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Donald Trump is asleep on the job

Published 2 months ago
Description

What was supposed to be an event about health care affordability turned into something far more revealing. Trump drifted off on camera, lashed out at reporters, pushed mathematically absurd claims about drug prices, bragged about foreign granite in his America First remodel, and once again showed the country what authoritarian staging looks like when the image of control starts collapsing in real time.

The Breakdown:
Trump used a health care event to stage another visual display of dominance, seated at the center of a carefully arranged group of loyalists whose role was to project power and obedience rather than public service
But the event quickly became a window into deeper instability, with Trump falling asleep on camera multiple times during an Oval Office broadcast while top officials and executives stood behind him
The issue is not mocking an older man for being tired, it is that the most powerful office in the world is being held by someone who governs through impulse, chaos, and visible decline while the White House insists everything is fine
The recurring bruises on Trump's hands and the effort to cover them with makeup matter less on their own than the larger pattern of concealment and denial around his condition
This episode argues that the real authoritarian move is not just the weakness itself, but the insistence that the public must deny what it can plainly see with its own eyes
The event was also filled with dishonest spectacle, including impossible claims that drug prices have been cut by over 100 percent and RFK Jr. repeating fake arithmetic that had already been publicly debunked
Trump defended those absurd numbers anyway, saying there are two ways of calculating, which only reinforced how casually truth gets bent inside his administration
He also veered into vanity projects, bragging about resurfacing the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool and boasting about imported granite outside the Oval Office that turned out to be sourced from Africa and carved in Italy
That exchange exposed what America First really means in practice, not principle or sacrifice, but branding, image, and whatever flatters Trump's ego in the moment
Reporters who tried to press him on the length of the Iran war, rising gas prices, and his own broken timelines were mocked, interrupted, and insulted in the room
Those attacks on the press are part of a larger pattern, not isolated outbursts, and they are happening as media consolidation threatens to put even more of the information landscape into the hands of people aligned with Trump's interests
The Warner and Paramount merger is treated here as a democracy story, not just a business story, because concentrated ownership makes it easier for political pressure, access concerns, and authoritarian influence to reshape what gets covered and what gets buried
This is how press freedom often erodes, not always with direct censorship at first, but through ownership, intimidation, compliance, and shrinking editorial courage
Even so, the script points to signs that Trump's control is weakening, including collapsing approval numbers, increasingly strained performances, and a public image that no longer fully hides the disorder underneath
The message of this episode is that the performance of strength is cracking, the truth is getting harder for them to conceal, and independent journalism matters more than ever as the line between truth and propaganda comes under even greater pressure


More on my daily Substack at: https://heatherdelaneyreese.substack.com/


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