While the Democrats and their allies in the legacy media and the Ruling Class wallow in 2024 election post-mortems, they are overlooking the foundational factor in Donald Trump’s triumphant return to the White House — their immersion in Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS).
It was TDS that caused this cabal to foolishly throw caution to the wind and overtly and massively engage in voter fraud in 2020 in order to elect a senescent mannequin in Joe Biden, thereby permanently alienating nearly half the electorate. They then stupidly acquiesced to disastrous left-wing ideology in governing the nation. And in 2023-24 they mindlessly attempted to imprison Trump for the rest of his life, thus increasing his popularity among the bulk of the citizenry. Thus, it was Trump Derangement Syndrome that led to Trump’s landslide victory in the 2024 election and the saving of America from being transformed into a one-party socialist oligarchy.
The genesis of Trump Derangement Syndrome was unbridled elitism combined with tacit acceptance of Marxist ideology. The seeds of this disorder were planted during the Obama years and took root in the 2016 campaign further metastasizing throughout the four years of the Donald Trump presidency.
Afraid of losing their status and lifestyles and aware of the ongoing and stealthy success of the Obama-inspired transformation of the nation, the ruling elites since 2009 have been gradually aligning themselves with the Marxist-influenced American Left in the expectation that the radical Left would willingly ally with them and defer to a governing oligarchy dominated by the current Ruling Class.
While there is no written agreement, there has been a tenuous understanding on power sharing. The Ruling Class would dominate the corridors of power, while the Marxists would be free to transform the culture and society. That is, until Trump’s election in 2016 threatened the elite’s status and the left’s ambitions.
Donald Trump possessed a trait that the ruling elites and their Marxist-inspired allies could never match. Trump could not only relate to and empathize with the masses, but he also thought, acted, and spoke like many of them. The possibility of having a man they perceived to be the composite of their stereotypes of average Americans occupying the White House infuriated the self-styled best and brightest. Trump, to them, was a doppelganger for the dimwitted rednecks from the South, the unkempt factory workers from the Midwest, the ill-educated residents of urban ghettos, the unsophisticated farmers, and the vulgar over-the-road truck drivers.