Hope For America with Heather Delaney Reese

Trump is completely unfit for the job, and yesterday made it undeniable

14 min · 3. juni 2026
episode Trump is completely unfit for the job, and yesterday made it undeniable cover

Description

After days of hiding from the press, tucked away from the American people deep inside the White House, the President of the United States finally found a moment to emerge from seclusion when he took a phone call from a reporter earlier today. Asked about negotiations collapsing over the Iran war, Trump shrugged off the question entirely, saying, "I really don't care. I couldn't care less," because the discussions had "started to get very boring." This was the President of the United States discussing a deadly war that he started, and his response was that he didn't care anymore because it was boring. Based on the events of 6-1-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump told CNBC's Eamon Javers he "couldn't care less" about Iran negotiations because they had "started to get very boring" * His only flash of energy on the subject was a threat to "blow them up to kingdom come" * Hours earlier, Trump posted on Truth Social that talks were continuing "at a rapid pace" * While he was posting reassurance, Iran was already moving to suspend its participation over Israel's escalation in Lebanon and threatening to block the Strait of Hormuz * Trump told the reporter he was "going to ask" Netanyahu what was happening in Lebanon, while in the middle of a regional war his military helped start * An hour later, Trump posted that he had a "very productive call" with Netanyahu and announced a ceasefire on every front * Netanyahu publicly contradicted him, saying the IDF would "continue to operate in southern Lebanon as planned" * Israel's defense minister Israel Katz denied there was any ceasefire in Lebanon at all * According to CNN and The Times of Israel, the call was heated, with Trump reportedly telling Netanyahu, "you're f**king crazy" and "I'm saving your ass. Everybody hates you now" * In private he was shouting. In public he was posting gratitude and "ETERNITY!" * On gas prices, Trump claimed oil would soon be "dropping like a rock" with "1,700 boats right now that are loaded up with oil" * Why this is a fairy tale told at our expense while families watch numbers climb at the pump * How strongmen surround themselves with aides who manage them instead of informing them, until no one is left to say the true thing out loud * Federal judge Leonie Brinkema in Virginia temporarily blocked the Anti-Weaponization Fund * Republicans in Congress balked, with some signaling they would not move their own immigration and law enforcement funding package until the fund was dealt with * After Trump met with Speaker Mike Johnson, the DOJ said it would "abide by" the court's ruling * An administration official described the fund to Axios in three words: "Dead for now" * A hearing on June 12 could decide the rest * Why this is what friction looks like when the guardrails are made of people who still do their jobs Donald Trump held nothing together today. But the rest of the country did. We watched a President treat a war like a chore and a fantasy like a strategy. But we also watched the machinery of accountability creak back to life, just a little, on the very same day. As long as there are people still pushing back, we are not finished. Not even close. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

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161 episodes

episode Trump now has an airport named after him - wait until you see the fine print artwork

Trump now has an airport named after him - wait until you see the fine print

After a day of silence from a president known for posting constantly, Donald Trump's only message to the country was not about threats, NATO, public safety, or the work of the presidency. It was about himself, and about a public airport in Palm Beach being renamed for his brand. The story gets worse when the legal agreement, trademarks, merchandise control, public costs, and airport code change reveal how public institutions are being turned into personal monuments while the federal government struggles to track a parasite outbreak that is already making thousands of Americans sick. Based on the events of 7-9-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump made only one social media post all day, at 8:07 p.m., after a day of unusual public silence. * His only message celebrated Palm Beach International Airport being renamed The President Donald J. Trump International Airport. * Trump called the Palm Beach location "HOT," the renovation "SPECTACULAR," and signed the post as President DONALD J. TRUMP. * Eric Trump landed at 5:01 a.m. on the family plane known as Trump Force One so the Trump brand would be first under the new name. * Eric called the airport renaming only "slightly controversial" on Fox and Friends and credited his father with putting the region on the map. * The FAA changed both the airport name and code, replacing PBI with DJT. * The rebrand is estimated to cost $5.5 million, with Florida expected to cover roughly half. * A 35-page licensing agreement was approved 4-3 by the Palm Beach County commission. * The Trump Organization filed three trademark applications months before the name change took effect. * The agreement gives the Trump Organization control over which vendors can manufacture and sell airport merchandise. * Trump has veto power over biographical material displayed inside the airport. * A non-disparagement clause blocks the airport from publishing material that could tarnish Trump's reputation. * The trademark applications cover watches, jewelry, collectible coins, clothing, luggage, umbrellas, tote bags, and even security-line slippers. * The deal says Trump cannot receive royalties from airport merchandise, but his company can still control approved vendors and profit through supply arrangements. * Florida State University law professor Jake Linford noted that the merchandise limits do not appear to cover services, leaving room for branded lounges or other licensing fees. * The old Palm Beach International Airport name, signs, highway markers, and decades of public identity are being overwritten by Trump's personal brand. * Trump's name has also been attached to planned Navy warships, a wealthy-foreigner visa program, a prescription drug website, and federal savings accounts for newborns. * At the same time, cyclosporiasis has sickened more than 2,000 people across at least 18 states, with Michigan nearing 1,200 cases in about two weeks. * The CDC has lost more than a quarter of its workforce since January 2025 and made tracking this exact parasite optional as of July 2025. * Taco Bell locations in Metro Detroit posted notices pulling lettuce, cilantro, onion, pico de gallo, and guacamole while ordinary Americans and under-resourced public health workers try to connect the dots. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

11. juli 202618 min
episode Trump invented 15 million beheadings, and no one around him blinked artwork

Trump invented 15 million beheadings, and no one around him blinked

At the NATO summit, the world watched a president who could not keep leaders, countries, facts, or threats straight while the people around him kept pretending this was strength. Donald Trump confused Zelenskyy with Putin, Iran with Japan, TikTok with "Tic Tac," and diplomacy with domination, all while threatening allies, announcing new strikes, bragging about imaginary social media numbers, and boarding Air Force One under security concerns he tried to deny. This was not just another day of chaos. It was a warning about what happens when visible decline, unchecked power, and political cowardice converge at the highest level of American government. Based on the events of 7-8-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump abruptly used the older presidential aircraft instead of his refurbished Qatari Air Force One while reports pointed to Iran-related security concerns. * He told reporters they were on "a dangerous flight," said he was first on Iran's list, and joked that if he went, they would go too. * Sitting beside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Trump mistakenly referred to him as "President Putin." * While discussing Iran, he claimed missiles had been fired by the "Islamic Republic of Japan," confusing two countries in the middle of a war crisis. * Trump told NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte that he was "very upset with NATO" and publicly attacked Spain as "a terrible partner." * He ordered his Treasury Secretary on camera to cut off trade and visits with Spain, calling its people "hopeless, bad people." * Trump renewed his demand for Greenland, dismissed Denmark's claim to its own territory, and invoked the Nazi occupation to justify American control. * Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen answered that Denmark was ready to defend every inch of NATO, including its own territory. * After previously celebrating an Iran memorandum of understanding, Trump declared the agreement "over," called Iranian leaders "scum," and said negotiation was a waste of time. * Trump announced that U.S. forces had struck more than eighty targets inside Iran and suggested more strikes were likely, sending oil prices higher and markets lower. * In the middle of discussing China and war, Trump bragged that he was number one on TikTok, mispronounced it as "Tic Tac," and claimed billions of views. * Aboard Air Force One, Trump claimed "probably billions of votes" disappeared in the Los Angeles mayor's race, even though California has about twenty-three million registered voters. * He claimed prescription drug prices fell four hundred to six hundred percent, an impossible figure because prices cannot fall below zero. * Trump said he had settled the Congo and Rwanda conflict after "fifteen million people had their heads chopped off," inventing a grotesque claim unsupported by reality. * His public confusion extended to calling the JCPOA the "JCPOC," calling Erdogan the leader of a "great company," and stumbling over denuclearization. * His swollen feet, bruised hand, and limp arm were visible as the White House insisted his performance was "marathon" and "high-energy." * Tom Nichols warned that something is deeply wrong and that allies, staff, world leaders, and enemies all know it. * Joe Walsh called for the Twenty-Fifth Amendment while Chuck Schumer called Trump's performance an embarrassment on the world stage. * While Trump unraveled abroad, courts at home ordered the release of $5.8 million to E. Jean Carroll and rejected Ron DeSantis's "Stop WOKE Act." * Those court rulings showed that accountability can still hold, even while elected officials around Trump refuse to act. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

Yesterday21 min
episode Trump's disturbing NATO visit exposed something allies already know artwork

Trump's disturbing NATO visit exposed something allies already know

At the NATO summit in Ankara, the danger was visible before Donald Trump even reached the microphone. He stepped off Qatar's Air Force One gripping the handrail, wandered off the blue carpet, and had to be physically guided back into place by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Then the words caught up with the image. Trump admitted he almost skipped the summit because NATO allies did not support his Iran attack, praised Erdogan while considering a return of F-35 fighter jets to Turkey, dismissed Ukraine's suffering as something that "doesn't affect the United States," threatened Europe over Greenland, and showed once again how quickly his weakness becomes someone else's opportunity. At home, his Justice Department was threatening election officials over a nearly nonexistent noncitizen voting crisis, while his interference in the World Cup turned one of America's rare shared joys into another reminder that under Trump, even the rules of a soccer match can become political property. Based on the events of 7-7-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump arrived in Ankara on Qatar's Air Force One at 2:15 p.m. local time and appeared physically uncertain as he gripped the handrail walking down the stairs. * Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan greeted Trump on the tarmac before the two began a ceremonial walk along a blue carpet. * Trump repeatedly drifted from side to side, stopped, and appeared disoriented during the walk toward Turkish military personnel. * Erdogan reached under Trump's arm, redirected him back toward the carpet, and pointed him toward the microphone on live television. * The White House later posted edited arrival footage that cut out the moments where Trump appeared lost and had to be guided. * Asked about possible U.S. troop drawdowns from Europe, Trump instead complained that NATO allies did not support his strike on Iran. * Trump said he was "very disappointed with NATO" and suggested he might not have attended if the summit had not been hosted by his "friend" Erdogan. * Trump said the United States would consider selling Turkey F-35 fighter jets, even though Turkey was removed from the program in 2019 after buying Russian S-400 air defense systems. * When asked about risks from American technology sitting alongside Russian systems, Trump said he had "no concerns at all about anything" and praised Turkey's roads. * Erdogan told reporters Trump had already promised him five jets, while the White House declined to clarify whether that was true. * Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged the United States not to transfer F-35s to Turkey, warning it would upset the regional balance of power. * Trump said he would lift CAATSA sanctions on Turkey because "we don't want to sanction friends," despite Turkey's Russian defense purchases. * On Ukraine, Trump said Russia's war "doesn't affect the United States" and complained that images of the battlefield did not "help the look." * Trump renewed threats over Greenland, saying it should be controlled by the United States and warning Europe that America could remove soldiers from the continent. * Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen rejected Trump's Greenland demand, while Finland's president answered with the line, "Be more Arctic, be more cool." * Erdogan gained legitimacy, potential access to advanced U.S. aircraft, sanctions relief, and a NATO spotlight while opposition journalists were denied accreditation and Turkish citizens were arrested. * Trump's Justice Department sent letters to election officials in all fifty states and Washington, D.C., threatening possible prosecution over noncitizen voting. * Noncitizen voting is already illegal, and Brennan Center research has found it accounted for roughly 0.0001 percent of votes in examined jurisdictions. * Trump called FIFA's president to push for reversal of a U.S. red card, admitted he did not know what a red card was, and still got the automatic World Cup suspension lifted. * After Belgium beat the United States, Belgian players mocked Trump's YMCA-style dance and their football association posted "Overturn this," turning the moment into a global punchline. This was not just a strange diplomatic visit, a reckless policy promise, an election intimidation campaign, or a sports controversy. It was one pattern repeating across every part of American life: a president who cannot separate public responsibility from personal grievance, who treats allies as props, authoritarians as friends, democratic institutions as obstacles, and shared national moments as things to bend around himself. But the more visible that pattern becomes, the harder it is to ignore. People who may not follow NATO, sanctions, or election law saw it in the World Cup. Allies saw it in Ankara. Voters can see it before November. That recognition matters, because a country can still choose clarity over chaos, truth over spectacle, and democracy over one man's need to dominate every room he enters. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

9. juli 202618 min
episode Trump's ICE is now investigating US citizens who speak out against them artwork

Trump's ICE is now investigating US citizens who speak out against them

At a White House event meant to showcase another first, Donald Trump gave Americans a clearer view of something far more dangerous: a government that protects the powerful while intimidating ordinary citizens for speaking out. He casually bragged that crypto figures were lucky he was president when federal investigations disappeared, even as ICE's internal watchdog was being turned outward against Americans who criticized the agency. The result is a chilling picture of selective accountability, federal surveillance, and a direct threat to the First Amendment itself. Based on the events of 7-6-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump opened an Oval Office event fixated on a gold bell and joking that he would not give it back. * During the event, he was asked about cryptocurrency and responded by taking credit for investigations being dropped. * Trump said that when he sees a crypto figure whose investigation was dropped, he tells them, "You're lucky I'm president." * The script connects that admission to an industry that has personally enriched him by more than a billion dollars. * The same day, Wired reported that ICE's Office of Professional Responsibility has opened more than 100 cases involving Americans accused of doxing or threatening ICE employees. * ICE's Office of Professional Responsibility was created to investigate misconduct, corruption, and abuse by ICE officers. * That internal watchdog is now being aimed outward at civilians for speech critical of ICE. * The script contrasts those speech investigations with the lack of accountability for federal officers involved in DHS shootings. * FIRE filed a federal lawsuit in Washington, D.C., on behalf of David Streever of Rochester, New York. * Streever emailed then-acting ICE Director Todd Lyons after federal agents shot and killed two American citizens in Minneapolis. * His email was angry and harsh, but the script frames it as protected First Amendment speech. * Five months later, Homeland Security Investigations agents appeared at Streever's home while he was in Finland with his daughter. * The agents handed his wife an official ICE and DHS warning notice saying he may be in violation of federal law. * After Streever returned to the United States, another HSI agent tracked him to an airport hotel at JFK. * FIRE attorney Adam Steinbaugh said the delayed response showed Streever presented no real threat and that the pursuit was designed to intimidate lawful speech. * Paigelynne Gonyea in Syracuse received a similar warning notice over an Instagram post while she was working at a polling place. * Civil liberties groups say these are the first known instances of DHS using formal warning notices against Americans over speech. * The script warns that authoritarian governments begin by making examples of a few people and watching whether fear spreads. * Historical parallels include the Stasi, the Soviet security apparatus, and Pinochet's Chile, where institutions meant to protect the public were redirected against dissent. * The closing argument calls for peaceful speech, accountability, investigations, and collective refusal to be intimidated into silence. This is not only a story about ICE, cryptocurrency, or one federal lawsuit. It is a warning about what happens when government power stops policing itself and starts policing the people. The First Amendment cannot survive only as words on paper. It survives when ordinary Americans keep using it, especially when those in power want silence. David Streever refused to back down, and because he did, millions of people now know what DHS and ICE were doing. That is how courage spreads, and that is why speaking peacefully, clearly, and together still matters. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

8. juli 202616 min
episode Trump’s frantic social media spiral was disturbing, even for him artwork

Trump’s frantic social media spiral was disturbing, even for him

At 12:36 in the morning, shortly after the fireworks had exploded overhead from America's 250th birthday celebration, the President of the United States was already back on Truth Social with his first post of the day, which seemed innocent enough: "Best fireworks show, EVER!" But less than twenty-four hours later, that post would mark one of Donald Trump's most frantic social media spirals in a very long time. Over the course of the day, he posted or reposted more than 100 times, including 67 posts in just two hours. Based on the events of 7-5-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump posted or reposted more than 100 times in a single day, 67 of them in just two hours * A meme of Italian PM Giorgia Meloni with "RESTRAINING ORDER NEEDED," 48 hours before they are expected at a NATO summit together * Italian media called it a "disturbing qualitative leap" and "theater of digital contempt," with even ally Matteo Salvini warning against it * A fake image of Barack and Michelle Obama on Air Force One covered in graffiti, echoing the ape video he posted five months earlier * A side-by-side of Melania Trump and Hillary Clinton framed to reduce a former Senator and Secretary of State to her appearance * A billboard threatening jail over "election fraud," pre-loading justification to reject any midterm result * An authoritarian propaganda image of Trump as a towering military figure commanding jets over a sky consumed by fire * Why the image evoked Soviet, Mussolini, and North Korean cult-of-personality aesthetics, not a constitutional president * Trump declaring himself "Number 1 on TikTok" as though it were a defining presidential achievement * Resharing a post using the phrase "suicidal empathy," a white nationalist term treating compassion as civilizational self-destruction * The morning after hundreds of white nationalists marched through the capital * Trump's most honest post: if Democrats add states, expand representation, and end the filibuster, "it will be impossible for a Republican to ever be elected President again" * Why he was describing a fair system, and admitting his party cannot survive one * Not one of the 100+ posts was about healthcare, wages, housing, or the cost of groceries * Patriot Front's march through D.C., and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum's refusal on CNN to condemn the group * Fox host Laura Ingraham calling the white nationalist march "fake" * The Newport Beach Fourth of July chaos and how it was immediately folded into a familiar political narrative * Why division is not just a consequence of this presidency but its only consistent product The posting spree is not the behavior of a person who is winning. It is the behavior of a man who knows the ground is shifting beneath him. Instead of spending his Sunday making life better for a single American, he spent it posting more than a hundred times, trying to make himself feel bigger. In November, we will do the one thing he admitted he fears most: participate in a democracy where every eligible voice counts equally. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

7. juli 202620 min