Donald Trump is holding the world hostage.
True to his unstable nature, the US President messed around with global trade programs like Yo-Yo.
We capture Trump’s trigger happy whim, beyond the cost of balancing, that Trump’s trigger happy whim is taking a big blow to his tired mind.
His omnipotence is overwhelming, and most of us feel a momentary reprieve and pinned out of constant confusion.
Last week, Trump once again confirmed his talent for self-preservation, without any spots of regret over the trauma and uncertainty he caused.
Faced with volatile polls, he has announced a shaking of equity markets, a sale of the US Treasury Department, a brewing rebound within the Republican Caucus, and Trump has defended the true social media platform, and announcing a sudden reversal of the central aspects of what is considered “to be considered economic policy.”
Trump’s allies on Capitol Hill reportedly were captured unaware of the changes in the president’s bulldozing course, wondering what the Captor would do next.
The supposed “check and balance” allowed Trump’s essential modus operandi, shameful, or even worse.
In this broader context, Trump’s eligible temporary tariff pardon is not considered a “defeat” or “retreat” by the lord of Mar Lago. It is part of his ever-evolving “master strategy” to revive America’s past manufacturing capabilities.
To his legions of praisers and supporters, Trump is a mythical and unrequited fallible person, which spurs doubt as it is a symptom of debilitating.
For Trump, certainty is a virtue. The questions and introspection raised are for sissies, not strong people tasked with decreasing American “greatness.”
Trump has the answer because he is the answer.
Others may scoff at his evangelical “conversion,” but I am sure that after dodging the assassin bullet, Trump had a transformative inspiration that transformed his presidency into a messianic mission.
In the unopinional part of the speech that meandered into a congressional joint session in early March, Trump gave a pointed expression to his belief that he was saved by God’s intervention to save America.
“I think my life was saved… for very good reasons,” Trump said. “I was saved by God to make America great again. I believe in it.”
I hate being disappointed, but this may be rare when Trump is telling the truth.
Trump’s latest prescription to “make America great again” has failed grandly, but his critics are deceiving himself if he thinks “market mayhem” or some fretting billionaires brothers to urge him to abandon his chosen fate and justification.
Unlike Democrat US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR), Trump confuses stubbornness with wisdom.
FDR encouraged disaster – the collapse of finance, the drastic advances of poverty and despair, and the gatherings of foreign fascism. He was obliged to borrow phrases and make America great again.
In a speech released in May 1932, FDR addressed the uncertainty of Americans. This sparked the anxiety felt by many of most descendants of men, due to the current unpleasant and potentially sustained financial disruption.
“Through these savings, among millions of fellow citizens, its sense of safety was qualified for a land rich in natural resources and productive facilities. “What’s even more disastrous is that it disappeared in anticipation of future security and the certainty of bread and clothing today.”
The FDR solution came from experiments, not dogma.
“The country needs bold and lasting experimentation. It’s common sense to try and try it out. If you fail, be honest and admit it and try something else. But more than anything else, try something,” Roosevelt said.
The FDR approach not only exploited the federal tools, resources and ingenuity to revive America, but also meant the commander’s willingness to oscillate the rogs of orthodoxy and solidity.
His legacy wasn’t just the singular length of his revolutionary presidency. It was a good and fruitful feeling to admit that failure was inevitable.
Another unspoken meaning of FDR advice is that even the president can learn valuable lessons from making mistakes.
Experiences and insights derived from “screwing” can solve other problems that occur large, small, near and far across the presidency.
Roosevelt asked. He learned by objecting. He wanted to be challenged. He knew that the people around him enjoyed the expertise he lacked. He understood that the president didn’t know everything and that exercise his heavy responsibility sometimes required a measure of humility.
Trump prefers direction over argument. He demands and cherishes absolute loyalty to discourse and objections. He is driven by instinct and screaming, not patience or deliberation.
In any working democracy, serious initiatives are the product of serious scrutiny. Trump is all performance. He completely rejects the essential qualities that informed Roosevelt’s shrewdness: perspective and pragmatism.
The impressive irony is that Trump wants to mimic FDR by expanding his presidency to a third term, albeit illegal, if his health and popularity remained in place.
Predictable outcome? Trump never admits failure. Doing so would include Trump who recognizes that he is wrong or admits that he may be wrong.
As we know, it doesn’t happen, it doesn’t happen.
Trump’s unwavering certainty is fascinating for his acolite. His crazy care has been praised as a calculated tactic. In these unsettling and chaotic times, the illusion of a leader who claims to be perfect may be comforting. Still, it remains a mirage.
The price of Trump’s signature recalcitrance will skyrocket in days, weeks and months. The stock market is turning wildly. If the robust alliance continues to unlock, the public’s confidence will be fragile. And through the rocky turmoil, Donald Trump will remain convinced he is right.
That’s what makes America’s reckless president so dangerous.
The views expressed in this article are the authors themselves and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.