In yet another episode that underscores Hollywood’s enduring obsession with President Donald Trump, actress and professional outrage merchant Rosie O’Donnell resurfaced online this week with a rambling video confession that even she admits borders on unhealthy fixation.

Speaking from her new home in Ireland—where she relocated in 2025 to escape the country that made her wealthy and famous—O’Donnell acknowledged that she promised her therapist she would stop talking about Trump. She then immediately did the opposite, launching into a breathless rant filled with conspiracy theories, amateur psychological diagnoses, and familiar cries for the 25th Amendment.

“I wish I could say I don’t think about him a lot, but I do,” O’Donnell admitted, before accusing Trump of posting “crazy” messages and bizarrely suggesting he suffers from “temporal frontal lobe dementia.” The irony of a self-professed obsessive diagnosing someone else’s mental health was apparently lost on her.

From there, the monologue spiraled. O’Donnell demanded—yet again—that the 25th Amendment be invoked to remove Trump from office, despite zero medical evidence, zero constitutional basis, and zero support from anyone outside the progressive echo chamber. “He needs to be stopped,” she insisted, repeating a line Democrats have been chanting since 2016 while voters keep rejecting it.

Not content with questioning Trump’s mental state, O’Donnell escalated to outright fantasy, implying he participated in or dreamed about murder and accusing him of being part of a coup—claims delivered without facts, evidence, or even a coherent timeline. According to O’Donnell, Trump is simultaneously too unintelligent to orchestrate anything and yet dangerous enough to topple democracy, a contradiction that has become standard fare among Trump critics.

She also floated a familiar fearmongering trope: that Trump will start a war to cancel elections. Referencing U.S. foreign policy moves involving Venezuela and Nicaragua, O’Donnell claimed—without evidence—that Trump was “killing people along the way” and laying the groundwork to suspend the 2026 elections. It was the kind of wild-eyed speculation that plays well on social media but collapses under even mild scrutiny.

This is hardly O’Donnell’s first meltdown. Earlier this year, she announced her move to Ireland with her 12-year-old child, declaring America unsafe under Trump and suggesting she might only return when the country meets her definition of “equal rights.” She praised Ireland as “loving” and “welcoming,” while continuing to broadcast daily commentary about the U.S. political system she claims to have fled.

What makes the episode especially revealing is O’Donnell’s own admission that she can’t let go. Even from overseas, even after therapy, even after leaving the country, Trump still dominates her thoughts. It’s a textbook case of Trump Derangement Syndrome: the inability to disengage from a man who continues to win elections, dominate headlines, and expose the cultural bankruptcy of his loudest critics.

For conservatives, the video wasn’t alarming so much as it was validating. Once again, a celebrity exile proved that no amount of distance—geographical or emotional—can break the left’s obsession with President Trump. And once again, the hysteria said far more about the accuser than the man she can’t stop talking about.