
The European Parliament is not usually the place for four-letter words. So when Danish MEP Anders Vistisen leaned into his microphone on Jan. 20 and said, “Mr. President — f—k off,” to Donald Trump, the room froze.
You usually hear procedural warnings and carefully worded condemnations in parliaments. But amid Trump’s growing threats against Greenland’s sovereignty, someone had to step up from the usual speeches. So, the Danish MEP, Anders Vistisen, took it upon himself to speak to Trump the way he understands.
On Jan. 20, 2026, Vistisen stood up on his podium and delivered what the US needs to hear. “Let me put this in words you might understand,” he said. “Mr. President, f—k off.” He wasn’t improvising or losing his temper. He was, by his own explanation, speaking in the only language Trump has ever demonstrated he understands.
That short sentence swiftly became the headline across borders. And the rest was the indictment. Vistisen reminded the parliament that he had said the same thing a year earlier. But the message hadn’t changed because the behavior hadn’t changed.
The MEP cut through Trump’s every talking point
Trump continues to threaten Greenland and frame Arctic sovereignty as a bargaining chip. He is continuously applying military and economic pressure as if they are negotiating tactics rather than acts of coercion. So, crucially, Vistisen pointed out something the EU’s own leadership has tried to soften away: this is not a “discussion.”
While European officials talk delicately about “security concerns in the Arctic,” it is the United States that dramatically reduced its military presence there. From roughly 15,000 troops to about 150, as Vistisen pointed out. That’s not vigilance. It’s a clear abandonment, followed by a convenient entitlement on Trump’s side.
The MEP then applied the sleight of hand to resources. Trump’s allies keep framing Greenland’s rare earth minerals as a global necessity and a strategic imperative that justifies pressure from Washington. But Vistisen cut through that easily. Those resources, he said, belong to Greenland. Not the U.S. or NATO. And definitely not to Trump’s real estate dressed up as foreign policy.
Anders Vistisen understood the assignment
Everyone's speaking POTUS's tone nowadays
— Crypto Sensei (@cryptosenseiXBT) January 20, 2026
Vistisen also added how the European Union has already bent over backward. He mentioned everything, from trade concessions and investment promises to asymmetric tariffs that favored the U.S. But it was all offered in good faith. Yet, Trump’s threats remain. And that’s exactly the part that snapped the tone.
When one side keeps escalating militarily, rhetorically, and symbolically, and the other side keeps responding with diplomacy seminars, someone eventually has to say the thing that has been politely implied for months. In simple words, it’s a “No.”
No, Greenland is not for sale, and security does not require ownership. No, intimidation does not become legitimate just because it’s dressed up in policy jargon. And no, Europe is not required to pretend this is normal. But for Trump to understand, it’s “f—k off.”
Vistisen’s speech was cut off almost immediately, citing rules and decorum. But the message had already landed. Across social media, the reaction was celebratory. “Someone had to say it,” one said. “That’s the way,” another added. “Bullies don’t understand unless you speak their language.” And Anders Vistisen understood that perfectly.