Trump's staged McDonald's stunt was deeply revealing
カートのアイテムが多すぎます
カートに追加できませんでした。
ウィッシュリストに追加できませんでした。
ほしい物リストの削除に失敗しました。
ポッドキャストのフォローに失敗しました
ポッドキャストのフォロー解除に失敗しました
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概要
Trump's staged McDonald's stunt outside the Oval Office revealed far more than his team intended. What was billed as a feel-good photo op with a DoorDash driver became a disturbing window into his physical decline, his delusions of grandeur, his willingness to exploit a family's suffering for political theater, and the widening gap between his manufactured image and the reality Americans can plainly see.
The Breakdown: Trump staged a McDonald's delivery photo op outside the Oval Office, complete with a DoorDash driver in a branded shirt, then openly asked reporters, "This doesn't look staged, does it?" The event used Sharon Simmons, a DoorDash driver whose husband is undergoing cancer treatment, as a prop in a White House performance about tax refunds and generosity Trump looked visibly drained and diminished, despite the carefully pressed suit and staged visuals, reinforcing growing concerns about his physical decline When Sharon awkwardly answered "maybe" after Trump assumed she had voted for him, he ignored what she actually said and kept narrating the scene the way he wanted it to be Trump turned Sharon's warmth into a weapon against the press, calling reporters "not the nicest people" while using her presence to stage-manage the interaction He handed Sharon a $100 bill on camera after being reminded to tip, a hollow gesture from a man whose net worth has soared while families like hers are being crushed by medical debt Trump defended the AI image of himself depicted as Jesus Christ by saying, "It wasn't a picture, it was me," then tried to dismiss it as him being shown as a doctor or Red Cross worker He used Sharon's husband's cancer treatment and her tax refund to support his fantasy that he "make[s] people a lot better," directly linking a blasphemous self-image to a family's real suffering Trump confirmed the naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz had already begun, discussing an act of war and rising gas prices while standing beside a woman whose job depends on driving He suggested the U.S. might escalate further against Iran, talked casually about oil companies doing very well, and showed once again how detached he is from what ordinary people will pay for his decisions He refused to apologize to Pope Leo, attacked him again for opposing the war, and twisted calls for peace into support for nuclear annihilation When Trump tried to drag Sharon into a culture-war talking point about women’s sports, she calmly refused and said, "No, I'm here about no tax on tips," becoming the most honest person in the entire spectacle Trump casually talked about stopping by Cuba after finishing other matters, continuing his habit of speaking about sovereign nations as if they are personal errands or possessions He ended by raving about building a UFC-style arena on the White House grounds for his birthday, turning the presidency into spectacle while the authoritarian model he idolized is collapsing abroad The bigger story is not strength, but decline, a man retreating deeper into pageantry, self-mythology, and propaganda as his base fractures and democratic movements gain ground from Brazil to Poland to Hungary
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