MAGA: Another Look At Your “TDS” Definition
Alright, MAGA—let’s talk about “TDS”: Trump Derangement Syndrome.
You love throwing that label at anyone who criticizes Donald Trump, claiming we’re “obsessed” with him. But here’s the reality: he’s the one who demands to be the center of attention every single day.
Before Trump, it wasn’t normal for a sitting president to dominate headlines nonstop. Trump made it that way—and insists on keeping it that way. He won’t even clearly rule out an unconstitutional third term, because doing so would mean admitting someone else might take the spotlight.
And that’s the one thing he can’t stand.
Watch what happens after the midterms, when the 2028 race starts to take shape. Traditionally, presidents step back and let the next generation lead the party. Trump won’t. He’ll fight to stay front and center, because everything has to revolve around him.
So let’s ask the real question: who actually has TDS?
The people criticizing him—or the ones building their entire identity around him?
The millions buying Trump-branded gear, wearing matching outfits, waving flags, showing up to rallies like it’s a lifestyle, not just politics. The kind of devotion that, to anyone outside that bubble, looks a lot less like support and a lot more like a cult.
And it doesn’t stop there.
These are the same people who defend him through scandal after scandal—things they would never tolerate from anyone else.
Let’s test that.
If a Democrat skipped congressional approval to start a war they promised wouldn’t happen…
If their personal wealth jumped by billions while in office…
If they accepted a $400 million “gift” from a foreign government…
If they ordered the Justice Department to bury damaging files…
If regulators threatened a news network for negative coverage…
If they pardoned over 1,600 people tied to an attack on the Capitol…
Would you be calling for impeachment?
Be honest.
Because anyone claiming they wouldn’t is lying.
So again—who has Trump Derangement Syndrome?
The people pointing out what’s right in front of them, or the ones who excuse everything, defend anything, and pivot on a dime whenever Trump says so?
This isn’t about policy anymore. It’s about loyalty—total, unquestioning loyalty to one man.
A man who once said he could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and not lose support—and meant it.
And based on what we’ve seen?
He wasn’t wrong.
That’s not criticism. That’s the definition of Trump Derangement Syndrome.





