Whoopi Goldberg did not mince words — and she did not blink — as she stared straight into the camera and delivered a blistering rebuke that left no room for misinterpretation. On The View this morning, the veteran actress and co-host unleashed her fury not just at Donald Trump, but at every Republican lawmaker who has chosen silence over decency in the wake of a brutal tragedy.

The backdrop to Goldberg’s outrage was grim. Over the weekend, beloved director Rob Reiner and his wife were found murdered in their Los Angeles home, an act authorities say was carried out by their own son. As the Reiner family reeled from the unimaginable loss, Trump chose that moment to post on Truth Social — not condolences, not restraint, but mockery. He falsely claimed Reiner had died “due to the anger he caused others” and blamed it on what he called an “incurable disease” known as “Trump Derangement Syndrome.”

Hours later, instead of walking it back, Trump doubled down in a press briefing, labeling Reiner “deranged” and “very bad for our country.”

That was the moment Goldberg snapped.

“You know who’s bad for the country?” she asked, her voice steady but razor-sharp. “I don’t know how you were raised, but this man’s family is in deep mourning. What you said — and what you doubled down on — makes you bad for the country. Very bad for the country.”

The studio was silent. Goldberg wasn’t finished.

She acknowledged that some Republicans had done what Trump himself would not: speak up. She name-checked GOP figures who publicly condemned the remarks, including Rep. John Kennedy of Louisiana, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Thomas Massie of Kentucky, and Mike Lawler of New York. Their responses, she said, proved one thing — that decency is still possible, even in today’s political climate.

“There’s something we all know,” Goldberg continued. “When something horrific happens, we come together. We don’t delineate because someone didn’t like you. That’s not what you do.”

Then she turned her attention to the rest of the Republican Party — the ones who said nothing.

Goldberg leaned forward, locked eyes with the camera, and delivered the line that instantly went viral.

“There is no justification for him to have written what he wrote. There is no way to justify it,” she said. “And all of those Republicans who are quiet — damn you all. Damn you all.”

It wasn’t theatrical. It wasn’t performative. It was raw anger — the kind reserved for moments when moral lines are crossed so blatantly that silence becomes complicity.

Joy Behar followed by widening the lens, warning that Trump’s words are not fleeting outbursts but permanent stains. She predicted that long after today’s political battles are forgotten, Trump’s rhetoric will endure — not as strength, but as evidence.

“For years to come, generations ahead of us — when we’re all dead — this stuff is going to be in the Smithsonian,” Behar said. “Everybody’s going to know what he said. His legacy is in the dumpster. He doesn’t care, though.”

And that, perhaps, was the most chilling part.

Goldberg’s message wasn’t just about Rob Reiner. It was about grief. It was about basic human decency. And it was about the growing normalization of cruelty — especially when those with power choose silence over conscience.

On The View, Goldberg didn’t ask Republicans to change their politics. She demanded they remember their humanity.

And for those who refused?

Her verdict was final.