Saturday, February 07, 2026

The Fifth Circuit Jumps the Immigration Detention Shark

 

Trump's Meme About the Obamas is Vile and Racist, and No, It Won't Lose Him a Single Supporter


Trump's Meme About the Obamas is Vile and Racist, and No, It Won't Lose Him a Single Supporter
Feb 06, 2026
Donald Trump shared an unspeakably racist meme about President Obama and Michelle Obama on social media.
With our nation stretched to its breaking point by a litany of Constitutional crises and human rights emergencies, just a hair’s breadth from exploding into inexorable chaos, our sitting president used the unrivaled platform he has been given to perpetuate one of the longest-running and most dehumanizing stereotypes about people of color.
It is a historic dereliction of duty, a gross and unprecedented failure of leadership; it is dangerous, damaging, deadly.
And before you start thinking anything crazy, I just want to remind you (and myself) that we’ve been here before:
This is gonna end him.
This will be the tipping point.
This is the red line.
He’s finally gone too far.
How many times over the last ten years have you said this or thought this?
How many times have you heard this from well-meaning friends, trusted journalists, beloved podcasters, or even from me?
How many new additions to his vast resume of filth convinced us all that this would be the moment when our friends, family members, and neighbors finally had the scales removed from their eyes, when their buried humanity would show itself, when they would be broken from their mindless cultic stupor and reject him?
When he mocked a disabled reporter.
When he urged rally protestors to be beaten.
When he boasted about grabbing women by the genitalia.
When he mocked a decorated prisoner of war.
When he called veterans suckers and losers.
When he talked about a female reporter’s menstrual cycle.
When he shrugged off hundreds of thousands of pandemic deaths.
When he incited a violent insurrection at our Capitol.
When he screamed about immigrants eating family pets.
When he slandered citizens executed in the streets of Minneapolis.
When he berated a female journalist for asking about the burying of a human trafficking investigation, his name appears in thousands of times

If I had space here, I could easily list a thousand such moments when reasonable human beings were positive that we’d arrived at a nadir of morality, a political Waterloo, one that would precipitate the exodus of the brainwashed sycophants and empty-headed disciples who allowed him to ascend to a place he was never worthy of.
And yet, here we are, with this snarling, repugnant cesspool of a man once again slumped upon the highest seat in our nation and almost by the hour, tearing apart everything our forebears and ancestors spent two hundred and fifty years building.
And we’re here because tens of millions of people with whom we share this beautiful land have deemed every single bit of moral filth that has erupted from within his dead and blackened heart acceptable.
No violent rhetoric toward individuals or people groups has been a moral dealbreaker. No vicious attack on women or people of color or immigrants or queer people or Democrats has proven beyond the pale.
No lawless or immoral word or act has been the catalyst for their defection.
And so, no, his targeting of the Obamas with the kind of vulgar white supremacist propaganda that has forever poisoned our national bloodstream will change nothing for the people we know and love who have spent ten years fiercely tethered to him.
They will cling tightly to his side as he sinks rapidly like a bloated whale carcass toward an ever-deepening moral bottom, because they either harbor that same bigoted ignorance or they lack the courage to oppose it.
If they were people possessing the decency and goodness we still give them credit for, they would have abandoned him long ago.
They will have no great awakening.
They will not publicly condemn him.
There will be no epiphanies or moments of clarity.

He is them, and they are him, and that’s just how this is.
And since they will not part from him, we will need to part from them.

Trump’s Obama Derangement Syndrome

 

Maureen Dowd

Trump’s Obama Derangement Syndrome

Feb. 7, 2026, 7:00 a.m. ET

 

By Maureen Dowd

Opinion Columnist, reporting from Washington

It seems etymologically, metaphysically, geologically and ethically impossible that President Trump could reach a new low. But he has.

Every Friday, when I’m planning my column, I find fresh evidence that the president is unfit for his office. He taunts his foes in crude, creepy ways and tries to tattoo his name on everything.

Late Thursday night, a vile clip appeared on Truth Social, depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as apes in a jungle cartoon, to the Tokens’ “The Lion Sleeps Tonight.” It was at the end of a video filled with baseless conspiracy theories about the 2020 election. The man who pushed the despicable “birther” conspiracy is still at it, using a racist meme from a far-right Pepe-the-frog-loving acolyte.

Like many of Trump’s actions, it was both shocking and predictable.

As The Times reported, Trump has a “history of making degrading remarks about people of color, women and immigrants,” and the Obamas in particular, with “the White House, Labor Department and Homeland Security Department all having promoted posts that echo white supremacist messaging” in his current term.

Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, offered a pathetic defense for our pathological president: “This is from an internet meme video depicting President Trump as the king of the jungle and Democrats as characters from ‘The Lion King.’ Please stop the fake outrage and report on something today that actually matters to the American public.”

Well, Karoline, I think Americans do care that your boss is a racist and off his rocker.

“His presidency is enclosed in a bubble wrap of darkness and hatred and resentment,” Rahm Emanuel, who served as Obama’s chief of staff, told me.

Once the White House realized the outrage was real, the post was deleted. Officials blamed a staffer, though you know Trump was in on it. On Wednesday, he said he does “retruth” conspiracy theories himself.

He went so far that even a few Republicans in Congress, looking down the barrel of the midterms, objected.

On X, Tim Scott of South Carolina, the only Black Republican in the Senate, called it “the most racist thing I’ve seen out of this White House.”

Senator Katie Britt, an Alabama Republican who has been increasingly put off by some of Trump’s offensive actions, said on X, “This content was rightfully removed, should have never been posted to begin with, and is not who we are as a nation.”

Trump had a Dostoyevsky-esque moment on Thursday at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, when he confessed that his ego would not let him lose the 2020 race.

“You know, they rigged the second election,” he said. “I had to win it, had to win it. I needed it for my own ego. I would have had a bad ego for the rest of my life. Now I really have a big ego, though.”

He was admitting that our ginned-up election integrity crisis was simply an exercise in bending the truth to his bottomless vanity. “His ego could not handle the fact that he lost, so he had to pretend there was a voting crisis,” David Axelrod told me. “The world is still paying for that.”

(Trump also confessed to the religious gathering that he gets annoyed when Speaker Mike Johnson asks to pray before meals. Trump dryly noted: “I say, ‘Excuse me? We’re having lunch in the Oval.’”)

After obscenely slapping his name on everything from the Kennedy Center to a gold card for rich aspiring immigrants to warships, and planning a gargantuan triumphal arch and an outsize White House ballroom as reflections of his bloated ego, Trump is now trying to strong-arm Congress into naming more things after him by holding congressionally approved funds hostage.

The administration tried extortion tactics on Chuck Schumer, threatening not to unfreeze billions for a new railroad tunnel under the Hudson River unless he helped rename Penn Station in New York and Washington Dulles International Airport after Trump.

Trump’s dragging his own name and America’s name in the muck. The word “Trump” is an epithet in many circles. But in a bizarre manifestation of insecurity, the president still wants to stamp his moniker everywhere, just as he did when he was a New York businessman prone to bankruptcy.

Trump had another quintessential Trump moment on Tuesday when he lambasted CNN’s Kaitlan Collins for not smiling as she asked him, in light of the latest release of Jeffrey Epstein filth, what he would say to the pedophile’s survivors “who feel like they haven’t gotten justice.”

He told her that it was time to move on — the latest deflection from the fact that he has never come clean about his association with the odious Epstein.

Like a shuddersome image of worms slithering from underneath a rock, a bunch of powerful and formerly respected people in America and beyond have been exposed by the Epstein files.

Many of the ultra-elite who insisted they did not know the truth about Epstein’s depravity have been unmasked as liars. Instead, as The Wall Street Journal wrote, prominent people from Noam Chomsky to Stanley Pottinger to Peter Mandelson to Michael Wolff “actively consoled him, cast him as a victim and in some cases offered advice on how to rehabilitate his image.”

And the shoes keep dropping. CNN reported on Friday that Navy Secretary John Phelan was listed as a passenger on Epstein’s private plane in 2006.

As The Times’s David Fahrenhold told CNN, the louche role of some tech billionaires in the Epstein scandal is particularly chilling because our lives in the coming years will be defined by these billionaires.

Once we saw the lords of the cloud as heroic — young geniuses who would improve our lives. Now, as Fahrenthold said, the personal failings, insecurities and midlife crises of these men are dictating the way they run their companies. We were, he said, “a little bit misplaced in sort of putting our hopes in these folks.”

They are not keeping hope alive.

 

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