Opinion

Everything Trump is doing makes perfect sense if you understand one simple fact

Everything Donald Trump is doing and will do makes perfect and sudden sense if you understand one simple fact: For him, it’s all a show.

He views the White House as a sound stage, like the set made to look like a boardroom where he performed for NBC on The Apprentice. He sees the people around him as a supporting cast, who can each be easily and quickly replaced (and often are) if they fail to play their roles the way he thinks will work best for the program.

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Gretchen Whitmer just did us all a huge favor

Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer stands, as U.S. President Donald Trump (not pictured) signs executive orders and proclamations, in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 9, 2025.

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There’s a new dress code in Trump’s DC — and it’s straight out of a dictator’s playbook

Trump’s legal serfs: when law firms bow to the Don. Trump is bragging about how he’s forced five more major US law firms to kiss his a-- and give away $940 million in free services to his favorite causes. So far, the rogues gallery of cowardly law firms which have put money above principle includes Kirkland & Ellis, Latham & Watkins, Allen Overy Shearman Sterling, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft, Paul Weiss, Skadden Milbank & Willkie, and Farr & Gallagher. On the other hand, three major firms are suing Trump’s administration for their efforts to intimidate and extort them (my words, not theirs), including Perkins Coie, Jenner & Block, and WilmerHale. And over 1600 attorneys who work for the big firms that have bowed down to Trump’s intimidation have signed a letter demanding they do better.

They wrote: “When we are united, we cannot be intimidated. These tactics only work if the majority does not speak up. Our hope was that our employers, some of the most profitable law firms in the world, would lead the way. That has not yet been the case.” One of the very first things authoritarians do when they seize control of a country — from Hitler in the 1930s to Putin in the early 2000s — is to seize control of the country’s legal system.

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Trump is drinking his own Kool-Aid as evidence of his dementia grows

Trump didn’t just end his ill-conceived tariff drama, he only postponed it. Again. It’s not good news, it’s just delayed news.

Economists know that the best conduit to a healthy economy is stability. Yet the only reliable commodity from the Trump administration to date has been instability. In under three months of Trump’s second term, the chaos has been so relentless that even Fox News propagandists have, at times, fumbled their spin.

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Trump is about to target something far more terrifying than tariffs

When I was a teenager, my dad decided it was a good idea to keep as much cash as possible in the bedroom safe. I don’t remember exactly when this was, but it was probably around 1987. That’s when the stock market crashed so badly that people feared another Great Depression.

My dad didn’t trust banks, because his dad didn’t. Grandpa came of age during the Great Depression. He remembered and feared bank runs and bread lines and not being able to find things, forget about not being able to afford them. He grew up to be the kind of man you don’t see anymore. No one saves jars and scraps of tin foil. In his youth, those were hard to come by. We live in an age of abundance now.

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Trump, dementia and the duty to warn

To ensure that the United States will always be led by a coherent, functioning President, the Twenty-Fifth Amendment provides for the prompt, orderly, and democratic transfer of executive power in the event the president is incapacitated, physically or mentally. Trump’s tariff debacle, where he thrust out his chest, flung economic incoherence at the world, then flip flopped only two days later, was the strongest evidence yet- in a roiling sea of evidence- that he is mentally incapacitated.

Despite inheriting the strongest post-covid economy in the world, Trump keeps insisting that the US economy is broken and in need of saving.He insists global trading partners who sell us more than they buy from us- even countries that are a fraction of our size- are “taking advantage.”

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The sickening secret sauce to Trump's political success

THE ANSWER: Racism.

THE QUESTION: How in the hell did we get here?

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The suffering of white Trump voters isn't going to change a thing

Now that trillions of dollars have vanished as a consequence of the Trump tariffs, I see that some liberals who are sitting on high perches are talking about how the tide is turning against the president. They tell us that even Donald Trump’s voters are changing their minds.

It’s things like this that worry me. It tells me that liberals still operate according to certain articles of faith that are well beyond their expiration dates. It tells me that liberals grossly underestimate the power of corruption, greed, arrogance and stupidity, and grossly overestimate the inherent goodness of the American people.

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'Will not erase us': Trump’s fascism is being met with massive public pushback

If there’s a through line to the first months of Trump 2.0 it’s the president’s penchant for trying to disappear his critics, enemies and the fast-multiplying targets of his disdain.

It’s classic authoritarian behavior.

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Hands up if you're tired of winning

Nick Anderson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.

Trump fiddles while America burns

After markets crashed globally in response to Trump’s tariffs, slipping into bear territory on Monday before wobbling up, down and back up again, the White House issued a tone deaf slapback about Trump’s golf game, saying, “[t]he President won his second round matchup of the Senior Club Championship today in Jupiter, FL, and advances to the Championship Round tomorrow.”

As Americans watch their retirement accounts drop, Trump has spent one-third of his 76 days back in office on the golf course, indicating he couldn’t care less. No one from his administration has faced critical questions about his “Liberation Day” strategy, and it appears Trump used ChatGPT to generate the whole thing.

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'Woke': MAGA retirees shocked from slumber by Trump economy

Nick Anderson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.

Trump’s trash talking costs Las Vegas

Lost in the focus on President Donald Trump’s tariffs is the economic impact his war of words is having on international visitation to Las Vegas. When the President of the United States tells people they are not welcome, could be detained, or even end up in an El Salvadoran prison, they listen and decide to go elsewhere. The result will hit Las Vegas hard with empty hotel rooms, vacant tables at restaurants and empty seats at shows. The President may cause a recession in Las Vegas from his hanging up the “not welcome” sign to the rest of the world.

International tourism is big business in Las Vegas, with over 5 million people estimated to have come last year. No country sends more people to Las Vegas than Canada. Canadians make up 30 percent of Las Vegas’s international travel. With domestic air travel to Harry Reid airport down almost 8% over the first two months of the year, Las Vegas can ill afford a sharp decline in international visitors.

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