This is how President Donald J Trump sees himself. Personally, I believe it is grounds for invoking the 25th amendment. I would be interested in your view.
âŚyou canât think of any better reasons than that one?
Is that an actual person he is apparently putting light on? Who is it?
I believe itâs Paul Newman. Only time will tell!
This move is a great strategy because the mere suggestion that the Don is a religious savior⌠even in a piece of ridiculous art⌠is enough to subconsciously influence a good three-quarters of his voters to stay with him, trust him, etc.
To a leftist, itâs absurd, but to a conservative, itâs sensational, deeply philosophical, maybe even an omen.
He likely got the idea from his PR aids or whatever. The propaganda masters.
I understand he has taken the post down. However, as you say, job done.
Oh yeah. You look at that image for even a second and the package is delivered like a mental Trojan horse.
You got an IQ lower than 90, this is the fucking end of days and the Don is gonna handle shit.
You know there are Christians on the left and they think itâs the âend of daysâ (maybe not in those words) too (or that you should always be ready for & expectant of that possibility), but that heâs a good candidate for the antichrist. âŚbut they are pretty lax on some pretty important things⌠so I think everyone needs to take a pause for a deep dive inward.
William Lane Craig tell you this?
He seems to have women salivating in his âlecturesâ. LOL
Enlighten me.
And to add to my previous statements. It would be better if the world did what they call in my line of business âplanned ignoringâ when he does shit like this (including dissing the pope, and I ainât even Catholic). What a friggin moron.
from his own mouth:
Iâm âlike, deadâ rn.
Reposted in
We watchâŚ
FFS Ichthus77
âWe watch the collapse of late stage capitalism in real timeâ
If thatâs a thread, I probably have it hidden because âŚI donât see it.
Keep watchin, watcher watchers.
Youâre right, there are many other reasons, but this shows how deranged the man is and its getting worse by the minute.
You mean that really? Surely the conservative would regard it as blasphemous rather than philosophical. I think that anyone who has worked in the psychiatry even a short time sees it as an example of a deterioration of his grasp on reality. He is becoming schizophrenic, alongside his sociopathic and psychopathic degradation.
.
I found it amusing. ![]()
I have also seen people laugh at the antics of people with psychiatric disorders, but normally, we should find it sad, at least, that they are in a state of delusion almost permanently. When it is the most powerful man on earth, it becomes daunting and worrying to wonder what he will do next.
.
You are welcome to your view.. Iâll stick with mine. ![]()
Bob, the most puzzling thing to me is that nobody in his circle/swamp stops him. But that puzzle is solved by this:
Iâve taken this from an article I am writing on another subject:
Whenever we try to build a âbetterâ society, we tend to repeat the same moral and psychological mistakes that undermine our ideals. These archetypal forces, which recur in every social project ranging from utopian movements to modern technocracies, became known in Christianity as the âseven deadly sinsâ. They befall us every time.
- Pride (hubris): The belief that we have finally found the right system, whether ideological, religious or technological. This arrogance blinds societies to their own errors and justifies oppression âfor the greater goodâ. Every utopia begins to crumble when its perfection is taken for granted.
- Greed (Avarice): The desire to accumulate wealth, power or influence turns cooperative ideals into hierarchies of control. Even in collectivist or egalitarian societies, greed mutates into bureaucratic privilege and corruption.
- Lust (desire as domination): More than mere sensuality, this refers to an obsessive drive to possess people, resources or even narratives. It fuels consumer culture and the commodification of intimacy and identity.
- Envy is the corrosive comparison that pervades both capitalist and socialist societies. When fairness is measured by what others have, envy replaces empathy and undermines solidarity.
- Gluttony (Excess and Consumption): A material and psychological hunger without end. It shapes economies that depend on overproduction and overconsumption, devouring the planet in the process.
- Wrath: Outrage that turns into vengeance, often disguised as justice. Revolutions born from righteous anger often end up reproducing the very systems of violence they sought to destroy.
- Sloth (apathy or despair): The temptation to withdraw from moral responsibility and accept that nothing can change. This spiritual inertia allows corrupt systems to persist unchallenged.
The supposedly âsuccessfulâ exploit those of us who are less fortunate through greed, entitlement and the illusion of superiority, breeding resentment, contention and resistance. The result is a world in which inequality is normalised, domination is justified as merit and the moral cost of comfort is quietly displaced onto the vulnerable.
Essentially, the delusion of being superior to others, to nature, or even to existence itself underlies our crises. Believing that a life of ease is an individual right rather than a historically privileged and ecologically expensive exception turns human flourishing into a zero-sum game. Technology can amplify and disguise this assumption by offering efficiency and comfort while masking the extraction and alienation on which it relies. Yet, ultimately, nature has the last word: ecosystems, climate and the limits of finitude cannot be bargained with indefinitely.
When society is plagued by such attributes, you get the feeling that leaders are burdened by a big parasite on their necks, draining the humanity out of them. Their faces reveal their helplessness, and it is only their power that prevents people from laughing at them. They are weak, but have armies or thugs at their disposal.
Really, man. Oy vey.

