I'd like to kick off 2026 by wishing everybody a happy new year, but I can't.
It's no happy new year when a president of the United States openly breaks domestic and international law by invading another country that poses no national security threat to the United States, killing innocent civilians, kidnapping its president and first lady - and lying to the American people about it.
It's no happy new year when, on the fifth anniversary of the Jan. 6 insurrection, a president of the United States issues a statement from the White House praising 1,600 armed rioters who stormed the U. S. Capitol as "patriots" and then blaming Democrats and Capitol Hill police officers for starting the assault.
It's no happy new year when an American citizen in Minneapolis is murdered by an ICE agent while simply trying to drive away from the scene, and a president of the United States, without any evidence, calls her a "professional agitator" who was "very disorderly," and accuses her of "running over" an ICE officer, which she clearly did not do.
And, may I remind you, we're barely one week into 2026.
By any definition, we are now a country in utter chaos. There are no rules. If there are, there's no one to enforce them. There's no law. If so, there's no one, courts or Congress, willing to uphold the law. There's no truth. But only a continuing cascade of big lies. So many colossal lies, repeated so often, as Hitler proved with his "Big Lie" theory, that a clueless populace starts to believe them.
For those who still believe in the rule of law and the primacy of truth, the challenge is how to respond to Trump's daily, reckless, illegal actions. Unfortunately, Steve Bannon's "flood the zone" strategy is working. We hardly have time to respond to the latest Trump outrage before he drops another one. But we can and must hold him responsible for each and every outrage - and make sure the American people know how dangerous he is.
Let's start with this week. There's no justification for Trump's invasion of Venezuela. Period. It's a total violation of international law, including treaties which the United States has ratified. Venezuela is no national security threat to the United States. Venezuela has never attacked any American citizens or property. Venezuela's responsible for only a tiny sliver of illegal drugs coming into the United States. There's no way Trump can justify blowing up small boats off the coast of Venezuela, seizing its oil tankers or kidnapping its admittedly illegally elected leader as a matter of self-defense.
It's also, of course, a total repudiation of his campaign promises to focus on "America First," to avoid "endless foreign wars," and, especially, not to engage in any "regime change." Promises made, promises broken. Like Vietnam, Iran, Afghanistan and Iraq, here we go with another ill-fated U.S. attempt at regime change, this one all Donald Trump's.
And, as it turns out, it's not about trafficking in illegal drugs, as Trump first declared. It's all about oil. Trump admits he talked to American oil companies before and after attacking Venezuela - while keeping Congress in the dark. Wednesday's New York Times headline blared: "Chevron Set to Reel in Big Rewards in Venezuela." And you can bet that, somehow, the Trump crime family will get a slice of those profits.
This January 6, Trump, again, blatantly lied about the 2020 election being stolen. But blaming Capitol Hill police officers, who responded on Jan. 6, 2021, five of whom lost their lives, with "provocative tactics" and turning "a peaceful demonstration into chaos" is a new low, even for Donald Trump.
As quick as he was to blame Capitol Hill police for starting a riot, Trump was even quicker to defend ICE officers in Minneapolis for murdering an innocent American woman, Renee Nicole Good - contradicting reports by state and local law enforcement officials and ignoring the evidence seen on video by millions of Americans.
If you think you see a common thread here, you're right. Three events this week unmask the essence of the Trump regime: Might makes right. We have the power and we have the right to exercise it anyhow, anywhere, any time we want - against perceived enemies at home or abroad - regardless of the law - and by violence, if necessary. For him, violence is good.
I fear for my country. This year will not be a happy year until we block this monster in the November midterms. I hope we still have a country left by then.
(C)2026 Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
When Susie Wiles agreed to be Donald Trump's chief of staff, one of the first things she did was huddle with former chiefs to get their advice. Reportedly, they told her one thing she should definitely not do was talk to Chris Whipple.
Fortunately for all of us, Wiles did not take their advice. Whipple, a well-respected reporter and author of the 2017 classic "The Gatekeepers: How the White House Chiefs of Staff Define Every Presidency," is known as the walking encyclopedia of chiefs of staff. But Wiles not only agreed to talk with him, she gave him 11 interviews over the last 11 months - every one of them, as she agreed, recorded on tape - and revealed by Whipple in this month's Vanity Fair. It's worth subscribing to, just to read the whole article.
All I can say is: Thank you, Susie! For me, it's the first present under the Christmas tree. Just in time for the holidays, Susie Wiles has given us all a gift: a peek behind the curtain into the personalities and workings of the Trump White House. And it ain't pretty.
While Wiles continues to profess her loyalty to the Trump team, she proceeds to dump on the whole bunch of them, starting with the president himself. Initially, she recounts, Trump agreed to limit retaliation against his perceived political enemies to his first 90 days in office. Promise broken. With the total cooperation of Attorney General Pam Bondi (more later), he's still busy at score-settling.
About January 6, Wiles told Whipple she tried to persuade Trump to pardon only those who just wandered into the Capitol without engaging in any violence, and certainly not those who were seen on camera assaulting police officers. Trump refused. He insisted on pardoning the whole lot.
Surprisingly, Wiles also admitted she believed Trump's tariffs were more harmful than he would admit, suggested his anti-immigration crusade had gone too far and said Trump was dead wrong when he claimed that Bill Clinton had once visited Jeffrey Epstein's island.
Asked to describe what it was like being so close to Trump, Wiles told Whipple it was like working for someone with an "alcoholic's personality" - which Trump immediately said he considered a compliment. Really? Medical experts list the following personality traits of an alcoholic: self-centeredness (prioritizing personal needs); impulsiveness (difficulty controlling urges); manipulativeness (use of deceitful tactics); emotional instability (exaggerated emotional reactions); defensiveness (irritable when confronted); and perfectionism (unrealistic self-expectations).
That may define Trump to a "t," but only in Trump's world would that be considered a compliment.
After undermining the image of Trump himself, Wiles proceeded to belittle many of those around him. She put down Vice President JD Vance as a "calculating conspiracy theorist," dismissed HHS Secretary RFK Jr. as "quirky Bobby," called OMB Director Russell Vought a "right-wing absolute zealot," and dismissed one-time Trump pal Elon Musk as an "odd, odd duck" and "avowed ketamine user."
Among Cabinet members, most of Wile's scorn was directed against AG Pam Bondi for her handling of the Jeffrey Epstein matter, starting with Bondi's distributing binders about Epstein to a group of social media influencers at the White House in February. "I think she completely whiffed on appreciating that that was the very targeted group that cared about this," Wiles said of Bondi. "First she gave them binders full of nothingness. And then she said that the witness list, or the client list, was on her desk. There is no client list, and it sure as hell wasn't on her desk."
For me, the most stunning quote in the interviews was Wiles description of her own job. "I hear stories from my predecessors about these seminal moments where you have to go in and tell the president what he wants to do is unconstitutional or will cost lives. I don't have that," Wiles told Whipple. WTF? If that's not her job, what is her job?
Upon publication, in true Trumpian fashion, Wiles attacked the Vanity Fair article as a "hit piece." But nobody believes her. She agreed to the interviews. Every one of them was taped. And the White House has not cited one case where she was misquoted.
Unwittingly, perhaps, Susie Wiles has performed a valuable public service. She has confirmed our worst beliefs in how bad things really are in the White House. The United States is led today by a bunch of amateurs, not one of whom, starting with Donald Trump, is qualified for the job they hold. God save the Republic.
(C)2025 Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Pete Hegseth: Yes, Virginia, there is still a Santa Claus
If there's one thing never-Trumpers need this holiday season - and, remember, we are the majority of Americans! - it's a bit of good cheer. Here it is.
First, let's not kid ourselves. These are still perilous times. Every day, Donald Trump does something more outrageous, more destructive, more un-American - and gets away with it. In the last few weeks alone, he's launched an illegal war against Venezuela, blowing up 23 small boats and intercepting an oil tanker on the high seas; declared France, Italy, Germany, and Spain America's new enemy; pardoned the former president of Honduras convicted in helping smuggle tons of cocaine into the United States; torn down the East Wing of the White House; sent the military into Washington, Los Angeles, Chicago, Memphis and New Orleans; unleashed ICE to track down and arrest brown-skinned American citizens; admitted he would personally intervene in the competition between Netflix and Paramount over who would buy Warner Brothers in order to kill CNN. And announced the EPA is loosening rules on exposure to formaldehyde, which is just what families need, instead of lower grocery prices.
Sheesh! It's too much to keep up with. There's not enough outrage to go around. As the New Yorker's Susan Glasser recently wrote, the "new normal is we have to forget about yesterday's scandals in order to make room in our brain for tomorrow's."
However, as bleak as it is, I see glimmers of hope, no matter how faint, in two places: Trump's political problems and personal problems.
Start with the political. Almost every candidate Trump endorsed this year lost. He lost in the Virginia race for governor, the New Jersey race for governor, the mayor's race in New York City - and this week he lost in the mayor's race in Miami. In a stunning win, Eileen Higgins became the first Democrat to lead Miami in almost 30 years, trouncing Trump-endorsed Emilio Gonzalez 59 percent to 41 percent.
Democrats also won down-ballot races: flipping two state Senate seats in Mississippi; electing two Democrats to the Georgia Public Service Commission; flipping 13 seats in the Virginia House of Delegates; and confirming three Democrats to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The only race a Trump-endorsed candidate won was last week's special congressional election in Tennessee. But, even there, Republican Matt Van Epps only won by 9 points in a district Trump carried by 22.
The numbers don't lie. Trump's a political loser, and everybody knows it.
But Trump's also in trouble on the personal front. There are signs he's suffering from both physical and mental decline. While the White House is in total denial, two headlines generated a lot of news this week. The Express blared: "White House in State of Panic as Trump Keeps Falling Asleep." And the Drudge Report asked: "Why Hasn't His Hand Healed?"
Twice this week, Trump was caught on camera dozing off. During a three-hour Cabinet meeting, while Secretary of State Marco Rubio was praising his foreign policy prowess, Trump, sitting next to him, slumped back in his chair with eyes closed, clearly catching a few z's. He also dozed off the next day while hosting leaders of Rwanda and the Congo. Looks like "Sleepy Joe" has been replaced by "Dozing Don."
Also caught on camera, and tracked for months by the Drudge Report, Trump often wears a bandage on his right hand, which also appears swollen. The White House shrugs it off as the result of shaking so many hands, but several medical professionals have raised questions about signs of serious venous insufficiency. He was spotted with one or two bandages on his right hand every day last week.
And then there's Trump's mental health, or lack thereof. For years, leading psychiatrists have warned that Trump is mentally unfit to be president, which is more and more evident each passing day. Any doubts about his mental illness disappeared after a 488-word rant Trump released in the middle of the night, December 10, on Truth Social.
It's not enough to read it. As MS-NOW's Philip Bump said, you have to hear it out loud to make "the bonkers-ness sink in." So here, dear friends, thanks to AI, is a link to the president of the United States howling at the moon. Listen and cringe.
If the CEO of any company acted that way, he'd have been escorted out of the office by health professionals in white coats.
So, yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. The wheels are starting to come off the Trump train. Just not fast enough.
(C)2025 Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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