Webster

The Constitution was made to guard the people against the dangers of good intentions." --American Statesman Daniel Webster (1782-1852)


Wednesday, February 4, 2026

"Has Donald Trump Ever..."

 

I clipped this off Farcebook during the cruise..



Has Donald Trump ever opened extermination camps for entire groups of people?
No.
Has he used the U.S. military to deliberately target innocent civilians?
No.
Has he targeted hostile forces like ISIS and the IRGC?
Yes.
Has he promoted racial hatred?
No.
Did he call for unity—under one flag, regardless of race or religion—at his 2025 inauguration?
Yes.
Has he repeatedly challenged media manipulation and outright falsehoods?
Yes.
Did he help broker peace deals and ceasefires between long-standing adversaries during his time in office?
Yes.
So why the hatred?
Because it was never about what he did.
They hated him from day one.
Every misrepresentation, every exaggeration, every manufactured scandal is recycled and sold as “truth.” Racist. Misogynist. Rapist. Anything will do—as long as it justifies the hatred. The labels matter less than the outcome.
Why do they hate him?
Because without that hatred, they would be forced to confront something far more uncomfortable: themselves.
The truth is this—many are deeply invested in a system that no longer works. A system he challenged, disrupted, and exposed. And people who have built their identities around a broken system will defend it with everything they have. History is full of those who defended their masters while calling themselves virtuous.
To admit that Trump is a disruptor rather than a tyrant would require them to unravel the beliefs, credentials, and moral hierarchies they’ve spent their lives protecting. That kind of reckoning is unbearable. So denial becomes survival.
They don’t hate him for who he is or what he’s done. That’s just the story they tell themselves. They hate him because their egos recognize him as a threat—to their status, their worldview, and the system that validates them.
He holds up a mirror they refuse to look into.
That mirror reflects an unsettling possibility: that the system they trusted is false, that the narratives they defended were hollow, and that the world they were promised was never real.
And when a system collapses, so do the identities built inside it.
Will they ever understand this?
No. The ego doesn’t work that way.
It sneers instead. Not out of strength—but out of fear.
Because it’s always easier to hate the one holding up the mirror than to face the reflection staring back.


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