Three Problems, One Pattern: America Keeps Paying for the Messes Trump Makes America’s biggest crises don’t always come from dramatic moments. Sometimes they come from global shocks no president can control. Sometimes they come from a president who manufactures chaos for political gain. And sometimes they come from something as mundane as a reflecting pool on the National Mall. But when you line up these three stories — Biden’s inherited post‑pandemic gas crisis, Trump’s self‑inflicted 2026 Iran conflict, and the Reflecting Pool fiasco — a single pattern emerges: Some presidents inherit problems. Others create them. And Trump alone is responsible for the messes he creates. This isn’t about ideology. It’s about competence, responsibility, and the difference between governing and performing. 1. Biden’s Post‑Pandemic Gas Crisis vs Trump’s 2026 Iran Conflict **One president inherited a global crisis. The other president created a regional one.** When gas p...
Why America No Longer Believes Its Own Eyes America is living through a crisis deeper than politics, deeper than partisanship, and deeper than any single public figure. It is a crisis of perception — a slow, deliberate erosion of the basic human ability to trust what we see and hear. The rest of the world watches Donald Trump speak, watches how he behaves, watches the chaos that follows him, and they see something obvious. They see a man whose words and actions are exactly what they appear to be: blunt, impulsive, self‑interested, and often destabilizing. They hear what he says and take it literally. They watch what he does and judge it directly. There is no partisan filter, no identity pressure, no media bubble telling them to reinterpret it. But here at home, tens of millions of Americans look at the same footage, hear the same words, and walk away believing something entirely different. They don’t just disagree. They disbelieve their own senses. And that didn’t happen by ...