters aren’t just weighing policies anymore. They’re weighing temperament, judgment, and how a person treats the folks they’re asking to serve.

Around here in hillbilly country, we got a saying:
“If you’re gonna ride the bull, don’t act surprised when folks watch how you hang on.”

This story ain’t over yet.