This article from The Atlantic paints a grim picture of Donald Trump's second term as president, characterizing it as a period marked by erratic behavior, incompetence, and escalating authoritarian tendencies. The author describes Trump as "America's Mad King," highlighting numerous examples of his administration's disastrous decisions and actions.
These examples illustrate a pattern of malicious incompetence, highlighting an administration seemingly incapable of effectively governing.
The author suggests that Trump's actions stem from a vindictive narcissistic personality, prone to rage and aggression when confronted with setbacks or criticism. They warn of a potential "narcissistic collapse," escalating the already unstable situation further.
The article notes growing public dissatisfaction and resistance, evidenced by election results, mass protests, and declining public opinion polls. However, the author also highlights the unwavering support of the MAGA movement, creating an uncertain future.
The conclusion emphasizes the gravity of the situation, stressing that America's strong institutions may be able to withstand this crisis but at a significant cost. It concludes by highlighting the role of the 77,302,580 voters who contributed to this predicament.
Last Monday, Donald Trump, seeking to fortify public support for his massive, across-the-board tariffs, posted: “The United States has a chance to do something that should have been done DECADES AGO. Don’t be Weak! Don’t be Stupid! Don’t be a PANICAN (A new party based on Weak and Stupid people!).”
By Wednesday, Trump had caved. His witless, incoherent, and incompetently executed policies—his administration had imposed tariffs on an Australian territory that is home to no people but to many penguins—created a financial panic that risked devastating the American economy and triggering a global recession. Trillions of dollars of stock-market value evaporated in a matter of days.
A man who has spent most of his life, and much of his presidency, gaslighting the public ran into the brick wall of reality. Misinformation, disinformation, bullying, and nasty social-media posts proved ineffective. Stock and bond markets weren’t intimidated by the threats of the aging president.
Trump fought reality, and reality won.
WE’RE FEWER THAN 90 DAYS into Trump’s second term; many more collisions between the president and the real world will come. So what can we expect, based on what we’ve witnessed?
Read: I should have seen this coming
We won’t see qualities from Trump that we haven’t seen before, but we will see them in a more extreme version. He is more impulsive, more vindictive, and more anarchic than in his first term. “He’s at the peak of just not giving a f--- anymore,” a White House official familiar with Trump’s thinking told The Washington Post. “Bad news stories? Doesn’t give a f---. He’s going to do what he’s going to do.”
Trump is America’s Mad King.
Compounding the problem is that the president has surrounded himself with men and women who are utterly loyal to him, unwilling to challenge him, and certainly unable to contain him. (The praise lavished on Trump by the members of his Cabinet during their meetings would make even Kim Jong Un blush.)
On top of that, this is an administration filled with third-rate intellects, conspiracy theorists, and misfits. They aren’t qualified to manage Oak Hill, Alabama, or Monowi, Nebraska, let alone the federal government. Their combination of maliciousness and incompetence has produced enormous, dangerous, and in some cases lethal disruptions. Some examples:
Boasberg said he would begin contempt proceedings, unless the administration found a way to give the men a way to exercise “their right to challenge their removability through a habeas proceeding,” even if they were to remain in El Salvador while they did so.
“The Constitution does not tolerate willful disobedience of judicial orders—especially by officials of a coordinate branch who have sworn an oath to uphold it,” Boasberg wrote. Allowing political leaders to defy court judgments would make “a solemn mockery” of “the constitution itself.”
This kind of malicious incompetence is evident in almost everything Trump and those in his administration touch. You can be sure, too, that there are many more similar acts of ineptitude we don’t yet know about. And Trump still has more than 1,350 days to go.
THE SECOND TRUMP PRESIDENCY, more even than the first, will be defined by Trump’s authoritarian desires and his ineptitude. It might be that the latter impedes the former; ruthless efficiency can help in the dismantling of democratic institutions, but having an administration filled with freaks and fools can impede that effort and catalyze public disaffection and even resistance.
We’re already seeing that reflected in a handful of election results, in mass protests across the country, in focus groups and public-opinion polls, and in the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index, which provides a snapshot of the U.S. economy’s health. Early this month, we learned that index had hit its second-lowest reading since 1952, dragged down by fears of higher prices and unemployment. Expectations for inflation hit the highest level in 44 years.
But here’s the danger: Vindictive narcissists like Trump hold grudges and harbor resentments, blame everything on someone else, and weaponize information. They have a mean, even sadistic, side, belittling others to feel better about themselves and using, abusing, and discarding people.
Read: How American can avoid becoming Russia
Empathy is, to them, an alien quality. When they begin to feel like the walls are closing in; when their external validation, sense of superiority, and grandiosity are threatened; when they experience setbacks or humiliating public failures, they can approach what is known as “narcissistic collapse.” This can lead to intense feelings of rage and acts of aggression, to agitation, and to increased impulsivity and distortions of reality.
So as the second Trump administration careens from one failure to another, as unhappiness with the president rises, as events and reality refuse to bend to his will, he will become darker and crueler and more unstable. His advisers, all of whom are afraid to stand up to him, will enable him. And the MAGA movement, more cult-like than ever, more walled off from reality than ever, will stay with him until the end.
Leaders who have been worse—more ruthless and more skilled than Trump—have been stopped, and few nations have been blessed by a system of government as wise and resilient as what our Founders created. Many of our institutions are stronger than those in most other nations. So Trump is hardly invincible, and many millions of Americans will not give up without a fight. My hope and expectation is that they will prevail, that America will prevail, but it will come at quite a cost. It didn’t have to be this way. There are 77,302,580 co-authors of this catastrophe. They have left a crimson stain on this Republic.
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