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    He Doesn’t Think About Your Bills—So Believe Him

    “He told you exactly who he is.” Great. If you don’t think about Americans’ financial situation, what exactly are you thinking about—your next press stop? “Believe him” is the new “don’t ask questions,” because while the quote-card insists it’s all vibes and zero brain-cells, the rest of life keeps filing evidence under Family Bills, Food Prices Up, and Gas Prices Up, with Overwhelmed in the margins and Help Wanted but Can’t Afford to Live as the fine print.

    That’s the authoritarian cosplay trick: ignore the invoice, then demand loyalty like it’s a substitute for arithmetic. The only thing he’s clearly focused on is training you to treat “I don’t think about anybody” as leadership, and the cost keeps doing the opposite of mind-reading. The newsroom raccoon can read receipts—and it’s not buying “Believe Him” as care.

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    Pricing in the ‘I don’t think about you’ plan

    He said the quiet part out loud—(allegedly) “I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation.” Cool. The receipt gets a microphone anyway: RENT $2,100/month, GROCERIES UP AGAIN, GAS 4.89/10… KEEP CLIMBING.

    Your struggle is not his priority, apparently—until “WORK HARD. STILL FALLING BEHIND.” shows up like a recurring meeting he never attends. Billionaire logic: “not thinking” is just priority theater with autopay, and the numbers still invoice you the moment you try to live.

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    The Big Lie Needs a Big Crowd: The More Evidence Piles Up, the Louder the Chanting Gets

    I swear the whole thing works like a crime scene where the evidence table is the stage: more facts arrive, and instead of the argument shrinking, the crowd expands—REPEAT IT, DEFEND IT, louder. Not because the lie suddenly becomes truer, but because “being right” has turned into a team sport where volume counts as verification. Follow the thread, but check the knot: the knot is social incentives, not reality.

    Normal people don’t wake up wanting to join a chanting club; they just want to resolve confusion without getting socially evicted. So the system hands them a script: when the evidence piles up, you don’t update—you perform. Evidence becomes a recruitment flyer. And the big lie needs a big crowd because denial isn’t a position you hold; it’s a role you keep, right up until the next round of “proof” triggers the next round of noise.

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    Duty Over Ego: The Service-Sell Test

    “SERVICE OR SELF?” is supposed to be a moral X-ray, but it keeps doing the thing cable-news loves most: turning leadership into a storefront sign. One side offers “built for others” with “put people first” and “duty over ego” as if sincerity comes with font size. The other side rolls in “built for himself”—“trump brand over everything,” “measured success in attention,” and “donor-first politics”—then swears the difference isn’t style.

    Sure. “THE DIFFERENCE ISN’T STYLE. IT’S WHO THEY SERVE.” And the punchline is that the test is itself packaging: it’s a service sermon delivered like a personal brand pitch. If the proof is mostly slogans and vibes, then what you’re really choosing isn’t leadership—it’s who gets to feel served while everyone else pays the real bill.

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    Culture Wars, Class Loot

    You got culture wars. They got class war. The system keeps you mad at teachers, mad at immigrants, mad at books—because that’s a nice, loud menu item that fits in a push notification. Meanwhile the part with the grown-ups happens off to the side: while CEO pay goes through the roof, your cost of living keeps climbing like it’s on auto-renew.

    Then comes the RSVP question: “Distracted yet? That was the point.” Inside the Trump Tower-style executive lounge, it’s gold access, bonuses up, workers last—while “We trust Trump” plays like the customer-service script. If they keep you distracted, you’ll never notice who’s picking your pocket; you’ll be too busy auditing morals to audit the incentives.

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    When Facts Fail, Faith Prevails: Truth Is Treason, Doubt Is Weakness

    When truth is treated like treason and doubt gets stamped “weakness,” the whole operation stops being politics and starts being liturgy: keep nodding, keep praising, keep pretending the receipts are holy. Peace be with you comes right after it trains people to call “I don’t understand” a character flaw and “you were wrong” a personal attack.

    And the neighbors who actually need answers—workers, voters, tenants, the folks paying for the miracle—get handled like security threats for asking for basic reality. Meanwhile the cult’s devotion stays “unbroken,” the way a preacher’s collar stays crisp: the golden calf doesn’t need facts; it needs obedience, and somehow the merch always sells.

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    I Love All People—Except Poor People in “Those Particular Positions”

    I love all people, rich or poor. But in those particular positions, I just don’t want a poor person. That’s not a moral philosophy—it’s customer service with a velvet rope. Everyone’s welcome to feel the vibes, right up until the moment a poor person might apply for the decision room and suddenly “access” becomes a staffing requirement.

    Then the receipt arrives like it always does: “Government of the wealthy, by the wealthy, for the wealthy.” Call it benevolence, call it tradition, call it “governance.” Either way, the loving part is the marketing, and the selecting part is the fine print.

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    If the Story Changes, the Followers Change With It

    In the cult of denial, the “update” isn’t learning—it’s editing reality’s entrance requirements: “See No Evidence” on the left, “Hear No Facts” on the right, and a leadership-at-the-front that never has to sweat over what happened. Then comes the line that tells you everything: “If the story changes, the followers change with it.” Not because the world got clearer—because the tribe got threatened.

    I’ve sat through enough confessions (and enough press releases in a collar) to recognize the same moral trick: when truth costs you comfort, denial becomes a sacrament. But if evidence is always the enemy and facts are always the distraction, the “truth test” stops testing truth and starts testing loyalty. Peace be with the neighbor who wants receipts; mercy be with the voter being told that ignoring them is the same thing as being faithful.

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    Sell Access → Protect Allies → Let Policy Follow: The “500 Days” Timeline Keeps Proving the Pattern

    In the “FOLLOW THE MONEY” 500-day universe, the government isn’t run on process—it’s run on the customer-service button labeled SELL ACCESS. PROTECT ALLIES. AND LET POLICY FOLLOW. The way it works (at least in the alleged category-swapper math) is simple: Nov. 7 brings Trump-branded wine and cider to military-store aisles, because nothing says “public service” like insider perks in uniform packaging.

    Then Nov. 14 hits with the second leg of the combo: connected lobbyists, then—poof—Joseph Schwartz shows up with a presidential pardon. Finally Dec. 2 is the checkout screen: BUY LUNCH, DROP THE RULE, and suddenly the nursing-home staffing requirement is the only thing that can’t survive contact with preferred access. Policy “follows,” sure—just not voters, not patients, and not the people waiting for basic fairness while the rich ones get expedited shipping.

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    Follow the Record, Not the 12-Hour Hype

    Now, if Watergate was really the “12-hour news story” everybody-summarize-and-sprint crowd wants, you’d expect the calendar to stop when the soundbite stops. But the record’s running a different clock: “783 DAYS BREAK-IN TO RESIGNATION” and then “1,782 DAYS BREAK-IN TO FROST BROADCAST.” That’s not a microwave; that’s a full smoker session of consequences—served cold for anybody hoping we’d forget on schedule.

    And that Nixon line—“LET THE AMERICAN PEOPLE DOWN.”—doesn’t land overnight either, because the record has it airing nationwide nearly three years after he’s already gone. So when the “deep state” cosplay starts, just remember the real fast part: not the scandal timeline—the blame-vibe switch. Follow the record, and the hype loses its punch.

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