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12/31/25 08:55 AM #18750    

 

Jay Shackford

Donald Trump’s 

Golden Age of Awful

A damage assessment of the President’s first year back in office

By Susan Glasser/The New Yorker/Dec. 30, 2025

No matter how low one’s expectations were for 2025, the most striking thing about the year when Donald Trump became President again is how much worse it turned out to be.

Did we anticipate that Trump would come back to office wanting to rule as a king, consumed by revenge and retribution, and encouraged by sycophants and yes-men who would insure that he faced few of the constraints that hampered him in his first term? Yes, but now we know that bracing for the worst did not make the inevitable any less painful. In the future, historians will struggle to describe that feeling, particular to this Trump era, of being prepared for the bad, crazy, and disruptive things that he would do, and yet also totally, utterly shocked by them.

A partial catalogue of the horrors of 2025 that not even the most prescient Trump-watcher could claim to have fully predicted: gutting cancer research in the name of expurgating diversity programs from the nation’s universities. Shutting the door to refugees—except for white Afrikaners, from South Africa. Empowering the world’s richest man to cut off funding for the world’s poorest children. Welcoming Vladimir Putin on a red carpet at an American Air Force base. Razing the East Wing of the White House, without warning, on an October morning. Alienating pretty much the entirety of Canada.

Your list might be different from mine. There is so much from which to choose. And that is the point.

Yet the biggest disappointment of 2025 may well have been not what Trump did but how so many let it happen. Trump has always been a mirror for other people’s souls, an X-ray revealing America’s dysfunction. If this was a test, there were more failing grades than we could have imagined.

On the first day of his second term, the President pardoned more than fifteen hundred violent rioters who sacked their own U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, in a vain effort to overturn Trump’s 2020 election defeat. Even his Vice-President, J. D. Vance, had said that this was something that “obviously” shouldn’t happen; Trump’s chief of staff, Susie Wiles, later admitted that she had lobbied him not to go that far. But Trump didn’t listen. He was putting America on notice. The first outrage was a sneak preview of those to come: if there was a choice to be made, he would invariably opt for the most shocking, destructive, or corrupt option. And who was going to stop him?

This is why any obituary for 2025 requires a special shout-out to those whose craven folding to Trump might well have proved to be among the biggest bad surprises of the year—the law-firm managing partners and corporate executives and technology tycoons who decided to pay protection money to the President rather than stand up for the rule of law that enabled their great success in the first place. Eight long years ago, the story of the first year of Trump’s first term was the rearguard struggle over control of the Republican Party; this time, with Trump having long ago won the battle for the G.O.P., he has extended his hostile takeover far beyond the realm of partisan politics, advancing a vision of breathtaking personal power in which the President claims the right to determine everything from what appears on the nightly news to the place names on our maps to which laws passed by Congress should be followed and which can be ignored.

Just a year ago, it was still possible to envision a different course for Trump’s second term—to imagine that, while the President himself might really mean to carry through with his most radical plans, there remained strong forces in society to resist him. Republican leaders in Congress and the Trump-appointed conservative majority on the Supreme Court may yet prove to be something other than the willing handmaidens of democracy’s demise, but they have so far failed to do so. This past year’s disruptions are as much their work as Trump’s; without their acquiescence, as passive or unwilling as it has been at times, many of Trump’s most extreme acts would not have been possible. Just think about Senator Bill Cassidy, of Louisiana, a medical doctor who made much of the “assurances” he extracted from Trump’s vaccine-denying nominee for Secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. Kennedy won his confirmation vote, then broke the pledges he had made to get it. Cassidy has, in the tradition of the Senate, been deeply concerned ever since.

And so Trump sits in the White House, largely unchecked, live-streaming his manic attack on the Deep State for hours a day, an archetypal mad emperor whose courtiers will keep praising him no matter how fat, ugly, or naked he turns out to be. He has become our national micromanager-in-chief, renovating the world economy with a theological belief in the magic of tariffs one minute, renaming the Kennedy Center for himself the next; he is everywhere all at once, ordering up prosecutions of his political enemies on his social-media feed, personally demanding tribute from C.E.O.s and princes, waging unceasing war on wind farms and low-water-pressure showerheads. Who knew, when he spoke of a new “golden age” in his Inaugural Address back in January, that he meant it literally, as a preview of his plans for redecorating the White House? Whatever he does, he can count on the flattery of followers who assure him, as his golf buddy turned international peace negotiator Steve Witkoff did this fall, that he is “the greatest President in American history.”

My colleague Jane Mayer recently made an observation that sums up why it’s been so difficult to write, or even think, about what’s happening in Washington this year: it’s hard to be so angry all of the time. Most of us are simply not used to being this frequently upset, enraged, infuriated, or just plain disgusted by public occurrences. And yet that was the essential condition of engaging with the state of Trump’s America in 2025. Whenever one tuned into the day’s events, there was sure to be another grotesque act of personal aggrandizement or self-enrichment on the part of the President, another billionaire sucking up to him, another brazen act of lawlessness from those who are charged with executing our laws. The year’s signature social-media experience was being confronted by all those videos of poor souls being dragged out of their cars and beaten by masked thugs acting in the name of the government. To watch or not—that was the question. It was all so inescapable and emotionally manipulative: upsetting by design.

The shock videos are just part of it. Remember the gay Venezuelan makeup artist who was sent to El Salvador’s most infamous prison because he had made the mistake of seeking asylum in the U.S.? Or the countless U.S. citizens, some of them small children, who have been caught up by Stephen Miller’s goon squads? Is it better or worse to know that Trump wanted to do even more to fulfill his campaign-trail vow of “mass deportations now,” with his Administration admitting earlier this month that it had fallen far short of its stated goal of a million people shipped out of the country? The more than six hundred thousand deportations in 2025 announced by his Department of Homeland Security is still, by far, the largest number ever.

This is true of many of his other radical plans as well. For all the shock and awe of Elon Musk’s campaign to slash government spending, the federal government will end 2025 with pretty much the same enormous budget deficit that it had before—a far cry from the two trillion dollars in savings Musk initially promised. Yet what he accomplished in the few months before his inevitable falling out with Trump was an unspeakable amount of human trauma, reducing the government workforce by some two hundred and fifty thousand employees, slashing foreign aid to needy children and starving families, ending programs and careers with little regard for who or what or why.

The problem here is that taking stock of all that Trump has done in 2025 means confronting the new reality of an America where the raw and arbitrary exercise of power for its own sake is both possible and permissible. It can happen here, we now know, because it is happening here.

As wretched as this year has been, many of the President’s critics have decided that it is at least ending on a positive note. They discern a whiff of impending irrelevance in our lame-duck septuagenarian President. And there is no doubt that Trump today faces a set of positively Biden-esque problems, from persistent inflation to sagging approval ratings. Some sixty per cent of Americans now disapprove of his Presidency. Prospects for the 2026 midterms look bad for him and his party.

But that is next year’s story. For now, I’m still stuck on the damage assessment from what Trump has already wrought since his return to the Presidency in 2025. If ever there were a year whose end could not come soon enough, this was it. I’d like to dance on its grave and drink buckets of champagne in honor of its demise. Happy New Year. Finally, there is something to celebrate. 


12/31/25 09:55 AM #18751    

 

Jack Mallory

Trump admin attack details for Joanie, and an addendum to Glasser's "damages." Thnx, Jay--I especially liked her line, "Trump has always been a mirror for other people’s souls."

Nobel Peace prize?

 

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/12/31/how-many-countries-has-trump-bombed-in-2025


01/01/26 11:37 AM #18752    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, you are so correct that so many past Presidents have taken us to war. I was forcusing on Trump as he unfortnately the President now. He holds a special place as the cruelest President and most self serving of all time. That is his first place prize. Love, Joanie. On second thought the outcomes of the wars result in extreme cruelty such as the Iraq war under Bush where thousands died.


01/02/26 07:39 AM #18753    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, I just had a chance to click on the link about how many countries Trump has already bombed...He really is trying hard to get the top award in bombings...its really huge hypocracy that he is trying to get the Nobel Peace Prize...Love, Joanie


01/03/26 07:44 AM #18754    

 

Jack Mallory

Fucking insane. Kidnapping a head of state. And his wife. 


 

Does this make Bone Spurs and his wife legitimate targets as well?
 


01/03/26 10:47 AM #18755    

 

Nora Skinker (Morton)

Applause to our POTUS for taking action to free Venezuelans from the clutches of a narco-terroristic, oppressive, illegitimate, criminally indicted dictator and not continue ignoring Maduro for ideological reasons. Whether democracy eventually emerges or not, remaining powers within that country are forced to take notice that the trafficking of drugs, humans, oil & other anti-American activities now require new direction. Oh, and anglers can safely resume their passion. 


01/03/26 12:39 PM #18756    

 

Jack Mallory

Bone Spurs claims that one country has the right to unilaterally attack another country, depose their leader, kidnap him and his wife, try them, and "run" that country indefinitely. 

Perhaps this is a precedent we should support? Who would we like to see descend on Washington at midnight? I'm voting for Canada. Other nominations?

*********

And he says he’s "not afraid of boots on the ground." Other people's boots, other peoples' feet in the boots. Bone spurs, you understand. 


01/03/26 03:19 PM #18757    

 

Jack Mallory

Trump looks us right in the eye, tells us "No crime in DC."  


https://dailyvoice.com/virginia/arlington/no-crime-in-dc-trump-touts-as-police-investigate-multiple-recent-homicides/

And from my DC MPD buddy: New Year's Eve, 2 shot, one died in 200 block 37th St. NE 

WHY, WHY do people believe anything he says? For the same reasons Germans believed Hitler. Because they wanted to, they chose to. 


01/03/26 07:05 PM #18758    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

I agree with you Jack. Trump is continuing a bad precedent of attacking boats and killing people and deciding which governments are ok. Usually he cozies up to the dictators like Putin, and Kim but he must want Maduro's oil. It's always something Trumps wants that motivates him.     I think some people just are blinded by devotion to Trump no matter what he does.  He said he could shoot someone on fifth Avenue with no push back  and none of his supporters said anything.  They are fine with whatever he does. How ironic that those supporting Trump toppling a dictator are blinded to the fact that Trump is a dictator and he is doing everything to destroy our democracy. The hope is in We The People saying no like the No Kings Day and other times we stand together against the Trump dictatorship.  By the way banning so many countries with brown people is very telling. Love, Joanie


01/04/26 08:07 AM #18759    

 

Jack Mallory

Two neighboring heads of state, one Honduran, one Venezuelan: both accused of directing massive drug imports into the U.S. 

"Mr. Hernández was charged in 2022 with conspiring to import cocaine into the U.S. and using machine guns as part of that conspiracy. The charges unveiled against Mr. Maduro on Saturday also include a cocaine importation conspiracy and possession of machine guns as part of it. The combination of the trafficking and gun charges makes the potential penalties in such prosecutions more severe." https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/03/world/americas/trump-maduro-juan-orlando-hernandez.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share

Hernandez, president of a very poor country, was convicted of trafficking 400 tons of cocaine into the US and sentenced to 45 years in prison. But he was fully and completely pardoned by Donald Trump. 

Maduro, course, was just violently seized and Venezuela put under American governance. What was the difference?

 

, of


01/04/26 01:57 PM #18760    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Nobody outside or even likely inside Venezuela is sad that Maduro is gone. He is a thug and a notorious drug lord.

But why are we there? He was not bringing fentanyl to the US. He was shipping cocaine and the dreaded marijuana  😲 to Europe. How was that a threat to the US? 

Nothing was mentioned by the felon, Hegseth, or Rubio about a transition to Democracy in Venezuela. So it wasn't that. In fact, the current vice president of Venezuela, Rodriguez, who is as guilty as Maduro of the crimes his government committed, is calling for the return of Maduro, yet the felon says she’s all on board with doing what the US says. Who you ganna believe? People are not dancing in the streets of Caracas. They know that there has been no regime change. Venezuelan opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Corina Machado would be a likely future Democratic leader but the felon dismissed her as "a nice lady" but not up to the job. Anyone wanna bet a quarter that he's jealous of her winning the Nobel? 

According to the felon, “We’re going for the oil.”  What about the 30 million people of Venezuela? Are they going to be okay with American troops sent to Venezuela to protect American oil workers as we “take the oil”? The felon says he's going to make the people of Venezuela rich from the oil......that he's taking from them? How does that work? I guess it works the same way he said he was going to make Americans rich. 

Deposing the dictator is the easy part. And our forces did an admirable job! But after the dictator is gone, what happens next? Are Hegseth and Rubio, who are presumably now running the government of Venezuela, going to set up offices in Caracas? Or are they going to try to run things from their offices in DC? Push buttons to make things happen without US troops on the ground? 

Is the president allowed to take the leader of any country he doesn't like (or whose oil he covets)? Where in the Constitution does it give him that power? If it's illegal, will he suffer consequences? No, of course not. The Supreme Court made sure of that.

 


01/04/26 07:09 PM #18761    

 

Jack Mallory

Joan, we’ll be greeted with open arms, just as we were at the Bay of Pigs, in Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan . . . I'm sure the  Commander in Chief is aware of our glorious history of bringing democracy to the world!

********

As imperialism returns to the forefront of US foreign and military policy in stereotypical, almost political cartoon form (OIL!), I recommend looking at the history of Marine Corps Major General Smedley Butler. Involved in many of the most blatantly imperialist American wars of the late 19th and early 20th Century, a two-time winner of the Medal of Honor, Butler evolved into a strongly anti-war, anti-imperialist advocate (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smedley_Butler ) and the author of War is a Racket, in which he summarized his history in the Marine Corps like this:

"I helped make Mexico, especially Tampico, safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefits of Wall Street. The record of racketeering is long. I helped purify Nicaragua for the international banking house of Brown Brothers in 1909–1912 (where have I heard that name before?). I brought light to the Dominican Republic for American sugar interests in 1916. In China I helped see to it that Standard Oil went its way unmolested. Looking back on it, I might have given Al Capone a few hints. The best he could do was to operate his racket in three districts. I operated on three continents."

Not surprisingly, Butler is much admired by Vietnam Veterans Against the War!


01/04/26 09:29 PM #18762    

 

Jack Mallory

And just found this!


01/04/26 09:48 PM #18763    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, that is a great cartoon...By Trump's standards he should have himself arrested. Love, Joanie

Now Trump is talking again of taking Greenland...the thing is Greenland doesn't want to be part of the US...I hope the military will resist such an illegal order. Love, Joanie


01/04/26 10:08 PM #18764    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

The oopsy if we try to take Greenland is that Denmark is a member of NATO. So if we invade them, we'll be obligated to defend Denmark from the attacks from us. This should be fun to watch!!!


01/04/26 11:01 PM #18765    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

I don't think Trump is bound by any treaties, and he especially is always dissing NATO.  Also, just heard Marjorie Taylor Greene on Meet the Press...I had  given her some credit for speaking up for the victims of Epstein and standing up to Trump...However, I have to say that today I was horrified to hear how when asked about her speaking at a Nick Fuentes event and how did she feel about Nick Fuentes saying that Hitler is cool,  she said she is more concerned about free speech and won't get into talking about Nick Fuentes as what concerns her is that there is free speech. Yes, I agree that free spech is important but there is no reason that you can't support free speech but condemn the content of the free horrific speech of Nick Fuentes...she absolutely wouldn't speak out against that type of speech...She seemed very uncomfortable to condemn the speech content of Nick Fuentes...Love, Joanie


01/05/26 08:40 AM #18766    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Hi friends, I just read that the EPA, that really stands for the Environmental Pollution Agency wants to cut huge amounts of clean air regulations. This excerpt was in the Washington post today. "Administrator Lee Zeldin spelled out his aim to strip away more then 30 environmental regulations in the name of boosting economic growth." How tragic for the health of our country. Sorry that I haven't been writing uplifting posts.  At least we get to see Jacks beautiful photography now and then to marvel at.  Love, Joanie


01/06/26 07:09 AM #18767    

 

Jack Mallory

Lest we forget, and when they lie--as they have done, and will continue to do.

https://apps.npr.org/jan-6-archive/

NPR, so no paywall. 


01/06/26 08:10 AM #18768    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, thanks for the NPR link, etc....yes, this was a horrific day when a coup was attempted and Trump stood by and watched it all on tv. To think he pardoned all of them...Love, Joanie


01/07/26 07:09 AM #18769    

 

Jack Mallory

And again. Never forget:

"A day of love." DJT

He's not only a lying sack of shit, he's a lying sack of shit that thinks we're stupid. I guess it's easy to think that way when you're surrounded by MAGATs. 


01/08/26 08:58 AM #18770    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Renee Nicole Good was murdered yesterday in Minneapolis by an ICE agent. Her car had blocked ICE agents but she committed no violence. When an ICE agent approached her car and tried to open her front door, she backed up and attempted to drive away...Instead another ICE agent ran up to her car and shot her face three times at close range. She had her foot on the pedal and the car pushed forward. A woman nearby took a video and you could see Nicole's blood all over the airbag that deflated. It was a horrific thing. There were stuffed animals, like teddy bears in the car. She had a six yaer old child. This child has no parents now. She was a poet and people spoke of how she was warm and caring and a do gooder. Trump and Noem lied about it all making up a story that she was a terrorist and ran over an ICE agent...the video you can see shows that she didn't run over anyone but was killed in cold blood. It is truly heartbreaking..George Floyd was murdered nearby five years ago.  The second link is a video of what really happened...Its so very sad.  Love, Joanie

https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigration/2026/01/08/renee-good-ice-who-is/

https://www.startribune.com/video-ice-shooting-minneapolis/601559951

I might add that Noem not only is a liar like Trump but killed a puppy in cold blood so anything she says is worthless. 


01/08/26 07:33 PM #18771    

 

Jack Mallory

At the memorial for her this morning. 


 

Deb laying our flowers own. 
 


 


01/09/26 08:38 AM #18772    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Thank you for posting those pictures Jack...

Now I'm worried thatTrump might try to take over Greenland. In addition to that being awful in and of itself he will ruin NATO...He cares nothing about anything but himself and getting more money. To think he dreams of more conquests of countries while people are starving in this country and Trump cuts programs for hungry children that are in BLUE states. Love, Joanie

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/01/06/trump-cut-child-care-funds-00712875


01/09/26 02:44 PM #18773    

 

Nora Skinker (Morton)

Ahoy, friends. Indeed. these are trying times.  It is sorrowful whenever anyone's life is taken.  As for public opinions, I am hopeful that the local MN government will work with the Feds to investigate the death of Renee Goode, and that we may actually find out the whole truth of what happened there.  Usually the Federal Government has priority over the States with investigative privileges, as the Constitution dictates.  Until the details are known, it adds fuel to a growing fire to assume we know them.  A friend, who was a Juvenile Court Judge in Rockville, MD at the time, long ago shared that he maintained it was law enforcement which was the main thing instilling fear into a criminal mind.  I was raised to fear cops.  All cops.  It kept a lot of us out of trouble.  I believe there is no fear anymore. Am not saying this necessarity happened, but I cannot help but think that perhaps Goode felt emboldened as she watched and heard those around her screaming obscenities, throwing things and urging violence against law enforcement. I understand from the news, that the officer in question had had a prior incident with outraged protestors who dragged him many feet by car and resulted in his receiving stitches and a long healing process. Just adding a couple of unhappy observations.  Meanwhile, does the taunting and verbal abuse of ICE officers, doing their jobs, enrage anybody?  Or is it that I remember so well the days when we actually knew our local police officers from our communities (even from school) and understood at a young age the respect they so deserved?

As for Greenland; knowing how important it is to secure the US against our enemies, Russia and China, I back the importance of securing Greenland, and wish we had bought it, ala Alaska and Louisiana purchases.. I am not for using military might to gain access.  As a lonely voice on this forum, I furvently hope Trump will not willfully act against our NATO ally of Denmark, but through negotiation and bargaining we can seal a deal.  

On a happier note, I rejoice with all of you, whom I know are applauding Steve Witkoff and others who instrumentally have been working hard for the release of Venezuelan prisoners.  So, maybe it's not only "all about oil', after all.  


01/09/26 04:07 PM #18774    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

The Video of the murder of Renee Nicole Good says it all and no amount of angles will change what is clearly seen. A mother of 3 was murdered in cold blood...the little stuffed animals were in her car for her children that now have no mother.  Love, Joanie

https://minnesotareformer.com/2026/01/07/ice-officer-fatally-shoots-driver-through-car-window-in-minneapolis/


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