86 (get rid of?) President No 47?
New Trump-Centered Passport

Crowning King Corruption
As [British King Charles] delivered remarks to Congress, the official White House X account posted a photo from the monarch’s visit to the White House earlier today. The image shows Trump and Charles laughing, with the caption “TWO KINGS.”
MS Now, April 28th.
In China, more than half a century before the birth of Christ, the productive center of the country, the richest farmland generated profound wealth for the Zhou Dukes who carved up the territory. It was the time of Confucius. Three centuries later, power was consolidated into the first Qin Dynasty, led by Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of China; it was the era where the legions of Terracotta Soldiers were sculpted to accompany him into the afterlife. No one was allowed to make eye-contact with any of these dukes or, perish the thought, make a statement that contradicted any duke’s perception. The penalty was instant death. It was the time that indirect speech, avoidance of photo realistic art (impressionism with ambiguous symbolism was the rule), and “plausible deniability” became part of Chinese culture. A survivalist approach to explain why a statement could not possibly be a contradiction a of a leader’s perception.
How does Chinese this plausible deniability work? Well, if you must say anything about a Zhou duke’s “my way is the only way” statement, you might at least couch your position by saying, “there are a thousand stars in the sky,” so you could retort defensively, “I was only talking about stars.” That might work, and the duke wouldn’t have to label you a “low IQ” individual… or chop off your head. Donald Trump is perhaps the most self-centered leader on the planet, cares little or nothing for any suffering he may have caused, and while he has not yet executed any of the masses of Americans who disagree, he has very ineffectively ordered his Department of Justice (and “Retribution”?) to seek criminal indictments of his opponents to put them in prison for a very long time.
Ignoring the Constitution, US Attorney-Trump-toadies in various US Attorney offices have pursued indictments for various serious crimes against Trump’s outspoken opponents, almost always resulting in grand jury refusals to indict or a federal judge dismissing any indictments that were issued as either violating constitutionally protected actions or that the purported violative speech is just too flimsy to sustain a criminal cause of action. Take for example the recent federal indictment of Trump nemesis, former FBI Director, James Comey, who posted the above seashell photo on his Instagram account. As absurd as it sounds, the Trump administration decried the photo as a threat to assassinate the President, with the DOJ’s securing an unsustainable grand jury indictment on that basis.
Not only is Donald Trump, currently one of least popular presidents in US history, evincing symptoms of severe mental and physical decline, but he seems to be expanding his parallel universe – where the world worships, exalts and treats him like the most important leader on Earth – into reconfiguring his litany of serious policy errors into triumphs worthy of deep admiration. Trump’s center of the universe self-perception has been unabashedly depicted on his Truth Social platform, as a pope, a full-dress king, Jesus Christ or being tightly embraced by Jesus Christ. Add to this pattern of self-aggrandizement the notion that Donald Trump, directly or through his family, can operate with virtual impunity to make billions and billions of dollars
It’s not as if the United States has never witnessed financial corruption by its president before. As illustrated by The Atlantic’s recently republished a July 10, 2025 article by Casey Michel entitled America Has Never Seen Corruption Like This tells us: “The White House has seen its share of shady deals. Ulysses S. Grant’s brother-in-law used his family ties to engineer an insider-trading scheme that tanked the gold market. Warren Harding’s secretary of the interior secretly leased land to oil barons, who paid a fortune for his troubles. To bankroll Richard Nixon’s reelection, corporate executives sneaked suitcases full of cash into the capital.
“But Americans have never witnessed anything like the corruption that President Donald Trump and his inner circle have perpetrated in recent months. Its brazenness, volume, and variety defy historical comparison, even in a country with a centuries-long history of grift—including, notably, Trump’s first four years in office. Indeed, his second term makes the financial scandals of his first—foreign regimes staying at Trump’s hotel in Washington, D.C.; the (aborted) plan to host the G7 at Trump’s hotel in Florida—seem quaint… Trump 2.0 is just getting started, yet it already represents the high-water mark of American kleptocracy. There are good reasons to think it will get much worse.
“Virtually every week, the Trump family seems to find a new way to profit from the presidency. The Trump Organization has brokered a growing catalog of real-estate projects with autocratic regimes, including a Trump tower in Saudi Arabia, a Trump hotel in Oman, and a Trump golf club in Vietnam. ‘We’re the hottest brand in the world right now,’ Eric Trump recently proclaimed. In May, Qatar gave the White House a $400 million jet—a gift that looked a lot like a bribe but that Trump had no qualms accepting.
“And that’s just the foreign front. Domestically, Trump has used flimsy complaints to go after media organizations, resulting in settlements that resemble shakedowns. Last year, he accused 60 Minutes of deceptively editing an interview with his Democratic presidential opponent, Kamala Harris. Legal experts saw the claim as weak. Rather than fighting it in court, however, Paramount agreed to pay $16 million, which will subsidize Trump’s future presidential library and cover his legal fees. Following a similarly dubious lawsuit, ABC sent $15 million to Trump’s library fund and issued a ‘statement of regret.’
“Beyond the court, the president has peddled Trump perfumes, Trump sneakers, and Trump phones, shamelessly using the prestige of the presidency to boost his family’s income. And then there’s crypto: the $TRUMP meme coin, the pay-to-play dinners with investors, the paused prosecution of a crypto kingpin who had purchased $30 million in Trump-backed tokens.
“‘The law is totally on my side,’ Trump said after his election in 2016, when he was asked about mixing his financial affairs with his new office. ‘The president can’t have a conflict of interest.’ That statement is now alarmingly close to the truth. Thanks to last year’s Supreme Court ruling, Trump has presumptive immunity from criminal prosecution for any ‘official act.’ He has appointed an attorney general, Pam Bondi [even she wasn’t extreme enough for Trump], who appears willing to do his bidding no matter the cost to the Department of Justice. He has gutted independent bodies that went after white-collar criminal networks, task forces that investigated kleptocracy, public prosecutors that chased public corruption, and regulations that targeted transnational money laundering.
“The list goes on. Trump’s Treasury Department effectively terminated America’s new shell-company registry. His DOJ dissolved task forces that seized stolen assets. The administration froze the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, the bedrock of America’s antibribery regime. In sum, Trump has dismantled a network of agencies, laws, and norms that thwarted all kinds of kleptocracy, including the kind that enriches a sitting president.
“Foreign agents are watching as America’s anti-corruption regime crumbles. They see an extraordinary window of opportunity, and they know they’ll have to act quickly to take full advantage. Succoring Trump and his family has already proved one of the fastest ways to guarantee favorable policy. Are U.S. sanctions hurting your economy? Consider building a Trump resort. Want to stay in America’s good graces? Invest in Trump-backed crypto.
“All of this grifting is likely to accelerate. Consider the Qatari jet. The gift prompted plenty of hand-wringing in the United States, but also in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, which saw their regional foe gain leverage over them by charming Trump. Don’t think of the jet as the culmination of the president’s greed; think of it as the new bar for bids to come. Any Middle Eastern dictator who wants to surpass Qatar in America’s estimation now knows his price.” And billionaires seeking continued special treatment in government approvals and contracts know that when Trump asks for a donation for a pet project (say, a garish White House ballroom), stepping up with a big dollar number is simply the price of admission.
I’m Peter Dekom, and aside from my not wanting an international pariah’s photograph in my passport, Donald Trump has become a global blend of autocrat and senior American grifter, who should be considered a serious threat, our con-artist-in-chief and an embarrassment to all Americans.