The spectacle of the American presidency has taken a dark, surreal turn as Donald Trump enters the second year of his second term. While his supporters often dismiss his behavior as mere “unfiltered” charm, a growing chorus of lawmakers and observers suggest we are witnessing something far more unstable.
Beyond the viral clips of him nodding off during high-stakes briefings, a pattern of erratic decision-making and a “shocking lack of empathy” has many wondering if the administration is truly “sustainable.” From obsessive letters to foreign leaders to a perceived abandonment of duty during national tragedies, the evidence is mounting that the shields are not just off—they have been pulverized.
Rambling Rhetoric and Global Instability.
The president’s cognitive state has become a central focus of concern following a string of increasingly “unhinged” public displays. Critics point to his “untreated logorrhea,” noting that he has spoken nearly 200% more words in his first year back than in his initial term, yet the content has grown notably more “irrational and obsessive.” In Davos, he “rambled on for a full hour and a half,” at times confusing Iceland and Greenland and admitting he raised tariffs on Switzerland simply because their female prime minister “rubbed me the wrong way.”
🚨 WATCH: Trump appears to glitch mid-sentence:
— Brian Allen (@allenanalysis) February 12, 2026
“I’m proud to officially name the undispuut— jussss… when did this come out? Mr. Speaker.”
Loses his train of thought.
Breaks off mid-word.
Looks confused.
But we’re supposed to pretend everything is “totally fine.” pic.twitter.com/i3mwE8VOMg
Perhaps most alarming was his “unhinged letter” to Norway’s prime minister, in which he appeared to link a potential seizure of Greenland to his resentment over not winning the Nobel Peace Prize. As Jamelle Bouie of The New York Times observed, Trump seems to have reached a “self-destructive mania” reminiscent of Richard Nixon’s final days, when he was seen “talking to pictures of former presidents.” With three years left in the term, the international community is left asking: “has this man lost his mind?”
Prioritizing Theatrics Over Public Safety
While the president’s mental acuity is debated, his perceived lack of “neurological fitness” is compounded by what Democrats call a gross dereliction of duty. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez recently slammed the president as “unfit” after he hosted a lavish “VIP screening” of the documentary Melania at the White House while a deadly shooting crisis unfolded in Minneapolis.
The contrast was stark: as citizens braced for a “potentially crippling ice storm” and federal agencies like FEMA were reportedly “gutted,” the East Room was filled with tech CEOs and royalty enjoying “commemorative popcorn boxes.”
“So, what is the President up to? Having a movie night at the White House. He’s unfit,” Ocasio-Cortez tweeted, echoing a sentiment that the administration is “nuttier than a Payday candy bar.” The push for accountability is growing, with social media erupting in calls for impeachment, arguing that “it’s unacceptable for a leader to be watching a movie while their institutions mess up.”
Today DHS assassinated a VA nurse in the street, Bondi is attempting to extort voter files, and half the country is bracing on the eve of a potentially crippling ice storm with FEMA gutted.
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) January 25, 2026
So what is the President up to? Having a movie night at the White House.
He’s unfit. https://t.co/fW1dzoZ8uH
The current state of the executive branch is characterized by a “manic performance art” that leaves little room for stable governance. Between the “unhinged” diplomatic threats and the refusal to acknowledge domestic crises while hosting Hollywood-style premieres, the consensus among the “Trump-deranged community” and concerned centrists alike is that the office is being used as a platform for personal grievance rather than public service.
As confidence in his “mental sharpness” dips even among some Republicans, the question is no longer if he is acting differently, but whether the country can endure a “mad king” for three more years.


















