Trumpology
They will be teaching courses about Trump the same way they study Andrew Jackson and Teddy Roosevelt.
Just as their contemporary critics devalued and even reviled those former presidents and time proved them insightful and visionary leaders (Jackson asserted federal authority during the Nullification Crisis, paid off the national debt, expanded voting rights for the common man. Roosevelt set aside 250 million acres for conservation, created five national parks, secured the route and began construction of the Panama Canal, mediated the end of the Russo-Japanese War) objectively written history, will treat Trump the same way.
Trump and his love of gold and white interiors, his Diet Cokes, his golf dad pants, red caps, lateral dance (done with raised fists), has been one of the most consequential presidents in American history.
He seized power from the open borderers, climateers, self-dealing NGOs and set America on the path to reclaiming its role as world leader. At the same time, he encouraged other nations to share his ideas and plans for peace and prosperity and, through strategic alliances, felled one despotic regime after regime.
He did all this after years of Democrat-led impeachments and weaponization of federal government agencies which led to his home being raided, being civilly sued, then criminally charged, (typical of Trump he used his mugshot as a campaign fundraising tool, replicating it on mugs and the like).
He was mocked by mainstream media, banned from Twitter. His solution? He termed them “Fake News”, and created his own social media platform. His supporter eventually purchased Twitter, renaming it X.com.
And his political enemies? They have, by welcoming the unhinged into their party, provided for their own extinction.
Someday, it will be acknowledged that this nation was headed towards the proverbial cliff, both economically and in terms of foreign and domestic policies and the only thing that stopped the catastrophe was a man whose values never changed from those of a descendant of immigrants who held the American dream dear.
All the while, his would-be destroyers keep scratching their heads, wondering “How does he do it? He keeps bobbing up again and again like a cork.”
Here is part of Trump’s secret.
He has a loving family. They are his support system.
He is a hard worker, experienced great success at an early age in a field (construction) which required personal interaction and negotiation with different interests (is there anything more complex than dealing with governments, unions, banks?). These qualities gave him the ability to observe and learn how to incorporate the demands of different parties into his proposals. He is an esthete. He likes beautiful things and likes to share them with others. (He talks about different grades of marble like an art lover describing a painting.) He is incredibly funny and quick on his feet. He is disarming, charismatic. He is lucky.
Andrew Jackson, dour and unpopular saw a strong federal government as a means of safeguarding America’s future. Teddy Roosevelt was described by his daughter, Alice Roosevelt Longworth as follows. “My father always wants to be the corpse at every funeral the bride at every wedding, the baby at every christening” (Who does that remind you of?) gave America a blueprint for asserting its role as a world power
When Trump leaves office in three years, he will have righted America and set it back on its axis.
Yes, he is that big.
In the meantime, the illuminati in Minneapolis are crowing that they forced Trump to withdraw ICE from the city.
They have no idea what hit them.
