Excerpt:
Let’s be real something’s going on with Donald Trump, and people need to stop pretending it’s not. We can all see the decline, the strange behavior, and the reckless decisions. Yet every time he does something off the wall, people rush to blame someone else instead of holding him accountable. At this point, it’s not just bad advice — it’s bad judgment.


Posted by Leah
There’s been a lot of talk lately about Donald Trump’s health — and honestly, I think it’s long overdue. People keep dancing around the issue, but anyone paying attention can see that something isn’t right. His behavior, his words, even his energy — it’s all different. He’s not the same Trump that bulldozed his way into the White House years ago. He looks tired, lost at times, and like he’s running off fumes.
Now, I know his supporters hate to hear this, but we have to face reality. Maybe Trump really isn’t working with a full deck anymore. Maybe this isn’t about “bad advisors” or “fake news” or “deep state manipulation.” Maybe it’s simply that the man is declining — mentally, emotionally, and possibly even physically.
Recently, Marjorie Taylor Greene went on Tucker Carlson and said she believes Trump is being surrounded by the wrong people — that he’s getting “bad advice” from those who don’t have his best interests at heart. But here’s the thing: when do we stop blaming everyone else for Trump’s own decisions? When do we admit that he’s an adult making his own choices — and that those choices are not good ones?
It’s almost like every time Trump makes a mistake, people scramble to point fingers anywhere but at him. “It was his advisors.” “It was the media twisting his words.” “It was a setup.” Come on now. At what point do we call it what it is — poor leadership and a serious lack of mental clarity?
And I’m not saying this from a place of hate. I’m saying it because I’m genuinely concerned. This man wants to run the country again, but he can barely get through a press conference without saying something bizarre or contradictory. He’s mixing up facts, repeating himself, lashing out for no reason, and sometimes just rambling like he’s lost his train of thought. That’s not confidence — that’s confusion.
What’s even worse is how his base refuses to see it. They’ll defend anything he says or does, no matter how off-the-wall it sounds. I’ve watched him contradict himself in the same sentence, and instead of admitting he might be slipping, they twist it to make it seem like some kind of genius strategy. It’s not strategy. It’s decline — plain and simple.
Look, people were quick to drag Joe Biden for every stumble, every moment of forgetfulness, every slurred word. And yes, Biden has had his moments too. But let’s not act like Trump is doing much better. If anything, he’s showing the same signs — maybe even worse. There are times where he’s talking about things that don’t even make sense, going off script, making decisions that feel impulsive and chaotic. Maybe it’s age, maybe it’s stress, or maybe it’s the fact that he’s been surrounded by yes-men for so long that he’s lost touch with reality. But one thing’s for sure something isn’t right. He’s acting irrationally, speaking erratically, and making choices that seem more self-serving than ever before.
What really gets me is how people like Marjorie Taylor Greene, who are supposed to be close to him, won’t just say it outright that maybe the man is not mentally fit to handle the kind of power he’s chasing. Instead, they sugarcoat it, saying things like, “He’s being influenced.” Influenced by who? At this point, he is the influence. Let’s be honest. Trump’s not a puppet. He’s not being controlled. He’s doing exactly what he wants to do and that’s the problem. If this is truly his own mind at work, unfiltered and unchecked, then we need to start asking real questions about his mental state.
Because if this is what leadership looks like from him now — scattered, unpredictable, and delusional — then America has every reason to be concerned.





