By Ben Meiselas
Hi all, hope you are enjoying your weekend. Our researchers at MeidasTouch and I have been tracking all the latest news Saturday, and it’s been just one crisis another the other for the Trump regime. Let me break it down for you. I’ll keep this quick.
Trump is still reeling from the newly released images from the Epstein estate. Rather than confront the substance of what those materials reveal and just be honest with the American people, the administration accused Democrats of “selectively releasing photos” to make the president “look bad.” It’s hard to square that accusation with the fact that in the release, there were images of Democrats, including a former Democratic president, with Jeffrey Epstein as well. But Trump’s response says everything about where we are.
If the president truly had no meaningful relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, transparency would be the obvious remedy. Release the full files. Let the public see the record. Instead, the White House is attempting to discredit disclosure itself. The images, drawn from Epstein’s own materials, raise disturbing questions about Trump’s proximity to Epstein and the world he inhabited. Blaming others for exposing evidence is not a defense. Claiming you had “nothing” to do with Epstein despite all the evidence to the contrary just raises suspicion.
That panic was compounded by grim developments abroad. In Syria, we’ve just learned that two U.S. service members and an interpreter were killed in an ambush by an ISIS-affiliated group. It was a sobering reminder that the world does not pause for presidential theatrics. Just because Trump repeatedly says he’s “defeated ISIS,” that does not make it true. Trump’s approach to foreign policy continues to be defined by spectacle and self-promotion rather than seriousness. The consequences are measured not in headlines, but in lives.
The same pattern played out in Southeast Asia. Just days ago, Trump boasted online that he had personally brokered a ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia, declaring that “they have agreed to cease all shooting, effective this evening.” The claim was false. Thai officials publicly denied it as clashes continued along the border, with dozens killed and many more injured. Regional diplomacy had been led by other actors, including Malaysia and China. Trump did not just exaggerate his role; he injected confusion into an already volatile situation.
This is not an isolated incident. We have seen similar claims about Gaza, where Trump heralded a “historic peace deal” that never materialized. There was no ceasefire agreement, no signatures, no binding commitments. Israeli airstrikes continued, including attacks reported just this weekend. In Ukraine, Russia launched new ballistic and drone strikes against ports in Odesa, damaging civilian infrastructure. None of this aligns with the president’s self-portrait as a global peacemaker. The wars rage on. And Trump’s lies about “peace” are making the world a more dangerous place.
At home, the administration’s moral vacuum is even clearer. In a matter of days, enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies are set to expire, threatening sharp premium increases for roughly 24 million Americans. This is an imminent harm that could be prevented with a simple extension. Instead, Republicans in power are allowing it to lapse. When asked about the millions facing higher costs or loss of coverage, Trump dismissed the concern, telling reporters to “stop being so dramatic.”
That response captures the cruelty at the heart of this moment. A governing party is openly advancing a platform that strips health care away from working families. Right-leaning media outlets have largely ignored the story, while centrist and left-leaning outlets report the obvious reality: higher costs and worse coverage are coming unless action is taken.
Even as Americans brace for that impact, the president’s political operation continues to solicit money as if he were perpetually campaigning. Supporters receive messages crafted to feel personal and urgent, asking for donations to meet artificial “deadlines.” It is a familiar grift, one that persists despite the fact that Trump already occupies the Oval Office. Governance, it seems, is secondary to fundraising.
Layered on top of all this are growing concerns about the president’s health and fitness, fueled by visible signs that the White House waves away with implausible explanations. Transparency would serve the public interest. Deflection only deepens distrust.
Taken together, these threads form a coherent picture. A president under pressure from revelations about his past responds not with accountability, but with attacks on those revealing the truth. A president confronted with war and instability abroad responds with false boasts and misinformation. A president facing a preventable domestic crisis responds with mockery.
Democracy depends on an informed public and leaders willing to face facts, however uncomfortable. What we are witnessing instead is a presidency that treats truth as an enemy and accountability as optional. The Epstein files, the false ceasefires, the looming health-care cliff, all of it points in the same direction. We will continue to insist on transparency, reality, and humanity in the face of a presidency that has abandoned all three, no matter how enraged that makes the regime.













