When Donald J. Trump starts casting himself as a messiah while threatening bombs in the same breath, even parts of his own base seem to be asking: Is this strategy or spectacle?
Will someone please explain to Donald J. Trump that his middle initial doesn't actually stand for 'Jesus'?
Following the obscenities and blasphemies of his recent rants against Iran and Islam, the increasingly demented president has fractured his own Christian-Nationalist support base by posting an AI-generated picture of himself as their Messiah, healing the sick as warplanes soar overhead, and his followers worship at his feet.
(It has also been pointed out by the kind of people who comment on such things that the sick man being healed or resurrected by Mr. Trump's holy touch bears a passing resemblance to his dead old friend, the convicted child-abuser Jeffrey Epstein, a figure of such ill repute that the president's famously taciturn wife has just broken her habitual silence to announce that he's never been her friend.)
There are those who have supposed that Mr. Trump's frenetic vacillations between violent fits of pique and pious calls for peace have been cunningly calculated to make billions on the global commodities markets, with claims that anonymous individuals have consistently been buying or shorting oil immediately before each of his announcements has sent the price of a barrel either surging or tumbling, depending on which way his latest mood has swung him.
When last May he posted an AI-generated image of himself in the robes of the Pope, Baby Donnie Tantrump provoked the anger of American Catholics, but this latest outrage has also riled some of his most ardent supporters down among the evangelical Protestants of the Bible Belt of the southern United States.
He was trying to troll the Pope – the planet's most prominent American citizen – who had been calling for peace and speaking out against what he called those "discourses of death" that have been drowning out more reasonable voices and against that "delusion of omnipotence that surrounds us and is becoming increasingly unpredictable and aggressive." (more...)






