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 The Lying Mouth That Roared — And Why His Lies Hurt the People Who Trust Him Most.


America has always been loud. That’s not a flaw; it’s a feature. Loudness is how ordinary Americans have always made themselves heard in a country where power tends to gather at the top. We cheer loudly, argue loudly, pray loudly, and fight loudly. Loudness built unions, won wars, and kept politicians honest. But there’s a difference between being loud because you’re telling the truth and being loud. After all, you’re covering something up. And that difference matters — especially when the person doing the roaring is a president.
Donald Trump has always been loud. That’s not new. What’s new is how often the roar replaces the truth, and how often the people who end up paying the price for that roar are the very people who trust him most. This isn’t about whether someone likes Trump or hates him. It’s about whether the things he says help people or hurts them. And when you look closely, a pattern emerges: the lies don’t fall on him. They fall on regular Americans.

The “No New Wars” Lie! Trump loves to say he “kept us out of new wars.” It’s one of his favorite lines. But the record tells a different story. He launched more airstrikes in his first term than Obama did. He bombed Syria twice. He sent missiles into Iraq. And when he ordered the assassination of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani, the United States and Iran came closer to war than at any point in decades. When Iran retaliated by firing missiles at U.S. troops in Iraq, Trump went on television and said, “No Americans were hurt.” That was false. More than 100 U.S. service members suffered traumatic brain injuries. Real injuries. Real families. Real consequences. Trump didn’t pay for that lie. Military families did.

The Iran Lies — A Whole Pattern, not a One‑Off! Trump’s Iran narrative wasn’t built on one lie. It was built on a stack of them — each one designed to make him look strong while leaving regular Americans to deal with the fallout.

Lie #1: “Iran was planning imminent attacks.” Trump said he killed Soleimani to stop “imminent attacks” on U.S. embassies. But: His own Defense Secretary said he never saw evidence of imminent attacks. Members of Congress from both parties said the classified briefing did not show imminence. No intelligence agency publicly confirmed Trump’s claim. If the threat wasn’t imminent, then the strike wasn’t defensive — it was discretionary. And discretionary wars are paid for by ordinary Americans, not the people who make the decisions.

Lie #2: “Iran was building nuclear weapons and missiles that threatened the U.S.” Trump repeatedly claimed Iran was developing nuclear weapons and missiles capable of striking the United States. But arms‑control experts said there was no evidence Iran was close to such capabilities. Inspectors found no evidence that Iran had rebuilt nuclear enrichment facilities that Trump claimed they were restoring. This lie matters because it creates fear without facts — and fear is how leaders justify actions that put regular people at risk.

Lie #3: “No Americans were harmed.” After Iran’s missile strike on U.S. troops, Trump said: “No Americans were harmed.” That was false. More than 100 service members suffered traumatic brain injuries. When a president lies about American casualties, he’s not protecting the troops — he’s protecting himself.

Lie #4: “I had total authority to strike Iran.” Trump claimed he had “total authority” to launch military action without Congress. But: The Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war. The War Powers Act limits unilateral action. Even Republican senators pushed back. This matters because it tells his supporters that checks and balances don’t apply to him — that he can act alone without oversight. But when a president acts alone, the people who bear the risks are the public, not the president.

Lie #5: “A former president approved my strike.” Trump claimed a former U.S. president told him he was right to attack Iran. There is no evidence that this happened. No former president has said so. No reporting supports it. This lie matters because it’s designed to give Trump cover, he doesn’t actually have — and to make his supporters believe he’s acting with the blessing of past leaders.

Lie #6: “Iran backed down because they fear me.” Trump often says Iran “didn’t dare” challenge him. But Iran attacked U.S. troops. Iran-backed militias attacked U.S. bases. Iran seized tankers. Iran expanded its nuclear program. This lie matters because it tells his supporters that Trump’s approach made America safer — when the evidence shows the opposite. When a president lies about deterrence, he’s not protecting the country.
He’s protecting his image.

The Election Lies. Trump told his supporters he won the 2020 election “by a landslide.” He told them the system was rigged. He told them to “fight like hell.” But: More than 60 courts — including Trump‑appointed judges — rejected his claims. His own DHS and DOJ officials said there was no widespread fraud. His own lawyers admitted in court that they had no evidence. Who paid the price for believing him? Not Trump. His supporters did — with prison sentences, lost jobs, broken families, and futures permanently altered. Trump walked away. They didn’t.

The COVID Lies. Trump said COVID would “disappear like a miracle.” He said it was “under control.” He said it was “like the flu.” Meanwhile, hospitals are filled, and businesses closed, families lost loved ones, rural counties — overwhelmingly MAGA — were hit the hardest. Trump didn’t lose his job. Millions of Americans did. Trump didn’t lose a family member.  Millions of Americans did. The lie didn’t hurt him. It hurt regular people.

The Pattern Is Clear. Trump’s lies don’t hurt the media. They don’t hurt Democrats. They don’t hurt the elites. They hurt the people who trust him. They hurt the people who take him seriously. They hurt the people who believe he’s fighting for them. They hurt the people who think loyalty goes both ways. Because here’s the truth, Trump’s roar is always about Trump. When he says he’ll “take Cuba,” he’s not talking about policy. He’s performing dominance. When he says a former president approved his Iran strike, he’s not telling the truth. He’s trying to borrow credibility he doesn’t have. When he says he won an election he lost, he’s not defending democracy. He’s defending his ego. And when the consequences come — when the bills arrive, when the courts rule, when the truth surfaces — he’s nowhere to be found. The roar fades. The lies evaporate. And the people left holding the consequences are the people who believed him.

MAGA Voters Deserve Better. You can want strong borders. You can want American jobs.
You can want fair trade. You can want a president who puts America first. None of that requires believing lies. A leader who lies to you is not protecting you. He’s using you.
A leader who roars at you is not respecting you. He’s distracting you. A leader who tells you fantasies is not fighting for you. He’s fighting for himself. America doesn’t need a louder liar.
America needs a leader who tells the truth — even when it’s hard, because truth builds.
Lies break. And the people who get hurt first are always the ones who trusted the liar the most.



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