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Trump's policy incompetence will lead to his downfall, but he only capitalized on existing American discontent. This demand for revolution will remain, awaiting a new leader from the left or right.

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The appeal of a populist leader lies in their rejection of traditional political norms. When the electorate feels betrayed by the established "political class," they gravitate toward figures whose rhetoric is a deliberate and stark contrast, signaling they are an outsider.

Trump's 'America First' platform was not a random occurrence but a predictable backlash against the US establishment's post-Cold War excesses. Policies like 'hyper-globalization' and 'forever wars' created domestic discontent and a loss of faith in traditional foreign policy, which Trump successfully exploited.

Leaders don't just shape the times; they are shaped by them. Their temperament and actions are a reflection of the collective public mood. Comparing Obama's rise in an era of optimism to Trump's in a populist moment shows how the electorate projects its desires onto a candidate.

Populist figures don't create societal problems; they rise to power because existing economic and social issues create an environment where their message resonates. To solve the problem, you must address the underlying conditions, not just the leader who represents them.

Extreme inequality and inflation, driven by debt and money printing, create widespread frustration. This frustration "summons" populist figures like Trump, who are seen as chaos agents to disrupt a rigged system, rather than being the root cause of the political anger themselves.

Figures like Donald Trump don't create populist movements; they rise by capitalizing on pre-existing societal problems like economic despair. Focusing on removing the leader ignores the root causes that allowed them to gain power, ensuring another similar figure will eventually emerge.

Political figures like Donald Trump don't create movements but are instead elevated by pre-existing societal moods. They succeed by reflecting the populace's will to stay in power, not by shaping it. Had Trump run in the 90s, he would have failed.

Donald Trump is not the root cause of America's instability but rather a symptom of deeper, long-term issues. These include a decades-long breakdown in institutional trust, the collapse of the "American dream" of upward mobility, and extreme inequality. Focusing solely on Trump distracts from these more fundamental drivers of political crisis.

The perception of national decline in the US is not limited to one political side. Polling indicates that both left and right-leaning citizens believe the country's constitutional order and institutions are breaking down. The key difference is that each side is simply happy when their faction is temporarily "winning" the process of collapse.

Trump's efforts are not just breaking norms but constitute an attempt at a full-blown "political revolution." The goal is to gain direct political control over institutions like the FBI and DOJ, weaponize them against political opponents, and eliminate the checks and balances that constrain presidential power.