Trump doesn’t manage the economy. He destabilizes it on purpose.
In his second term, policy isn’t about growth or recovery. It’s about leverage. Tariffs are used as weapons, not tools. Tax enforcement is dismantled—not for reform, but to shield allies and punish critics. Aid flows where the votes live. Blue cities go dry.
The goal isn’t prosperity. It’s disorder. That’s always been the trick: flood the system, then skim the wreckage. The same strategy he used in bankrupt casinos and bad loans now plays out in federal agencies. Break it fast enough, and the accountability trail disappears.
Families can’t budget. Departments can’t plan. States can’t breathe. One week the market soars, the next it falls through the floor—and every headline shift is another chance for someone connected to cash out.
This isn’t mismanagement. It’s monetized collapse.
We’re not witnessing governance.
We’re living through liquidation.