Trump posted his own golfing Bruce Springsteen hitting Bruce Springsteen

The quarrel between President Donald Trump and experienced rock star Bruce Springsteen escalated Wednesday, the commander-in-chief posted a shaped video to social media showing him hitting the singer with a golf ball.

In a post shared with the President’s Truth Social and X account, Trump was proven to hit the golf ball. The video then shows a clip of 75-year-old Springsteen, tripping in one of his shows and rolling as he falls onto the stage. A golf ball seems to be added to the second clip, as if Trump was in charge of hitting Springsteen and causing him to fall.

The post was posted after the president and the “American-Born” singer made publicly traded barbs after Springsteen’s comments last week after commenting on his European tour.

"I love America, the United States I write about, has been a beacon of hope and freedom for 250 years and is currently in the hands of a corrupt, incompetent and treasonable government," he said.

He went on to accuse the Trump administration of “abandoning the world’s poorest children of illness and death…to endure the joy of masochism in the pain they exert on faithful American workers” and backing civil rights in the United States.

Initially, the Trump administration replied: “The 77 million Americans elected President Trump disagree with elitists and disconnected celebrities like Bruce Springsteen.”

Trump later responded to comments about truth socialization, saying Springsteen was "overrated" and "bastard".

“Never liked him, never liked his music or radical left politics, and importantly, he wasn’t a talented man – just an impatient, nasty asshole, who eagerly supported the fraudster’s Crooked Joe Biden, a mentally incompetent fool, and the worst president we’ve ever had, who was close to destroying our country,” Trump wrote.

Springsteen is not the only musician about Trump, nor is it the only musician on the receiving end of Trump's anger.

Last week, Trump released Taylor Swift, who recently completed a two-year record journey, has been no longer "hot" since he hated her since he hated her for the past Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris.

"Someone noticed because I said 'I hate Taylor Swift, is she no longer hot?'" Trump wrote on Friday

Representatives for Springsteen and Swift did not immediately return a request for comment.

Other musicians such as Neil Young and Pearl Jam singer Eddie Vedder also defended Springsteen and Swift.

"Bruce and thousands of musicians think you're destroying America," Young wrote on his website. "That's your problem. I'm not afraid of you. ”

At a concert in Pittsburgh on Sunday, Wade said Trump's response to Springsteen had nothing to do with the concerns he raised.

"All we hear is personal attacks and threats, and no one else should use their microphone or sound in public or they will be turned off," Vedder told the crowd.

Mithil Aggarwal contribute.