Trump will die before his term is up, maybe before the 2026 mid-terms

I’m not here to play political games or dance around some bullshit diplomatic language. When you lay out a constellation of symptoms like this – the wobbly gait, the mysterious bruising, the breathlessness, the cognitive scatter – you’re looking at a medical picture that smells worse than a rotting fish left in the summer sun. And as someone who gives a shit about what happens when leaders can’t lead, we need to talk about what these symptoms actually fucking mean.

The human body doesn’t lie. And try as Donald ShitsThePants tries he can’t spin it, can’t tweet it the way out of reality, can’t hire a press secretary to explain away the biological truth. When multiple systems start showing signs of distress simultaneously, when balance becomes compromised, when unexplained bruising appears, when cognitive function seems to fragment – that’s not just “getting older.” That’s the body sending up flares, screaming that something fundamental is breaking down.

The Neurological Nightmare: Parkinson’s Disease and Its Cruel Mathematics
Let’s start with the fucking elephant in the room – Parkinson’s disease. Yep, I fucking said it. PARKINSONS. This bastard of a condition doesn’t just waltz in and announce itself; it creeps up like a predator in the night, stealing pieces of neurological function one synapse at a time. So lets run down the list.

Fred Trump Sr. (Donald’s father): Died with Alzheimer’s disease.

Maryanne Trump Barry (Donald’s late sister): Showed symptoms similar to dementia Parkinson’s before her death, though not formally diagnosed.

John Walter (Donald’s cousin): Also had dementia and lateral Parkinson’s-like symptoms, but was never clearly diagnosed.

The bradykinesia – that’s the medical term for slowed movement – fits like a glove with descriptions of dragging a leg “like a piece of wood.” Parkinson’s doesn’t just make you move slower; it makes every movement feel like you’re pushing through invisible molasses. The gait becomes shuffling, unsteady, and patients often develop what we call festination – a hurried, forward-leaning walk that looks like they’re chasing their own center of gravity. We have seen this with Donald PissesHimself’s trips and falls.

The tremor isn’t always the obvious hand shake you see in movies. Early Parkinson’s can manifest as subtle rigidity, muscle stiffness that makes someone appear slouched or listless. The postural instability – the balance problems – these aren’t just “oops, I tripped” moments. These are fundamental disruptions in the brain’s ability to process spatial orientation and maintain equilibrium.

The bruising pattern is particularly telling. Parkinson’s patients fall more frequently, and they fall in ways that create specific injury patterns. The hands often bear the brunt because they instinctively reach out to break falls. But here’s the kicker – Parkinson’s medications, particularly blood thinners often prescribed to prevent stroke complications, can make bruising more prominent and longer-lasting.

Now let’s talk about the breathlessness while standing still. That’s not just being out of shape – that’s potentially the signature of heart failure, and it’s a motherfucker of a condition that kills you by degrees.

Donald Trump Out Of Breath GIF | GIFDB.com

Heart failure doesn’t mean the heart stops; it means the heart can’t pump efficiently enough to meet the body’s demands. When you see someone winded from minimal exertion, slouched and listless, that could be a cardiovascular system crying uncle. The heart is struggling to circulate blood effectively, which means less oxygen reaching the brain, the muscles, every fucking organ that needs to function.

The psychological impact of heart failure is devastating. Patients describe feeling like they’re slowly drowning, even when sitting still. The brain, starved of optimal oxygen delivery, can’t maintain peak cognitive function. Decision-making becomes labored, attention spans shorten, and complex problem-solving – the kind required for, say, international diplomacy – becomes exponentially more difficult.

The fluid retention common in heart failure can cause swelling in the legs, which might explain the “lumps and bumps” that sparked speculation about medical devices. Chronic heart failure patients often require compression garments or support devices that could easily be mistaken for braces or other equipment.

Here’s the brutal truth: the constellation of symptoms described – the gait problems, the unexplained bruising, the breathlessness, the cognitive scatter – these aren’t just signs of “getting older.” They’re potentially indicators of serious medical conditions that require professional evaluation and ongoing management.

Whether we’re looking at Parkinson’s disease, heart failure, peripheral artery disease, or diabetes complications, each represents a significant health challenge that could impact cognitive function, decision-making capability, and overall fitness for the demands of high-level leadership.

The psychological and philosophical implications are staggering. When the most powerful person in the world might be facing their own mortality, when their body might be betraying them in real time, when their cognitive function might be compromised – that affects all of us.

The anticipation algorithm is simple and terrifying: if these symptoms represent the early stages of progressive conditions, we can expect them to worsen. The question isn’t whether change is coming, but how quickly it will arrive and whether we’ll be prepared for the consequences.

What’s the difference?

Let’s review three stories out of Colorado Springs CO . . . see if you can guess the difference.


First is this account of a man who literally ran over a woman in a local parking lot, killing her.  He has been found incompetent and all charges have been dismissed.  He was released from jail with no punishment, no parole.  The family of the victim is devastated.  They don’t even know if the man will lose his driver’s license.  Honestly, this story is just too bizarre to believe.  I don’t get it at all.

After over a month of delayed court action, Joel Lang was released from jail as a free man after admitting to killing a woman with his car last November. The court ruled him incompetent to stand trial. 


Then there’s this, another unbelievable account of another arrest made in Colorado Springs!  A repeat offender was captured with a few illegal things:

(COLORADO SPRINGS) — A prolific offender was arrested multiple times in Colorado Springs, which resulted in the seizure of more than 40 firearms and over 23,000 fentanyl pills.

According to the Colorado Springs Police Department (CSPD), the first arrest occurred on April 9, during which the Metro Narcotics Unit took 45-year-old Orvle Embry into custody for felony eluding. During a search of Embry’s car, detectives recovered a large amount of drugs, guns, and cash, including:

  • Drug paraphernalia
  • Hundreds of rounds of loaded magazines in various calibers
  • Five rifles
  • Four pistols
  • 2,351.26 grams of fentanyl (approximately 23,500 pills)
  • 14 grams of marijuana
  • 0.91 grams of LSD
  • 4.47 grams of prescription medication
  • 51.41 grams of heroin
  • 58.44 grams of cocaine
  • 411.89 grams of methamphetamine
  • $14,296 in cash

An additional search of Embry’s home on Hidden Circle near Austin Bluffs Parkway and Academy Boulevard recovered additional evidence:

  • 32.3 grams of methamphetamine
  • 13.5 grams of fentanyl
  • Five guns
  • 8.9 grams of cocaine
  • $2,266 in cash

Embry was released on a $300,000 bond. On July 27, CSPD said an officer who was familiar with Embry’s extensive criminal history saw him going into the Walmart on Platte Avenue, and while he was inside the store, observed drug paraphernalia in Embry’s truck. When he returned to the car, Embry and a woman with him were taken into custody after a short foot chase.

www.fox21news.com/…

Yep, he was released on bond,

Screenshot2025-08-02at10.16.40AM.png


 

And now here’s another story about one other man.  It was more after the fact.  This man died in 2018.  He was tased to death by the Colorado Springs police.

The family of a 27-year-old man killed by Colorado Springs police officers in 2018 reached a $3.2 million settlement with the city Tuesday.

According to court documents, Jeffrey Melvin Jr. died in the hospital on May 2, 2018, six days after being tased up to eight times in a two minute period by CSPD Officers Daniel Patterson and Joshua Archer. The officers were attempting to arrest Melvin after responding to calls of a late night disturbance at the Remington Apartments in the southeast of the city.

www.cpr.org/…

Will you be surprised to learn that Jeffrey Melvin Jr. wasn’t even at the apartment during the actual altercation the police who killed him in 2018 were investigating? He arrived 18 minutes later, as officers were checking for warrants on the occupants and searching for evidence of other crimes.

“No amount of money will bring my son back home to us,” Melvin’s father, Jeffrey Melvin Sr., said in a statement. “But,I am glad that Colorado Springs finally came to the table and agreed to settle the case and recognize the tragedy they inflicted on our family.”

Body camera footage from the encounter shows Melvin appearing surprised and confused by the presence of the officers and trying to lock himself in the apartment. Officer Patterson ordered Melvin to turn around and put his arms behind his back. Melvin resisted, asking “What am I being detained for?”

I’m sure you won’t be at all surprised to learn that the first two — who were released from custody were White — while Jeffrey Melvin, Jr. was Black.

Trump’s “tariffs” are poised to set off HUGE economic disruption throughout our economy

Judges Signal Legal Meltdown as Billions in Duties Face Constitutional Challenge

Thursday’s federal appeals court hearing wasn’t just another legal proceeding—it was a constitutional reckoning that could reshape American trade policy and trigger an economic earthquake.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit spent nearly two hours grilling Trump administration lawyers over the president’s use of emergency powers to impose sweeping tariffs. The judges’ skepticism was palpable, with one noting that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) “doesn’t mention tariffs anywhere” and questioning whether Trump’s interpretation would grant presidents “unbounded authority.”

The Constitutional Crisis

Trump’s legal team faced a brutal cross-examination. When Justice Department attorney Brett Shumate argued that trade deficits constituted an emergency justifying tariffs, judges pushed back hard. One judge warned that accepting Trump’s logic could be “the death knell of the Constitution.”

The core issue: Trump used IEEPA—a 1977 law designed for financial sanctions—to impose tariffs for the first time in U.S. history. As attorney Neal Katyal argued for the plaintiffs, this represents “a breathtaking claim to power that no president has asserted in 200 years.”

What’s at Stake

The Court of International Trade already ruled most of Trump’s tariffs illegal in May, issuing a permanent injunction. That decision was paused pending this appeal, but if upheld, the economic consequences would be staggering.

The Refund Nightmare

Here’s where it gets interesting—and potentially catastrophic for the economy. If the courts declare these tariffs illegal, importers who’ve paid billions in duties could demand refunds with interest. This creates a perfect storm:

The Windfall Problem: Companies that raised prices to offset tariff costs aren’t likely to pass refunds back to consumers. They’ll pocket the difference as pure profit while consumers continue paying inflated prices.

Inflationary Whiplash: This scenario could actually worsen inflation. Companies keep higher prices while receiving tariff refunds, creating artificial scarcity in consumer purchasing power alongside corporate windfalls.

Interest Rate Implications: The Federal Reserve would face a nightmare scenario—corporate balance sheets flush with refund cash while consumer spending power remains constrained by elevated prices. This could force the Fed to maintain higher rates longer to prevent asset bubbles.

Market Chaos Ahead

The financial markets already convulsed when Trump first announced these tariffs in April, forcing him to delay implementation. A court ruling invalidating them would trigger another round of volatility as traders scramble to price in the new reality.

Supply chains, already disrupted by months of uncertainty, would face another shock as companies suddenly find their cost structures upended. The small businesses challenging the tariffs have complained about “complete uncertainty” making it impossible to plan operations.

The Political Fallout

Trump has framed this as a “life-or-death moment” for his trade agenda, posting on Truth Social that without tariffs, America would be “DEAD, WITH NO CHANCE OF SURVIVAL OR SUCCESS.” That’s the kind of hyperbole that suggests he knows the legal ground is shaky.

If the courts strike down his signature economic policy, it would represent a massive constitutional rebuke—and potentially crater his negotiating position with trading partners who’ve been scrambling to cut deals before the August 1 deadline.

What Happens Next

The appeals court isn’t expected to rule immediately, but Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield expects a decision “in weeks or months, not days.” That means the August 1 tariff implementation will proceed while legal uncertainty hangs over the entire system.

A Supreme Court battle is virtually guaranteed regardless of how the appeals court rules. But the damage to business confidence and market stability is already done.

The Bottom Line

This isn’t just about trade policy—it’s about the fundamental balance of power in American government. Congress has controlled tariff authority since the Constitution was written. If Trump can unilaterally impose duties by declaring emergencies, what’s to stop future presidents from using the same logic for any economic policy they favor?

The judges seemed to grasp this danger. Their skeptical questioning suggests they understand that constitutional principles matter more than short-term political convenience.

For businesses and consumers, the message is clear: buckle up. Whether Trump wins or loses this legal battle, the economic turbulence is just beginning.

And another Republican pedophile bites the dust (sorry, no, not Trump)

Scott Soucek of Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin, voted for Trump. In a Facebook post last October, he listed two dozen reasons why. One of them was: “I’m voting to fight against human/child trafficking.”  He added that he was not just voting for himself but also “for my children and my grandchildren.” It turns out that these admirable goals were expressed by an evil hypocrite.

On July 24, the police arrested Soucek and accused him of accessing hundreds of child pornography pictures through a file-sharing system. In a criminal complaint, investigators say they’ve connected hundreds of criminal images shared over the last few months to an IP address assigned to the 56-year-old MAGA.

No one should be shocked. Republicans have proved beyond a reasonable doubt that conservatives are past masters of projection. Every accusation is a confession. Everything they slime Democrats with springs from personal experience.

This is not the first time Soucek has been busted with child porn. As cops were gathering information for the current case, they discovered that Door County Internet Crimes Against Children investigators had interviewed Soucek in 2009. On July 15 of that year, they said that Soucek admitted to downloading criminal images.

Fox News 11 reported on the details of that first bust.

According to the criminal complaint, a day after Soucek’s 2009 admission, he brought his computer to the Sturgeon Bay Police Department to be analyzed. There were no images of children engaged in sex acts found; however, evidence of child pornography was found in an index file on the computer.

The complaint states, “It remains unclear as to why the 2009 case was not referred to the Door County District Attorney’s Office for prosecution, given that the Limewire Index file would typically provide evidence of user attribution, supporting the claim Scott Soucek was downloading child pornography. Further, Soucek himself admitted to downloading such material.”

Scott’s wife is also a MAGA. Stephanie Soucek is the chair of the Door County Republican Party. Last year, she represented Wisconsin as a delegate at the Republican National Convention. Reports of Scott’s depravity do not say if she knew of his previous possession of child porn — and chose to stand by her man. Or if she was not informed when the case fell through the cracks.

But credit her this time around. She told FOX 11 she is filing for divorce, and “at this time, my main concern is for my son and I am asking for privacy at this incredibly difficult time.” 

However, that credit is limited. Stephanie may have decided that her husband had crossed a line. But she still lobbied and voted for a man who has confessed to grabbing women by the pussy, to ogling naked and semi-dressed teens, and who has been found liable for sexual assault. It is too late in the game to be ‘shocked’ to discover that MAGA is a festering pile of criminal perverts worshipping at the altar of a degenerate molester.

America needs a moral reset. And it isn’t going to come from the right.  


COMMENT

This scenario is so common that, at this point, I automatically assume the worst about any right-winger who runs around yelling about child porn, child trafficking, or about “protecting” women.

They’re all too often turning out to be predators projecting their own violent tendencies.

Child pornography, pedophilia, and sex trafficking all perfectly OK with MAGA. But not drag story telling and books about LGBTQ. Oh no, can’t have that. Won’t someone think of the children??

 

Eric Hofer nailed it . . . in 1951

The True Believer’s Playbook: How Trump’s Movement Mirrors Classic Cult Psychology

Eric Hoffer’s 1951 masterpiece The True Believer reads like a prophecy written 70 years too early. The longshoreman-philosopher dissected mass movements with surgical precision, identifying the psychological patterns that drive people to surrender their individuality for a cause.

Today, his insights feel uncomfortably relevant.

 

Believer.png

 

The Frustrated Masses

Hoffer argued that mass movements recruit from the ranks of the frustrated—people who feel their individual lives are “spoiled or wasted.” Sound familiar?

Trump’s base isn’t primarily the destitute. It’s middle-class Americans who feel left behind by economic change, cultural shifts, and technological disruption. They’re not starving; they’re frustrated. Their America—the one where a high school diploma guaranteed middle-class stability—has vanished.

“The frustrated follow a leader less because of their faith that he is leading them to a promised land than because of their immediate feeling that he is leading them away from their unwanted selves.”

The MAGA hat becomes more than merchandise. It’s an escape hatch from personal disappointment into collective purpose.

The Holy Cause

Every mass movement needs a sacred mission that transcends individual concerns. For Trump supporters, it’s not just politics—it’s salvation.

“Make America Great Again” functions as what Hoffer called a “holy cause.” It’s deliberately vague enough to mean everything to everyone while specific enough to exclude the “unworthy.” The cause becomes more important than facts, more sacred than truth.

Watch how Trump rallies operate. They’re not policy discussions; they’re revival meetings. The crowd doesn’t come to learn—they come to believe.

The Infallible Leader

“The leader of a mass movement practically never wins anything by means of argument.”

Trump’s relationship with his base transcends normal political accountability. When he contradicts himself, supporters don’t see inconsistency—they see strategic brilliance. When he’s caught in obvious lies, it becomes evidence of media persecution.

This isn’t stupidity. It’s the psychology Hoffer identified: true believers need an infallible leader because admitting fallibility threatens the entire belief system that gives their lives meaning.

The Enemy Within and Without

Mass movements require enemies. Not just opponents—enemies. Hoffer noted that hatred is often more unifying than love of the cause itself.

Trump’s genius lies in providing an endless supply of villains: the media, the deep state, RINOs, antifa, immigrants, liberals, scientists, judges who rule against him. The enemy list expands and contracts as needed, but it never disappears.

“Hatred is the most accessible and comprehensive of all the unifying agents.”

When you’re fighting existential evil, normal rules don’t apply. Lying becomes strategy. Violence becomes defense. Democracy becomes expendable.

The Substitute for Individual Responsibility

Perhaps Hoffer’s most chilling insight: mass movements attract people who want to escape the burden of individual choice and responsibility.

“A man is likely to mind his own business when it is worth minding. When it is not, he takes his mind off his own meaningless affairs by minding other people’s business.”

Trump supporters don’t just support policies—they’ve outsourced their moral reasoning to the movement. If Trump says it, it’s true. If the movement does it, it’s justified. Individual conscience becomes collective identity.

The Immunity to Evidence

Hoffer predicted that true believers would become immune to contradictory evidence. Facts don’t persuade; they threaten.

We see this daily. Election fraud claims persist despite 60+ failed lawsuits. Vaccine conspiracies flourish despite overwhelming medical evidence. Climate denial continues despite observable reality.

“The fact seems to be that, like the ideal man of the totalitarian state, the true believer, no matter how much he preaches the will of God, the voice of history, the will of the people, or the dictates of science, is actually driven by an inner voice that whispers: ‘You are not wanted and there is no place for you in this world.'”

The Warning Signs

Hoffer wasn’t writing about Trump—he was writing about human nature. The patterns he identified appear across cultures and centuries because they tap into fundamental psychological needs.

The danger isn’t that Trump supporters are uniquely gullible. It’s that any of us can fall into these patterns when we’re frustrated enough, scared enough, or desperate enough for meaning.

Democracy depends on citizens who think for themselves, question authority, and accept uncomfortable truths. Mass movements offer the opposite: certainty, belonging, and the comfort of surrendering individual judgment.


The choice isn’t between left and right—it’s between thinking and believing, between democracy and mass movement psychology.

Hoffer saw it coming 70 years ago. The question is whether we’re wise enough to see it now.

Source: “The True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements” by Eric Hoffer (1951).

“Conservatives,” “MAGAts,” “Republicans” — call them what you will, they are selfish people concerned only about themselves

For once, a conservative is being honest about his hatred for the government and support for its destruction—so long as it doesn’t impact him.

“There are government programs that I’d like to see discontinued or cut back, especially those that don’t affect me,” but don’t touch the programs he personally depends on: “But the ones like the Postal Service, yes, we count on them,” Rick Wallace, a retired firefighter in rural Nebraska, told the Nebraska Examiner.

Of course they do. He lives in the kind of place where, if efficiency or cost savings become the standard, he’s completely screwed.

Wallace’s local mail carrier, Roger McDonald, drives nearly 150 miles every day to hit 334 delivery points. That kind of route bleeds money, and the long distance and sparse population density are part of why the U.S. Postal Service experiences annual losses. It’s also exactly the kind of thing that would vanish under President Donald Trump’s proposed privatization scheme, where unprofitable routes would inevitably be slashed, regardless of who’s left behind.

Postal carrier Josiah Morse steps carefully on a snowy sidewalk, Wednesday, Feb. 3, 2021, in Portland, Maine. The U.S. Postal Service's stretch of challenges didn't end with the November general election and tens of millions of mail-in votes. The pandemic-depleted workforce fell further into a hole during the holiday rush, leading to long hours and a mountain of delayed mail.  (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
A U.S. Postal Service carrier delivers mail in Portland, Maine.

But the government isn’t supposed to be profitable. It’s supposed to serve the common good, even when that good is a tiny outpost in the middle of nowhere.

Liberals have long understood that. We’ve been fine subsidizing rural America—its roads, its phone lines, its mail service, and its hospitals—because that’s what a shared society does.

But in return, rural conservatives have demonized the very government that sustains their communities. Worse, they’ve vilified the people—us—who’ve supported those subsidies. And now they admit that they only want to fund what affects them.

Well, rural broadband doesn’t affect me. I have fast internet—screw everyone else. The expensive rural postal network? Doesn’t affect me, why should I pay for it? All that costly telephone infrastructure? Let it rot. The Department of Agriculture? I’m not a farmer, cut it all. Medicaid funding for rural hospitals? I’ve got 5 hospitals within 15 minutes. Rural road maintenance? Let them crumble. Black lung benefits for coal miners? Sucks to be them. Meth epidemic in rural towns? Let them bootstrap their way out. None of it affects me, right?

It’s fucking gross, isn’t it?

That’s the difference between the right and left. Conservatives get off on the suffering of people who aren’t like them—that’s why they voted for Trump. But liberals? We’d be horrified if someone earnestly made the argument I just laid out. We believe in a basic social obligation to each other—even when it costs us something. Especially when it costs us something.

Wallace doesn’t give a damn about programs that don’t directly benefit him. But we’re supposed to spend whatever it takes to keep his mail coming 6 days a week? That’s not how this works.

The social contract isn’t a vending machine for personal convenience; it’s a mutual agreement that binds a nation of people together, one that says we all pitch in so that no one—no matter where they live—falls through the cracks. It’s a recognition that the government is the tool we use to express collective values, not individual preferences.

When conservatives start picking and choosing what parts of society are worth funding based solely on their own needs, they’re not just being selfish. They’re breaking the very foundation that holds this country together.

DO NOT fall for this . . . it’s a scam all the way

July 31 (Reuters) – Hours after the high-profile launch of Trump Mobile, a new Trump-branded mobile service provider, in June, callers to the company’s customer support line were greeted with, “Omega Auto Care, how can I help you?”

Two calls placed by Reuters that day to the mobile service’s helpline rang to the Missouri-based auto-warranty company, which is part of Ensurety Ventures, a St. Louis, Missouri firm led by entrepreneur Pat O’Brien, who was introduced by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. on June 16 as a member of the launch team providing “customer support and device protection” for Trump Mobile.

Today, calls to the support line are answered by people who identify themselves as Trump Mobile support staff, but the first-day confusion speaks to the dizzying speed with which the Trump family has scrambled to set up the businesses. In addition to Trump Mobile, the family has established several ventures since President Donald Trump was elected to a second term in November.

These include 12 new overseas development deals, a Trump-branded bible, a crypto trading platform World Liberty Financial – which has netted the president’s family about $500 million since launch – a $TRUMP meme coin, and a stablecoin USD1. Trump Mobile is what’s known as a mobile virtual network operator, or MVNO, which has grown in popularity in recent years as various celebrities and causes leverage their cultural clout to launch branded wireless ventures.

Read more: https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-mobile-wants-sell-you-telehealth-car-care-insurance-2025-07-31/


DO NOT FALL FOR ANY OF THIS.  STAY AWAY FROM IT.

EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THESE VENTURES IS A SCAM.