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Barack And Michelle Obama Are Slammed On Twitter After Posting Their Favorite Songs

Barack and Michelle Obama took to Twitter this week to post their favorite songs, but it didn’t end well for the former first couple.

The U.K. Express reported that it all started when Barack posted the couple’s summer playlist to Twitter.

“With summer winding down, here’s a sampling of what Michelle and I have been listening to — some new, some old, some fast, some slow,” Barack wrote. “Hope you enjoy.”

Social media users immediately fired back by slamming the Obamas in their responses to the tweet.

“Struggling to remain relevant, huh?” one social media user commented, with another adding, “Omg you are so irrelevant.”

“So bad, all of them,” a third user stated.

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This comes after the Obamas came under fire when it was revealed that they are buying an estate on Martha’s Vineyard for $15 million. Many have called them out for their hypocrisy on this, as the couple spent years condemning excessive wealth. During his presidency, Barack famously said, “I do think, at some point you’ve made enough money.” He also once told people trying to build their wealth “you didn’t build that,” referring to small businesses.

Social media users were quick to call the Obamas out for their hypocrisy.

“Aren’t the Obama’s the ones who said at a certain point you have made enough money? They also want to tax others more than they are willing to pay themselves,” one social media user commented, with another adding, “Must be nice to profit off the American people that you didn’t serve well, Barry.”

“Not only was he the worst president in my lifetime, but one of the biggest hypocrites in the world,” a third user wrote.

The Obamas were also recently criticized for their new Netflix documentary American Factory, which many have described as just being anti-Trump lefty propaganda.

“Its message is clear: Trump’s promise to reinvigorate the industrial heartland is going to take a lot more than a campaign slogan. There are no easy solutions. And if some manufacturing jobs do come back, they’re going to look nothing like they used to,” Steve Johnson wrote in a review for Politico. “Americans will have to accept a new reality to stay competitive in the global marketplace — one that they might not like, and one that Trump doesn’t acknowledge.”

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