- United States
- Fla.
- Letter
Trump cannot speak a coherent sentence. Do something about it, Congress.
To: Sen. Moody, Rep. Dunn, Sen. Scott
From: A constituent in Tallahassee, FL
March 12
You support someone who declares war who cannot speak a coherent sentence? Trump publicly admits to FALLING ASLEEP during planning sessions for the illegal Iran war!
Donald Trump casually confessed at a rally yesterday that he fell asleep during a planning meeting for his unauthorized war on Iran, while officials and generals tried to get him to pick a name for the deadly and illegal conflict that has raged to this moment.
ENOUGH he has dementia
“They gave me a list of names to choose, Trump told the crowd of MAGAts in Kentucky. ‘Sir, you could pick the name you’d like, sir,’ I said. ‘The name of what?’ ‘The name of the attack on Iran, sir,’ And they gave me, like, 20 names, and I’m like, falling asleep … Then I see, ‘Epic Fury.’ I said, ‘I like that name.’”
This is far from the first time the president, who turns 80 in June, has dozed off in public and private settings, such as press conferences, Cabinet meetings, roundtables, and even his inaugural "Board of Peace" session with authoritarian world leaders. When called out, he predictably denies it and blames aides for allowing cameras to get the snoring on tape.
Even MAGA voters are seeing it, making insightful observations like “you probably shouldn’t be falling asleep,” considering what an important job he’s got. It’s just another element of Trump’s comic buffoonery, and it is funny. “Commander-in-sleep.” Lol.
But in this case, the stakes are too high for this foolishness. Trump and Pentagon Pete have poked the hornet’s nest, and awoken a well-armed nation of 92 million who are no doubt planning payback at this very moment.
Trump admitting in public that he can’t stay awake with world peace in the balance is a real reminder that this war is being run by someone with no business leading any such operation, and it's no wonder it is already leading to sorrow, hardship, and uncertainty for hundreds of millions