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Kamala Harris discusses the challenge of responding to Trump's provocations and the importance of not being distracted by his tactics.
There are two things that are true about what President Donald Trump said at Charlie Kirk's memorial service: he did not hate his opponents and wanted the best for them.
The Trump regime's focus on distractions like memes and social media posts detracts from serious issues like healthcare and economic stability.
The rhetoric from Donald Trump is dangerous. He often makes assertions without basis, and his statements can change rapidly. This inconsistency makes it difficult to discern his true intentions.
Chad Wright believes that politics can be a distraction from one's spiritual journey and relationship with God.
Attention is all they need, as it were. The battle here is that human attention is finite.
One of the questions I have, just listen to the whole story and follow. And then at the end, if you're on the right or you voted for Trump, tell me how this isn't hypocrisy. Because I don't see how it couldn't be hypocrisy in any other way. I mean, it has to be. So I'm curious whether folks will acknowledge it.
I think it would be the ultimate troll of the establishment and the elites for Trump to get it. As in, they would have to just sit there and purse their lips and grit their teeth and go, I cannot believe this son of a guy. And I think that Trump wants it for that reason. It's just going to burn. It's going to burn all the right people.
Donald Trump views himself as an elected monarch, finding the legislature to be a nuisance that should simply comply with his wishes.
Trump's a very ego-driven guy, and I respect that. I mean, you can't be this super alpha male who's the leader of the free world, gets shot and doesn't even get phased by it. I mean, you can't be that guy unless you've got a pretty superhuman sense of self.