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Trump’s primetime rant: lies, racism, and crisis at the top

Trump and his billionaire buddies don’t seem to care about the Main Street recession. About 1.17 million jobs were cut in the first 11 months of 2025, during Trump’s time in office, with more than 15,000 store closures. Bankruptcies are rising fast and are at their highest levels since 2010.

Dec. 18 — On a Wednesday night, with just hours’ notice, Donald Trump seized the airwaves for an 18-minute primetime address. Major networks cut away from scheduled programming — including the live finale of Survivor. Speculation spread across media and political circles about what could justify such an abrupt interruption. Some wondered if it signaled a major policy shift or even a declaration of war on Venezuela.

What followed was neither policy nor clarity. It was a frantic, angry, fact-free tirade that alarmed even sections of the political establishment — not because of what Trump announced, but because of how he delivered it and what it revealed about a presidency struggling to contain deepening crisis.

A performance that alarmed even allies

In moments like this, presidents are expected to project control. Trump did the opposite.

He tore through more than 2,600 words in 18 minutes — roughly double his usual pace. The delivery was widely described as manic, rushed, and angry, as if he were chasing text racing ahead of him. One observer said it looked like the teleprompter was running at triple speed and Trump was barely keeping up.

The display was disturbing enough that CNN medical analyst Dr. Jonathan Reiner, a former cardiologist to Dick Cheney, publicly said Trump appeared “unwell.” Presidential addresses are staged to project steadiness. This one projected volatility.

Some commentators have speculated that Trump may be exhibiting symptoms consistent with white matter disease — a condition that can strip away social and political filters and intensify long-standing personality traits. This remains speculation, not diagnosis. But Trump’s publicly released medical reports omit brain MRI results. As one analyst put it bluntly: Withholding them raises serious questions.

Whatever the explanation, the political reality was clear. The head of the U.S. state apparatus appeared visibly out of control.

A speech built on economic falsehoods

The stated purpose of the address was to sell an economic success story. Trump claimed inflation had been crushed, prices were falling, jobs were booming, and foreign capital was flooding into the country.

None of it holds up.

Gas prices remain near $3 a gallon nationally, food costs continue to squeeze working-class households, and unemployment has climbed to a four-year high as layoffs continue to mount — the opposite of the boom he claimed.

It was a wholesale rewriting of economic reality — an attempt to deny the widening gap between official claims and working-class life.

Racism and fascism as political strategy

Fact-checking, though, misses the point. The speech’s core was scapegoating.

Trump described immigration as an “invasion by an army of 25 million people,” claiming migrants came from prisons and “insane asylums” to “prey on Americans.” This language is deliberate. It mirrors classic fascist rhetoric, which portrays a nation as a pure body under attack by criminal outsiders and promises salvation through repression and violence.

Trump has repeatedly referred to immigrants and political opponents as “animals,” “vermin,” and “the enemy from within.” This language prepares the ground for state violence, mass detention, and the suspension of basic rights — especially as economic conditions worsen.

Racism here is not a distraction; it is a tool. Layoffs have surged — more than a million since Trump took office — while housing, food, and health care costs remain punishingly high. Jobs disappear while prices rise, even as corporate profits and military spending are protected. Rather than confront these contradictions, the administration redirects anger downward, toward immigrants and communities of color.

Trump’s attack on the Somali community in Minnesota was especially telling, echoing earlier remarks widely interpreted as threatening Rep. Ilhan Omar. Instead of addressing why working people cannot afford rent or groceries, he offered a familiar racist answer: scapegoating immigrants and communities of color.

A speech born of desperation

Behind the scenes, the address appears less strategic than panicked. It came just hours after Vanity Fair published a profile of Trump’s chief of staff, Susie Wiles, quoting her describing Trump as having an “alcoholic’s personality,” judging people by their “genes,” and dismissing Vice President JD Vance as a conspiracy theorist. The backlash inside MAGA circles was swift.

According to journalists present afterward, Trump admitted Wiles told him he had to give the speech. He then asked her, “How did I do?” Even close allies reportedly found the address baffling — not the move of a leader acting from strength.

Meanwhile, material conditions continue to undercut the White House’s claims. Unemployment is rising. Household costs remain high. Wages lag behind prices. A Reuters / Ipsos poll showing just 33% approval of Trump’s economic handling reflects lived reality, not a messaging problem.

What the interruption really revealed

This address will not be remembered for policy or persuasion. It will be remembered as a moment when the mask slipped.

It revealed a president visibly unstable, a speech built on falsehoods, an administration leaning ever harder on racist and fascist scapegoating, and a ruling apparatus acting out of panic rather than strength.

For working people, the lesson is clear. When those at the top cannot resolve capitalism’s crises, they turn to lies, fear, and division. Our task is not to be distracted by the spectacle, but to organize against the system that produced it — and against the dangerous politics now being used to defend it.

 

Gary Wilson

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