When Donald Trump began his speech on Tuesday, he did not fully publicize his plans to make his history during the longest televised conference ever. There are many usual Trump Palaver on how windmills “destroy our country” and the changing power of tariffs, which he insists will completely revitalize the U.S. economy. “This will happen like magic,” he swears. “This will happen without a doubt.” At least for Trump 2.0, the standard thing is the president’s top adviser staring at the camera on Trump’s upper.
But in hindsight, the warning sign was there. First, there were seventeen minutes left before someone else could say a word at the meeting, even then, spokesman – Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent managed a “yes, sir” just before Trump resumed his speech. After another 15 minutes, no one said anything substantial, and the president did not call on the cabinet members, but Iris Tao, a reporter eraa far-right news organization is linked to the exiled Chinese opposition movement. “I heard you are very savage in this city,” he said. She did so, recalling a horrible incident in which a man wore a ski mask, hit her in the face with the butt of a gun and thanked the president for his decision to send federal forces to fight crime in Washington. “Thank you for making DC safer now,” Tao said. “For us, for our family, my parents, on behalf of my parents, now my kids are on the road. Thank you so much.” Now, that’s what journalism has experienced in the White House, as Trump’s employees have controlled the former independent news spin and have begun to decide for themselves that news organizations can engage with the president. The Kremlin’s news pool cannot work better.
As for Trump, his performance also seems to be in the Kremlin script. As the meeting extended, I recall the tradition of Vladimir Putin’s annual marathon press conference, in the tradition of Vladimir Putin’s cleanliness and the sneaky West. The history of one of the games Putin created in 2008 is four hours and 40 minutes, so I think Trump still has something to crave. Finally, Tuesday’s cabinet meeting took place over three hours and 17 minutes, and without defeating Putin, it would still be much larger than the “Godfather”, as soon as it was pointed out. (If the audience is actually forced to watch Tuesday’s meeting in full?) Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., the first cabinet member to be called. It wasn’t until nearly two and a half hours to get to the first question in the media.
There is a strong argument for not wasting time. We already know The live president Indulge in his performance; of course, he will be as long as possible. As for the rest, Trump actors are desperate to see his call time and recognition, which is not a revelation. Furthermore, as author Garrett Graff explain. Will another Trump actually rate the words?
Since the event directory is incomplete My last letter to Trump Washington Will include attempts to open fire at the White House Lisa Cookthe governor of the independent Federal Reserve; the new director of Trump in charge of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the resignation of several subsequent senior officials in protest against Kennedy’s anti-vaccine policy; the president threatens to militarize his domestic policing from Washington to other cities run by Democratic parties such as Baltimore and Chicago; the federal takeover of Union Station; a new executive order claiming a ban on the imposition of flags to violate the Supreme Court’s ruling, which ruled that it was constitutionally protected freedom of speech; a purge of senior intelligence officials on Friday contradicted the administration’s propaganda; the president personally demanded the prosecution of his former friend Chris Christie, for saying something he didn’t like on TV. This is part of the list.
Many real existential threats to democracy are evolving during the last holiday that should have been ahead of the surge in labor days, and watching the team of Trump and his “opponent-Norker” seem almost wrong, as retired Army General Ben Hodges incredibly called them.
Nevertheless, dear reader, I look. And, I think, it’s worth every moment.
Trump, like any narcissist who is handed to the microphone by the microphone in front of a worship audience, can’t help but reveal it. One thing this cabinet meeting and other recent appearances suggest is a president whose unchecked rule has never risen publicly as before. “It’s not that I don’t have the right to do anything I want to do,” he explained while detailing his plans to expand the deployment of the troops. “I’m the president of the United States. If I think our country is at risk, and in these cities, I can do it.” As he did a day ago, he also commented on critics who said they caught police like dictators. “Most people say, ‘That’s when you called him a dictator … If he stopped committing crimes, he could be everything he wanted.'” Trump said.
Aside from his almost obvious joy, many finally figure out that they are a world-class strongman, Trump can’t stand what’s behind his acting anti-crime craze in Washington, which is the prospect of winning in next year’s midterm elections. “I think crime will be a big deal,” he said. “And we are the party, the Republicans are the parties that want to stop crime… For the medium term, it will be a big and big theme. I think Republicans will do a good job.”
But, as usual, Trump’s biggest reveal is what he shows to those around him. To the soul of others, he is a mirror, not a flattering mirror. In this category, few people were able to become Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-Deremer on Tuesday, who invited Trump to see his “big and beautiful face”, sitting on a giant Putin-style banner flying outside of his department headquarters. “You are indeed the principal of change for American workers,” she told him. However, agriculture secretary Brooke Rollins provided fierce competition for Trump’s contribution to the history of the Republic. “I do believe we are having a revolution,” she said. “1776 was the first of Abraham Lincoln, the first of the first and the second. This was the third. Donald Trump led the way. We are saving America.”

Health & Wellness Contributor
A wellness enthusiast and certified nutrition advisor, Meera covers everything from healthy living tips to medical breakthroughs. Her articles aim to inform and inspire readers to live better every day.