3 Most Replied X Posts - March 2026, Week 10
Here are the 3 most replied posts on X this week, with 1.4M engagements combined.


JUSTICE THE AMERICAN WAY. 🇺🇸


Hey White House, please remove the Tropic Thunder clip. We never gave you permission and have no interest in being a part of your propaganda machine. War is not a movie.


Free and fair elections are the cornerstone of our democracy. But right now, they’re under attack. Several Republican-controlled states have redrawn their congressional maps to give themselves an unfair advantage in the midterm elections. Now Virginia has a chance to help level the playing field. If you live in the Commonwealth, early voting begins March 6, and Election Day is on April 21. Vote YES.
Hollywood, Washington, and the Ballot Box: X's Most Replied Posts of the Week
This week on X, the most replied-to posts had one thing in common: they all touched a nerve. Whether it was a Hollywood director drawing a hard line against the White House, the official government account flexing with a blockbuster movie clip, or a former president rallying voters in Virginia, the platform turned into a full-blown arena of opinions, jokes, and genuinely heated takes. With tens of millions of views spread across just three posts, it's safe to say the internet had a lot to say.
#1 Ben Stiller Tells the White House to Cut It Out
Topping the chart with over 54,600 replies and 814,000 likes, Ben Stiller fired off one of the week's most direct celebrity callouts. Responding to the official White House account posting a clip from Tropic Thunder, Stiller kept it short and sharp: "Hey White House, please remove the Tropic Thunder clip. We never gave you permission and have no interest in being a part of your propaganda machine. War is not a movie." The post racked up 37 million views and got retweeted over 91,000 times. Replies ranged from full-throated support to people arguing about copyright law, fair use, and the fine line between satire and political messaging. For a film that originally parodied war movies, ending up inside an actual government post about "justice" is quite the plot twist nobody asked for.
#2 The White House Drops a Blockbuster (Literally)
The post that sparked the whole drama came from the official White House account, which captioned a Tropic Thunder video clip with "JUSTICE THE AMERICAN WAY" and a couple of flag emojis. Simple. Punchy. Controversial. The post pulled in 63 million views, 133,000 likes, and 20,500 replies, making it one of the most-viewed government tweets in recent memory. Whether people found it bold, bizarre, or somewhere in between, one thing is clear: using a comedy film clip about fake war heroes to make a point about real-world justice was always going to generate some conversation. The replies were a mix of cheering supporters, legal questions about intellectual property, and more than a few people who just wanted to quote the movie back at them.
#3 Barack Obama Calls Virginia to Action
Rounding out the top three, former President Barack Obama took to X with a longer, more substantive post urging Virginia residents to vote YES in their upcoming election. "Free and fair elections are the cornerstone of our democracy. But right now, they're under attack," he wrote, pointing to Republican-led redistricting efforts in multiple states. With early voting starting March 6 and Election Day set for April 21, Obama's post came with a video and generated 39,500 replies, 191,500 likes, and 45.5 million views. The reply section was predictably divided, with supporters sharing the post widely and critics pushing back on the framing. Either way, with numbers like that, the message clearly reached a lot of people, which was probably the whole point.
A Week That Proves X Never Sleeps
From a copyright dispute between a comedian and the government to a former president's electoral call to arms, Week 10 on X was a reminder that the most replied-to posts aren't always the loudest or flashiest. Sometimes they're just the ones that tap into something people genuinely care about. Whether that's creative rights, political fairness, or a good old-fashioned argument about a 2008 comedy film, the replies kept coming.
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