I put men into body bags who were far better men than Hegseth or Trump could ever be

There are moments when the insult is so direct that politeness starts to feel like cooperation, and this is one of those moments. I am an atheist veteran, and I am watching this administration treat people like me as if our service was good enough to use but too inconvenient to recognize. I raised my right hand and swore an oath to the Constitution of the United States, not to Pete Hegseth’s personal theology, not to Donald Trump’s vanity project, and not to some Christian nationalist fantasy of what the military should look like. I gave years of my life to this country, and those years were not theoretical, symbolic, or decorative. They were real years, with real sacrifice, real loss, real stress, real consequences, and real pieces of life that never come back.

I served beside people with every kind of belief and nonbelief imaginable, because that is what the American military actually is when politicians are not trying to sand it down into propaganda. The people beside you on watch are not chosen by a church committee. They are chosen by training, duty, trust, competence, and the shared understanding that the mission matters more than personal religious branding. Nobody doing the actual work needed a theological inspection before deciding whether the person next to them counted. Now a political appointee with a culture-war résumé looks at that reality and decides that minority beliefs can be shoved out of official recognition because the spreadsheet looks cleaner that way. That is not leadership, and it sure as hell is not honor.

On March 25, 2026, Pete Hegseth announced that the Department of Defense was cutting the military’s faith and belief codes from more than 200 down to 31, and he wrapped the whole thing in the kind of bureaucratic language people use when they want an ugly decision to sound responsible. Efficiency always becomes a convenient excuse when powerful people decide certain Americans are easier to ignore. The military can track a service member’s dental readiness, training history, blood type, weapons qualifications, clearance status, dependent information, medical limitations, leave balance, and career paperwork with obsessive precision. It can track details so small they make normal civilian paperwork look relaxed by comparison. Yet somehow, acknowledging the actual beliefs of the people serving became too much to handle. That excuse deserves ridicule before it deserves analysis. A military that can coordinate submarines, aircraft, satellites, logistics, and global operations can manage a damn belief-code list when leadership believes the list matters. The problem was never complexity. The problem was whose existence became expendable once Christian nationalist politics got closer to the controls. When atheists, humanists, pagans, Wiccans, Druids, Deists, Heathens, Asatru, and other minority-belief service members get pushed out of recognition, the message is not subtle. It says the institution will still take your service, but people in power reserve the right to make your identity disappear when it offends their preferred version of America.

The timing makes the insult smell even worse. Hegseth has already drawn scrutiny for explicitly Christian activity inside the Pentagon, including a Christian worship service that turned the seat of military leadership into something far too close to a government-backed religious performance. Then, after that, we are supposed to accept that a massive reduction in recognized faith and belief codes is just neutral housekeeping. I do not have enough patience left for that level of convenient stupidity. This is the kind of thing that happens when someone mistakes religious confidence for constitutional authority. Private faith is one thing, and nobody is telling Pete Hegseth he cannot go pray, worship, quote scripture, or live according to his own beliefs as a private citizen. Public power is different, especially when that power sits over a military made up of Americans from wildly different backgrounds. The Secretary of Defense does not get to treat the force like his preferred congregation with better uniforms. The Pentagon is not a church annex, and the military is not a prop department for Christian nationalism. If he cannot separate his personal religious politics from his duty to the entire force, then he is unfit for the job. That should be obvious to anyone who understands the oath as something deeper than campaign theater.

Donald Trump owns this disgrace because this is his administration, his appointment culture, and his movement’s rotten understanding of loyalty. I already had no respect for Trump as a veteran, because the man spent his life dodging sacrifice while constantly demanding worship from people who actually made some. He avoided service, mocked military sacrifice, treated patriotism like merchandise, and turned public office into a monument to his own appetite. Now the administration carrying his name is giving us a Pentagon where minority-belief service members can be made less visible while the usual crowd pretends this is merely administrative tidying. The same people who lecture everyone else about love of country keep proving they only love the country when it flatters their preferred tribe. They praise the troops when the troops make good campaign scenery. They talk about freedom until freedom protects atheists, Muslims, pagans, immigrants, protesters, critics, or anyone else they want pushed to the edge of the frame. Their flag-waving always seems loudest when constitutional principle is weakest. Their version of patriotism has become a performance of dominance, grievance, and obedience. Veterans should be especially disgusted by that, because the oath did not ask us to defend one man’s ego. It asked us to defend a Constitution that exists specifically to restrain men like him.

The part that feels personal is not some abstract complaint about labels. It is the knowledge that this country will take almost everything from a service member and still allow politicians to treat that person’s place in the national story as conditional. It will take the missed birthdays, the broken sleep, the family strain, the deployments, the stress, the injuries, the dead friends, the damaged bodies, and the years of youth that nobody gets back. It will take the atheist on watch just as readily as the Christian beside him. It will take the humanist in uniform, the pagan in uniform, the Muslim in uniform, the Jew in uniform, the Sikh in uniform, the Hindu in uniform, and the person who does not want any belief label at all. Once the sacrifice has been made, the speeches come out, the flags appear, and everyone wants to sound solemn for thirty seconds. Meanwhile, when actual living service members need recognition, accommodation, support, and honest demographic visibility, suddenly the people in charge find a reason to narrow the record. The VA can recognize atheist and humanist emblems on government headstones, which proves the government knows damn well we exist. Apparently recognition becomes easier when the veteran is dead, silent, and no longer capable of objecting. That contradiction deserves to be dragged into the town square and made to explain itself. A country that can carve a symbol into stone after death can damn well recognize the person while they are still serving.

I want to be very clear about why this matters beyond my own anger. The Chaplain Corps is supposed to support the force, and the force is not a Christian club with a few tolerated outsiders attached for manpower. Religious preference and belief data help the military understand who is serving, what support exists, where accommodations may be needed, and whether the institution is actually seeing its people honestly. Pretending that hundreds of recognized identities can be collapsed into a tiny list without consequence is the kind of lazy arrogance that only looks harmless to people who already expect their own identity to remain protected. Majority groups rarely notice the machinery of recognition because the machinery was usually built with them in mind. Minority groups notice immediately when someone starts removing the bolts. Christian service members with actual integrity should be angry because religious liberty cannot survive as a majority-only privilege. Chaplains who take their calling seriously should be angry because their work is cheapened when the institution pretends some service members are easier to categorize out of sight. Commanders should be angry because trust erodes when troops learn that leadership sees some identities as clutter. Veterans should be angry because every attack on pluralism weakens the constitutional foundation we swore to defend. Nobody who respects the oath should shrug when government power starts playing favorites with conscience.

I earned the right to be furious about this, and I will not apologize for the temperature of my response. I earned it through years of service, through loss, through sacrifice, and through the simple fact that I actually paid a price for the country these people keep using as a backdrop for their religious politics. I buried friends who deserved better than being folded into somebody else’s cheap sermon about patriotism. I watched people give parts of themselves to a nation that too often remembers them only when applause is useful. I also know exactly how insulting it feels when a draft-dodging former president and a culture-war secretary treat real service members like supporting characters in their own ideological pageant. They can dress the policy up however they want, but the message lands clearly enough. We were good enough to serve, but our beliefs were too inconvenient to count. We were trusted with duty, but not with visibility. We were useful to the country, but apparently troublesome to the story these people want to tell about it. That is cowardly, sectarian, oath-breaking garbage, and it deserves condemnation without a single drop of sugar poured over it.

My service counted before Pete Hegseth ever touched a Pentagon policy memo. My oath counted before Donald Trump started confusing personal loyalty with national loyalty. The service of every atheist, humanist, pagan, Wiccan, Druid, Deist, Heathen, and minority-belief service member counts whether this administration recognizes it or not. Their place in the military is earned through service, not granted by the theological comfort level of a political appointee. Their dignity does not shrink because someone in power prefers a smaller, cleaner, more obedient version of America. The military belongs to the nation, and the nation includes millions of people who do not believe in God. The Constitution protects us anyway, which is precisely why Christian nationalists keep finding it so inconvenient. I did not serve a church, a preacher, a president, or a partisan movement. I served the Constitution of the United States. If Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump cannot respect that, then they are the ones dishonoring the uniform, the oath, and the country they keep pretending to defend… And they can cordially go fuck themselves!

A personal note

For over 40 years I have used credit cards from two gas companies:  Exxon and Shell.

About two months ago I recevied an email from Shell telling me my current card issued by Citibank woud expire on a certain date and I would be issued a new card by a company called “Imprint.”

Nothing happened.

Then I received an email directing me to log in to Imprint and establish an account.  I did.

I checked the account 2-3 times a week.  Each time I was told my new card was “in transit.”

Eventually the new card arrived.  I went on line to activate it only to be told the number on the card was “not valid.”

Tried several times with same result.

My bank account was linked to the Shell account because I had it set up on autopay.  Sensing that this was not going to be a good experience, I unlinked my bank account so neither Imprint nor Shell could make withdrawals from my bank account.

I tried a few more times to activate the account with the same result — this is not a valid Imprint account number.

I decided to cancel my account.  Cannot do that using their online chatbot.  I tried calling their customer support number, only to be greeted by another AI chatbot.  After a few frustrating minutes talking to an AI idiot, I was told to hold for the next representative.  After 25 minutes on hold, their system hung up.

I went though this experience three times and gave up.

My bank account is unlinked so Shell, Imprint, whoever, cannot take my money.  The card they sent me will not activate.

I did an online search for “Shell, Imprint” and found that the Imprint – Shell rolllout has been a disaster with thousands upon thousands of people having the same experience I had.

I will never use Shell again for anything.  Meanwhile, the useless card now sits in the bottom of my sock drawer.

Trump’s USA 250 Concert is a bust, his UFC freakshow is on the ropes . . . so . . . TIME FOR A RALLY!!

https://trumpstruth.org/statuses/39099

Donald J. Trump
@realDonaldTrump · June 4, 2026, 5:45 PM

On Wednesday, June 24th, at 7 P.M., in magnificent Washington, D.C., now totally beautified, and one of the Safest Cities anywhere in the World, and in celebration of our Country’s 250 Year History, we will be bringing you, LIVE, the Greatest Rally, EVER! It will be special at every level — A Rally to end all Rallies! We don’t want singers with no talent, but big fees to put you to sleep, we’ve told them all to stay home. All we want is you, me, a few speakers, and the Greatest Music ever played, the same Music you have listened to for years! We will have the fabulous Lee Greenwood introducing me with what has turned out to be one of the Greatest Hits of All Time, GOD BLESS THE U.S.A., and the amazing Christopher Macchio, who will sing Nessun Dorma, Hallelujah, Ave Maria, God Bless America, and others — Not since the legendary Luciano Pavarotti has there been such a voice! The Rally will also be featuring the wonderful U.S. Army Band “Pershing’s Own” and Armed Forces Choir, and “The President’s Own” Unites States Marine Band, with the Joint Armed Forces Chorus, all of your favorite Hits, PLUS a fine and highly dignified gentleman known as, President DONALD J. TRUMP!

GOOD NEWS: The “SAVE America Act” has failed in the Senate and is dead.

https://www.npr.org/2026/06/04/nx-s1-5751145/save-act-senate-vote-trump

The SAVE America Act, a far-reaching Republican election overhaul that President Trump said should be his congressional allies’ top priority, has officially failed in the Senate.

The measure was voted on Thursday as an amendment as part of lengthy debate over an immigration funding package. The election bill has languished in the Senate for months, after the House passed a version in February on a near party-line vote.

The election proposal would have taken effect immediately, even as voting is underway in congressional primaries.

Notably, the legislation would have required voters to show a document proving their U.S. citizenship, like a passport or a birth certificate, when they registered to vote.

Research has shown millions of Americans don’t have easy access to those documents. And experts say such a provision is unnecessary, as noncitizens have never been shown to vote at anything but microscopic numbers in American elections.

“The alleged sin that it is trying to correct happens so infrequently that it really does seem like the solution would be much, much worse than the disease,” said Georgetown law professor Steve Vladeck, in an interview with NPR this spring.

Still, as Trump has continued his years-long campaign to sow doubt in American elections, he pitched the SAVE America Act as a panacea to the fraud he falsely claims is rampant.

“Congress should unite and enact this common-sense, country-saving legislation right now and it should be before anything else happens,” Trump said during his State of the Union address. He went on to say the only reason Democrats opposed the legislation was because they want to cheat.

Trump posted frequently online about the bill as well — including on Thursday afternoon — saying at one point that he would not sign any other legislation before the SAVE Act was passed, that it “supersedes everything else.”

Taking that cue, some Republicans talked of wanting to abolish or circumvent the legislative filibuster to make it harder for Democrats to stymie the legislation. But it was clear to Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., that there wasn’t a broad enough appetite among his Republican colleagues for that.

“It’s about the votes. It’s about the math,” Thune had told reporters. “And I’m — for better or worse — I’m the one who has to be the clear-eyed realist about what we can achieve here.”

The act would have also required all voters to show photo identification to cast a ballot. And it would have mandated that all states submit their voter lists to a Department of Homeland Security tool that has been found to erroneously flag U.S. citizens.

Traditionally, Republicans have been staunchly opposed to any legislation that would nationalize how voting is done.

But Trump has openly said he thinks the U.S. should nationalize voting, and University of Notre Dame law professor Derek Muller noted that the SAVE America Act, had it been enacted, would have been “among the most significant nationalization[s] of elections in American history.”

That could end up being the act’s legacy, Muller wrote in a blog post in March.

“It does strike me that the debate has shifted from whether to nationalize elections to how, at least for many Republicans,” Muller wrote. “And that may well–even in failure to pass the Act!–make the conversation for Democrats next time they are in power much easier to have.”

He Blew the Whistle on DOGE. Then His Brake Lines Were Cut

On April 14, 2025, Dan Berulis, an IT staffer at the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), filed a Congressional whistleblower complaint with an extraordinary and urgent claim: The so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) had seemingly compromised the agency’s data and appeared to be exfiltrating it out of the NLRB entirely. Additionally, Berulis claimed that mere minutes after DOGE members had accessed the agency’s data, there appeared to be login attempts from an IP address in Russia.

At the time, DOGE teams, orchestrated by billionaire Elon Musk, were sweeping across government, firing federal workers and accessing sensitive data and technical systems with no oversight and little transparency.

The following day, Berulis went public in an NPR article with his name and claims. In it, he claimed that in the lead-up to his Congressional disclosure, a threatening note had been taped to his door, including photos of him walking his dog that appeared to have been taken by a drone. Berulis was already scared that speaking out had made him a target.

Five days after the NPR story went live, on Easter Sunday, April 20, 2025, Berulis got in his car to drive to Maryland to make a last-minute visit to his uncle, opting to take local roads instead of the major highway nearby. Within about five minutes of leaving his house, Berulis realized something was wrong. As he approached a stop sign at an intersection, his car wouldn’t slow down. He ran off the road and into the sign. When he examined his car, he found something that terrified him: His brake lines had been cut.

https://www.wired.com/story/he-blew-the-whistle-on-doge-then-his-brakes-were-cut/


BUT WAIT — THERE’S MORE!!

Since then, Berulis has laid low. He filed a police report, included in the suit and viewed by WIRED, and had the car seen by a mechanic who, according to the report, found “that the driver-side front impact/airbag sensor had also been removed but noted that the remaining wires had been spliced together, completing the circuit in a manner that prevented the vehicle from detecting or logging the missing component, while also preventing the vehicle from activating its safety protocols, alerting the driver, or engaging limp mode.” The police report also indicates that fingerprints had been found on Berulis’ car. According to the police report, the case is now “inactive,” “due to the lack of any specific suspect information,” though the police’s intelligence unit was notified.

Face facts: Trump is at the end of his rope; demented; very sick

Trump cannot stay awake in meetings.

 

 


AS of early June 2026, Trump has mentioned trips to his dentist for the past six months.  Here is an oral surgeon’s take on what’s wrong with Trump’s teeth.

Trump’s Dentition 

Well this is interesting: the following are two very recent photos

And these are from a short time ago:

I’m actually not certain about what’s going on here, but it may be that he is now wearing provisional or temporary bridgework. There is virtually no question that the earlier photo showed a fixed prosthesis over teeth or implants. The later photos appear to be a slightly different configuration and may be what we called characterized, which is what we perform on temporaries or even permanent restorations to break up the light reflection so it doesn’t look artificial.

He may well be in the middle of significant dental treatment which would explain why they mentioned it on multiple occasions. If his reconstruction failing catastrophically, there is a transitional crisis component which has a degree of uncertainty, despite what the capabilities of the dentist may be.

Now in a patient with dementia, and I have significant experience in this regard, this transition generates fear and anger. I posted a long time ago about my patient who was a Senior Judge in Philadelphia’s Court of Common Pleas, a very respected man, and possessing progressive Fronto-temporal dementia. “Nightmare” does not begin to describe what I went through with him for years until he finally passed away in his late 90’s.

For these individuals, the process is extremely disorienting and upsetting and I would NOT want to be Trump’s dentist, no matter my politics. God help the staff as well and even the dental laboratory technicians involved must experience real trepidation.

I will continue to keep an eye on this situation and report in. I believe that if he is suffering significant somatic illness, the immune response may be taking its toll upon his dentition.

In Trump’s fascist, white supremacist America, they are coming after Black people

In Trump’s Fascist, White Supremacist America, The Silence Is Deafening

DEAFENING… or at least that’s what I’ve oft read or heard when matters of concern don’t seem to garner much of a response. Yet the continued Trump/MAGA assaults of discrimination and disenfranchisement against Black people, immigrants of colour, gays, women, and other minorities are REGULARLY happening at such a pace, and on many fronts, that it gets barely a mention in the MSM… if at all.

Here are a few more such headlines. I know, it’s a lot. But if it’s any consolation, there are 107 more I haven’t posted… yet.

The Receipts: The Receipts: Every Way Trump Has Hurt Black People in His Second Term The Trump second term impact on Black Americans is no longer theoretical. From rising Black unemployment and DEI rollbacks to voting restrictions, HBCU funding cuts, and attacks on the Smithsonian, the first sixteen months of Trump’s second term have produced measurable consequences across Black America.

A third of the Congressional Black Caucus could lose seats amid redistricting Almost a third of the membership of the Congressional Black Caucus — 19 of its 62 members — are at risk of losing their seats through the 2028 election cycle as Republicans in southern states where they control the legislature move swiftly to redraw congressional maps less than two weeks after the Supreme Court dealt a blow to Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.

Rep. Clyburn says GOP redistricting push is part of larger Black disenfranchisement effort U.S. Rep. James Clyburn, the longtime Black representative from South Carolina whose seat could be at stake in mid-decade congressional redistricting, told ABC News that he sees the redrawing of congressional seats held by Black lawmakers as part of a larger history of discrimination and disenfranchisement against Black Americans.

The ‘Black recession’ is here: Trump’s tariffs gutted Black workers and Black-owned businesses According to data analyzed by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Black Americans have suffered the most under Trump’s tariffs program

Reverse Racism Lawsuits Target Black Programs as Wealth Gap Tells a Different Story Why Are Right-Wing Law Firms Suing Black Support Programs Like the Playing Field Was Ever Fair?

Pete Hegseth Fired US Army Chief Of Staff Because He Wants To Be Racist In Peace When Donald Trump nominated former Fox news pundit Pete Hegseth to serve as defense secretary, he replaced Lloyd Austin, the nation’s first Black defense secretary, who happened to be a four-star general, and who, during his 41-year military career, also served as director of the Joint Staff, was commanding general of U.S. and coalition forces in Iraq, and headed U.S. Central Command

Pentagon Pete took aim at women and minorities in secret purge Hegseth’s block on promotions for senior female and Black officers was just the tip of the iceberg of Pentagon discrimination. He’s embarked on a demotion rampage targeting women and Black men while touting a so-called “warrior ethos” makeover of the military.

In Trump’s military, white male supremacy reigns Executing on Trump’s vision of white male supremacy, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is personally blocking advancement of Black and female military leaders, undoing decades of progress in America’s armed services.

Trump Sued for Firing Most of the Black Officials in Government Trump has removed Black Senate-confirmed appointees; he has either nominated a non-Black individual for their replacement or has not formally replaced them at all,” the lawsuit states. “This trend fits with Trump’s consistent messaging criticizing diversity and inclusion and his clear and demonstrable emphasis on hiring white people.”

Idaho town voted to remove Juneteenth as official city holiday “Juneteenth is something that nobody had heard of until five years ago and was pushed for political purposes,’ Post Falls mayor, Randy Westlund, told his city council, ignoring the history of Texans and generations of Americans who have celebrated the end of slavery in the United States. (ignoring? no just fkn ignorant)

Justice Department Indicts Southern Poverty Law Center For Paying Informants Of White Supremacist Groups Here’s a question: If the Trump administration isn’t a white supremacist organization, then why is Donald Trump’s Department of Justice prosecuting one of the nation’s most well-known civil rights organization for using paid informants to infiltrate white supremacists?

Civil rights groups condemn Southern Poverty Law Center’s indictment and prepare for legal fights “It’s a blatantly obvious attack on civil rights and civil liberties to whitewash the foot soldiers of the great replacement theory and other extremists. This coalition isn’t going silent,” said Maya Wiley, president and chief executive of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, an umbrella organization of hundreds of civil rights groups.

Stephen Miller sinks to new level of white supremacy Miller presented his white supremacist version of history in an attempt to defend Trump’s ruthless imperialistic projects by claiming people could only “live freely” (after hundreds of years of violent European feudalism and colonisation) if they “got rid of the people who were raping and murdering and defying established systems of order and justice.”

Wealthy Florida community caught up in Republican racist chat uproar Miami-Dade GOP secretary Abel Carvajal created a conservative student group chat that quickly became choked with racist slurs, n-words, descriptions of women as ‘whores,’ slurs directed at Jewish and gay people, and musings about Hitler’s politics.

New report reveals 70 suspected modern lynchings in the Deep South The report, titled “A Crimson Record,” was produced by the civil rights organization Justice for Julius Action Network, often referred to as JULIAN. Researchers examined cases between 2000 and 2025 in Texas, Mississippi, Georgia, Louisiana, Florida, Tennessee, and Alabama.

GOP governor candidate explodes at Black voter: You should be lynched! Florida GOP gubernatorial candidate James Fishback blew up at a Black voter, telling him he should be “lynched” for asking about allegations of inappropriate behavior with teenagers.

St. Louis Cops Claimed They Had to Shoot Black Teen in the Back of His Head Because He Was a Threat, Then the Body-Camera Video They Hid for Over a Year Surfaced St. Louis cops initially claimed they shot and killed Emeshyon because the teen turned and pointed a gun at them, but body camera footage later released shows the teen never turned around and never had a gun in his hand when he was shot in the back of the head.

Trump is stalemated, there is no way out, he is trapped.

President Trump likes his military and diplomatic victories quick, clean and decisive.

On his desk in the Oval Office, he keeps models of the B-2 bombers that took out three Iranian nuclear sites in one night, not quite a year ago. In the opening weeks of the Iran conflict this year, he talked often about replicating his success in Venezuela — “the perfect scenario,’’ he said — shorthand for overthrowing a troublesome leader with one quick commando raid, and replacing him with a pliant, American-friendly successor.

But now, Mr. Trump has hit the stalemate phase of his presidency.

The war with Iran is clearly at that stage. When he declared a cease-fire on April 7, Mr. Trump said on social media that the end of combat operations would be conditional on “the COMPLETE, IMMEDIATE, and SAFE OPENING of the Strait of Hormuz.” It wasn’t. Even if commerce now resumes across the strait under a memorandum of understanding still under negotiation, it will still leave the future of Iran’s nuclear and missile programs exactly where they were in February: stuck in a further negotiation that the administration insists will be “time limited,” probably to 60 days.

But the Iranians sense Mr. Trump’s deep reluctance to restart combat operations that are deeply unpopular in the United States, and most Iran experts say they expect Tehran to try to stretch the negotiations for months or years — as they have with past administrations.

Then there is the Ukraine war, a conflict in its fifth year that Mr. Trump famously boasted he would end in 24 hours after taking office. Sixteen months after he was sworn in, he rarely mentions the war anymore, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently complained that he was tired of wasting time in endless negotiations, suggesting that he would be perfectly happy if some other country wanted to step in and play that role.

For their part, the Russians have quietly made clear that they are tired of periodic visits from the president’s special envoy Steve Witkoff and Mr. Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, according to people familiar with the negotiations. They say they want a stable, diplomatic process, with working groups and regular meetings. They also want an American ambassador to Russia — a job that has been open, astoundingly, for nearly a year.

And there is Gaza. When Mr. Trump flew to Israel to celebrate the release of the last of the living hostages from the Oct. 7, 2023, terror attack, he enthused about a 20-point plan that started with the disarming of Hamas, the creation of an international stabilization force and, ultimately, rebuilding Gaza into a gleaming territory of glass office towers and seaside resorts. Eight months after that trip, Hamas has still not disarmed, except in fake, A.I.-generated videos. (One, sent out by Mr. Trump, depicts him and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sunbathing.)

While more aid is making its way into the territory, Palestinians are still sleeping in tents, the rat-infested rubble has not been cleared, and Mr. Netanyahu announced last week that the Israeli military would expand its control to about 70 percent of the Palestinian enclave.

Perhaps all of this is the inevitable result of a president with huge ambitions running into the brick walls of global realities. Perhaps it is the result of overreach, as Mr. Trump — infused with the success of his first two military adventures, into Iran and Venezuela — assumes that there is no task too big for the U.S. military.

Some experts suggest that it arises from a fundamental misunderstanding of American power. As one of Mr. Trump’s close aides said recently, destroying nuclear sites from the air is what America does best, and controlling political events in nations like Iran, Russia and Ukraine is what the United States does worst.

More than likely, however, is that the stalemates along with Trump’s other many failures are due to the fact that he is a moron with a record of total failure as a “businessman” who is surrounded by people just like himself — fools, assholes, failures, and losers.

 

Trump is in deep trouble . . . and he knows it

At 8:15 this morning, the President of the United States began panicking in front of the entire world. For more than seven hours, he posted nearly 50 times. And when he finally slowed down, it would stand as one of the most revealing fits of rage of his presidency to date. Because what he shared was beyond any reasonable person’s comprehension.

  • He complained that because China has a ballroom, he should have one too.
  • He posted an image of a “Trump Peace Prize” bearing his own face.
  • He repeatedly compared himself to George Washington.
  • He shared an image of himself kissing a flag.
  • He shared a heroic fantasy image of himself depicted as the God of War that said, “YOU’RE GETTING DISCOMBOBULATED.”
  • And most concerning of all, he repeatedly called for a federal judge to be investigated, impeached, and removed from the bench, placing both the judge and his wife in danger by putting a target on their backs before an already radicalized base of loyalists.

    And we cannot say this part quietly, because the title in front of his name is the whole point. This is not a troll on the internet. This is not a man yelling into a void from his basement. This is the President of the United States. This is the one human being on the planet who commands the most powerful military, who holds the nuclear codes, who can move markets and topple governments and start wars on a whim.

 

When a man like that names a judge and a judge’s wife and tells millions of followers they should be ashamed, investigated, and jailed, the distance between a post and a real human being in real danger collapses to nothing.

There is no one above him to send it up the chain to. He is the chain. And the entire world is watching him spend a Saturday this way, our allies and our adversaries alike, all of them now asking the same question every American should be asking, which is whether the person with that much power over their lives is well enough to hold it. These are dark days for this country. They are dark days for the world. And it is a strange and frightening thing to live through a time when the most dangerous instability on earth is not a foreign army or a failing economy, but the mind of one man posting cartoons of himself for nearly 7 hours on a Saturday.
snip

And I keep coming back to one thing tonight. Never before have we seen an American president behave like this. Not in a country founded on democratic norms, not in our lifetimes, not in any lifetime we can point to. There is no modern equivalent for this, no American equivalent, for this level of instability, corruption, and sheer insanity playing out in public day after day. To know that there are people beside him taking his wildest fantasies and turning them into digital hallucinations for him to share is its own kind of betrayal. And then there are the people who still claim to follow him, who cannot keep pretending that any of this is normal, because it is not, and somewhere underneath this unimaginable spectacle, they know it too. He cannot keep going like this. A man does not spend his day the way he spent today unless something is wrong. What we are watching is a man in cognitive and physical decline doing it in front of the entire world. And one day soon, we are going to have to come to grips with something even harder than the posts themselves, which is that there were likely medical professionals who knew, who put their names to words like “excellent” and “fully fit,” and who covered for him anyway. We are going to have to reckon with how many people looked straight at this and chose to call it normal. How many looked straight at it and called it healthy. How many looked straight at it and chose loyalty over truth.

Because here is what today actually showed us, underneath the noise. This was not strength. A man in command of himself and his country does not spend seven hours of a Saturday begging the world to see him as George Washington. The judge did his work calmly, in writing, on the law, and it held. The President spent the day melting down at him in public, in front of everyone, in front of the whole world. One of those is what lasting, real power looks like. The other is what it looks like when power can feel itself slipping and cannot stop grabbing at the air. We have not seen him this exposed before. The mask he used to keep up, the one that hid the worst of it, is gone, and a man who has to insist this loudly that he is well and powerful and beloved is telling us, without meaning to, exactly how unwell and how unsteady he has become …