Website owner: James Miller
Donald Trump
I will dedicate this webpage to the topic of Donald Trump.
My opinion of Donald Trump is not a very flattering one. On a scale of 1 to 10 I would give him a 0. I think there is nothing at all about him that I like. I don’t have a good opinion of his character, his mind, his judgment, his ideas, or his conduct. I am too polite to say more than that. And even though I am a very conservative person my opinion of conservatives in general in this country has dropped from about an 8 to a 1 — just because I cannot have a good opinion of anyone who would support a person like Donald Trump. Just defending someone like him says worlds about a person. My opinion of Republican congressmen? I give them all a 1. They have lost any respect I might have had for them. Silence in all of Trump’s foolishness is consent. It reflects badly on both their character and their mind. In the past I have supported some conservative organizations financially. I have been shocked to see how they back Trump up in all he says and does. They won’t get more money from me. Noone has a mind of his own. That tells me worlds about people in general. People don’t think for themselves. They just follow. On the other hand, I definitely would not vote for a Democrat. So from now on I guess I will simply not be voting.
Trump LOSES IT On Tucker, Megyn, Candace and Alex
Tucker on Trump’s Desecration of Easter and a Warning to Christians Everywhere
Fareed Zakaria on the Moral Cost of Trump’s War | The Ezra Klein Show
Trump shares new AI image of Jesus embracing him amid Pope feud
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April 7, 2026, President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that "a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again" in reference to an 8 p.m. ET deadline for Iran to reach a deal regarding the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) on Wednesday went after the Republican response to President Trump’s recent post threatening Iran in which he stated that “a whole civilization will die.”
“It says something about just how bankrupt the Republican Party has become under Donald Trump, that none of them said a peep. And so, the reality is, the only thing, and the only thing they care about, is not the fact that the president of the United States threatened massive war crimes and genocide, the only thing they care about is their own elections,” Van Hollen told MS NOW’s Ali Velshi on “All In.”
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Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) said Thursday that President Trump’s threat earlier this week that Iran’s “whole civilization will die” was “absolute madness.”
CNN’s Pamela Brown and Wolf Blitzer spoke with Greene and asked why the president’s threat on Tuesday was “the final straw for” her.
“Because it’s absolute madness,” she said. “How can any person that is mentally stable call for an entire civilization of people to be murdered, to be wiped out, to never come back again? That’s what the president called for, and that shows that there’s serious instability in his thinking that he would not only say that in a private room, perhaps with his advisers, but actually go to his megaphone, his Truth Social, and post that for the entire country and the entire world?”
Trump on Tuesday warned on Truth Social that if Iran did not send a peace deal proposal and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a “whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again.”
“I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will,” he continued in the post. “However, now that we have Complete and Total Regime Change, where different, smarter, and less radicalized minds prevail, maybe something revolutionarily wonderful can happen, WHO KNOWS?”
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UNBELIEVABLE! Trump & Jeffrey Sachs’ Heated Fight Spirals Out Of Control | US News | World News
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The following is by William S. Becker, opinion contributor, published in The Hill on 4/20/26.
Donald Trump’s presidency is a morality lesson. He is a living example of what happens when a man is given power that far exceeds his character. It is time for America to acknowledge the lesson and move on.
Trump is engaged in a constant struggle for respect, seeking affirmation to maintain his facade of respectability. In reality, he seems to have starved his soul in pursuit of material wealth, power and fame.
This facade is as unstable as a Jenga tower. Trump fears that someone will pull out the piece that makes it topple, so he relentlessly punishes anyone who might try.
The real estate mogul constructs monuments not to great Americans or moments in history, but to himself. They include resorts, hotels, golf clubs and skyscrapers. Now, they include a Trump ballroom at the White House and a prospective Arc de Trump imposing itself on the Lincoln Memorial. His portrait hangs throughout the capital like Caesar’s adorned Rome. Soon, Trump’s likeness will appear on U.S. currency and commemorative gold coins.
He doesn’t understand, or perhaps will not admit, that he is memorializing a decade in which he caused decay, division, degradation, degeneration and disgrace. Once Trump leaves office, the plaques on his monuments will explain how the government failed America and nearly allowed the world’s continuing democracy to slip away.
Trump has imposed his will on the nation’s cultural institutions, dictating what the Smithsonian museums should exhibit and what the renamed Donald J. Trump-John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts should host. Once he is gone, a permanent exhibit at the National Museum of American History should teach schoolchildren how easily tyrants can mislead the people and fill the void left by a passive citizenry.
The Trump decade should be remembered as a period when a president commandeered every news cycle by creating fresh controversies. As his power crumbled, he escalated his outrages so that each one distracted national attention from the last.
Many theorize that he even launched a war to divert persistent attention from the most sordid scandal in American history: the Epstein affair. His badly conceived attack has so far cost the lives of 15 U.S. soldiers, wounded 400, and killed or injured nearly 30,000 Iranians while pushing the world economy to the brink of recession and imposing economic costs on people around the world.
The diversion has worked — at least, for now. Epstein has been pushed off the front pages, even though the Justice Department has unlawfully refused to release 2.5 million pages of evidence.
While two members of Congress have just resigned because of alleged sexual misconduct, Trump has been accused by at least 19 other women of sexual misconduct. He has so far been shielded from accountability in the Epstein scandal by his own Justice Department. But detailed accounts of Trump’s alleged predation are already part of the public record, including in documents filed as part of civil lawsuits.
The stench of scandal has characterized the Trump White House. The president and his Cabinet have repeatedly violated the Constitution, engaged in profitable conflicts of interest, abused his pardon power, deployed the military against the civilian population, ignored citizens’ constitutional rights, withheld public funds from states that didn’t vote for him, and used the threat of legal action and the denial of federal funds to extort private corporations and universities into conformance with his policies.
Trump has turned the U.S. Justice Department into his personal goon squad with specious investigations of his perceived enemies. Now, as they watch Trump’s support slipping among voters, his allies are reportedly working to rig this year’s elections and the presidential election in 2028.
That is the presidency to which Trump is building monuments.
Not all of America’s presidents have been paragons of virtue. But they have generally understood that their legacy would not be enshrined in white marble or gold coins, or in awards designed to bribe them. A president’s legacy is defined by deeds. It is enshrined in policies that make America stronger, democracy healthier, life better, justice more equal, and citizens more secure.
The voting public has twice given Trump the opportunity to redeem his legacy. Each time, he has only made it worse. His last chance is to resign now, citing health reasons.
If he doesn’t, then the challenge of redemption will pass to Congress. History will remember its current members more kindly if they do their jobs by removing Trump from office before he does irreparable damage to the country.
William S. Becker is co-editor of and a contributor to “Democracy Unchained: How to Rebuild Government for the People,” and a contributor to Democracy in a Hotter Time, named by the journal Nature as one of 2023’s five best science books. He previously served as a senior official in the Wisconsin Department of Justice. He is currently executive director of the Presidential Climate Action Project.
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The author of the above is most likely a liberal and probably has all kinds of outlooks and ideas I wouldn’t agree with but I think he has stated a lot of obvious truths about Donald Trump. There is no one like an enemy for seeing all of one’s faults.
The things that Donald Trump says and does give a very clear picture into his mind. He wants Greenland. Getting it is a problem when it belongs to someone else. So how do you deal with a problem like that? You just take it.
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10 Apr 2026
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