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Who’s Really Running This Country, and to What End?

Who’s Really Running This Country, and to What End?

Chaos at the Top, Silence in Congress, and a Nation Left to Suffer

Eric Miller's avatar
Eric Miller
May 01, 2025
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Allied We Can
Allied We Can
Who’s Really Running This Country, and to What End?
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At some point, we have to stop pretending.

What’s happening right now in Washington isn’t leadership. It’s not governance. It’s a chaos machine powered by ego, blame, and fear. Trump may have the title of president, but if you look closely, it’s clear: he’s not the one in control.

When the economy buckled this week, marking the first contraction in three years, Trump rushed to his social media bunker, fingers blazing, to do what he does best: blame someone else. “This is Biden’s stock market, not Trump’s,” he posted, distancing himself from the disaster he orchestrated just 100 days into his second term. A president shrinking from responsibility while his own decisions wreak havoc. That’s not strength. That’s abdication.

But don’t expect accountability from the Trump White House. In a bizarre, televised Cabinet meeting, his officials, seated behind red MAGA hats, offered praise so sycophantic it prompted even Ann Coulter to compare it to North Korea. The performance was a parody of leadership. It was less about governance and more about theater for the man in the mirror.

And yet, with the economy hemorrhaging, with GDP shrinking and trade collapsing under the weight of Trump’s reckless tariffs, the people who could act, the House and Senate Republicans, do nothing. Why? Fear. Fear of being primaried. Fear of losing donors. Fear of falling out of step with the MAGA cult they helped build. The cost of speaking up is high, but the cost of silence is becoming unbearable.

Let’s Talk Facts

The GDP contracted by 0.3% in Q1. This follows a healthy 2.4% in the last quarter of 2024. The reversal wasn’t random. It was triggered by a desperate surge of imports ahead of Trump’s new 145% tariffs. That rush dried up inventory and spooked the markets. Shipping is grinding to a halt. Container volume at the Port of Los Angeles is expected to drop 35% with similar collapses coming to the East Coast. UPS is laying off 20,000 workers. Warehouses are freezing hiring. Amazon is pulling back. And Christmas? It’s already canceled. Toys, decorations, and holiday goods, mostly made in China, won’t make it to shelves in time. Trump shrugged. “Maybe the kids get two dolls instead of thirty,” he said, with all the empathy of a hedge fund slumlord.

It’s not just the economy unraveling. Trump’s administration is a web of contradictions. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent says the pain is part of a “strategic plan.” Meanwhile, Trade Representative Jamieson Greer insists there will be no exemptions, and White House economic adviser Stephen Miran claims tariffs will actually raise revenue. But if deals are being made, the revenue disappears. If the tariffs stay, so does the pain. No one knows who’s actually in charge, least of all Trump.

And he likes it that way

Trump isn’t interested in being president. He wants the title, the spotlight, and the applause, but not the responsibility. He makes sweeping declarations, and when the consequences come crashing down, he’s nowhere to be found. When asked about his administration’s failure to return Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an innocent man unlawfully deported, Trump blamed unnamed lawyers. “I’m not the one making this decision,” he said. When pressed, he changed the subject. That’s not leadership. That’s cowardice in a suit.

This isn’t just about one man

The real scandal is the system protecting him. Republicans in Congress could stop this. The Constitution gives them the power to control tariffs. They could vote to end Trump’s abuse of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. But they won’t. In the House, Republicans rigged the rules to prevent a vote. In the Senate, Majority Leader John Thune said Republicans are “waiting to see” if the tariffs produce good deals. Waiting while 80% of business leaders panic, trade collapses, and American jobs vanish.

What happened to checks and balances? What happened to putting country over party?

The truth is ugly: power and fear now outweigh principle.

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