President Donald Trump’s authoritarian rampage has relied on a bold and cynical strategy to bend the public’s perception of reality: abject stupidity.
Just look at the White House’s website right now. There’s a new “Major Events Timeline,” which begins as a seemingly standard sequence of events depicting the evolution of the People’s House, all the way back to George Washington selecting the site, rebuilding after it was set aflame in the War of 1812, and all the way through Richard Nixon’s bowling alley renovation. When the timeline gets to 1998, though, it abruptly transforms into a crude MAGA troll job with a caption highlighting Bill Clinton’s Oval Office sex scandal.
Trump’s “big lie” is, at its core, a witless tantrum thrown by a malignant narcissist who lacks the integrity to accept defeat.
That’s followed by a caption reading “Obama hosts members of the Muslim Brotherhood, a group that promotes Islamist extremism and has ties to Hamas.” This is an apparent reference to a 2012 meeting between mid-level National Security Council officials and political representatives of the Muslim Brotherhood in the aftermath of the overthrow of Egypt’s longtime dictator Hosni Mubarak. If the trolling weren’t obvious enough, the caption is accompanied by a photo of Barack Obama wearing a turban during a visit to Kenya in 2006 — nowhere near the White House and years before Obama was president.
From there, the timeline hails Melania Trump’s tennis pavilion, mocks Hunter Biden’s cocaine use and rails against Joe Biden hosting a “Transgender Day of Visibility” celebration. Finally, the site gushes over Trump putting tacky gold stuff all over everything in the White House, paving over the Rose Garden, and leveling the entire East Wing.
There is something telling about the official White House website being casually debased by people working at the direction of the most powerful person on the planet — and for no other reason than to “own the libs.”
Trump and MAGA are attempting to rewrite history right before our eyes. They’re also trying to normalize untruths as facts — and they’re weaponizing vulgarity and stupidity to do both.
Take Texas’ lawsuit against the current and former makers of Tylenol, filed by the state’s attorney general Ken Paxton, alleging the companies knew that taking the drug during pregnancy can cause autism. This echoes a conspiracy theory frequently put forth by (who else?) Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, despite studies and major medical groups asserting there’s no evidence such a link exists. But RFK Jr.’s “Make America Healthy Again” movement isn’t based on facts or science — it’s strictly vibes, and the MAHA vibes essentially say all modern medicine is bad, including your vaccines, antidepressants and over-the-counter pain medicines.
Pretty much no one — and certainly not craven Mitch McConnell — thought Donald Trump would be a viable political candidate after he attempted a self-coup following his 2020 election defeat and his incitement of a deadly riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. The conservative-leaning Supreme Court, including the three justices Trump appointed, declined to even give his evidence-bereft claims of a stolen election a hearing. The Washington Post published an audio recording of him badgering Georgia’s Republican secretary of state to “find 11,780 votes” to overturn the state’s results.








