If Trump Enforces the Law, It’s “Tyranny.” When They Riot, It’s “Justice”
Law, Order, and the Disease of Trump Derangement Syndrome
Since When Is It Illegal to Enforce Federal Law?
Every time I turn on the TV, I see the same thing: people smashing windows, torching property, flipping cop cars, and calling it “justice.” It’s not justice. It’s lawlessness dressed up as political theater. And every single riot, every lawsuit, every breathless news chyron boils down to one disease: Trump Derangement Syndrome.
They hate him. Not because he’s breaking the law, but because he’s actually trying to enforce it.
The Promise He Made
Donald Trump ran for office with two big promises:
Get rid of illegal immigration.
Crack down on crime that follows when you flood the country with 30 million people who aren’t supposed to be here.
That wasn’t a secret. It wasn’t hidden. It wasn’t some backroom deal. It was the platform. The people elected him for exactly this reason.
So when Trump sends in the National Guard to back up federal law and actually do his job, why is it treated like a constitutional crisis?
Since When Is Enforcing the Law a Crime?
These aren’t Trump’s laws. These are the laws Congress passed decades ago. Deportation statutes. Border security. Immigration enforcement. They’re written down, signed, and sitting in the U.S. Code.
Since when is enforcing the law suddenly “tyranny”? Since Trump decided to do it. That’s the insanity of TDS: if Trump cured cancer, they’d sue him for putting oncologists out of work.
Hamilton Had This Figured Out
Let’s roll back to Alexander Hamilton. The Founders were clear: the President’s primary job is to execute the laws. And yes, that means he can move federal troops anywhere in the United States if federal law is at stake.
Federal law always — always — outranks state and local tantrums. That’s the system we live under. That’s the system Trump is operating under. Governors can whine, mayors can sue, and judges can stall, but at the end of the day, the President has not just the right but the duty to enforce national law.
The Real Criminals Are on the Streets
The mobs out there rioting aren’t patriots. They’re not “defending democracy.” They’re anarchists protecting a failed status quo. These are the same people who cheered as 30 million illegals poured into the country, and now they’re willing to fight — even violently — to keep them here.
They don’t respect borders. They don’t respect sovereignty. And they sure as hell don’t respect the rule of law.
Why is it that when Americans finally elect a President who actually does what he promised, the looney left and their media lapdogs make him out to be the villain? I’m old enough to remember the spring of 1970, when campus riots spiraled so far out of control that they ended with the tragedy at Kent State — four students dead. And you know what? The riots stopped cold after that day. I can only hope these modern riots end without the National Guard ever being forced to fire on its own citizens.
The Judge Shopping Circus
And when Trump cracks down? Cue the stampede to the nearest sympathetic judge. Doesn’t matter if it’s constitutional, doesn’t matter if it’s federal law — if they can find a robe-wearing activist willing to block him for 24 hours, they’ll do it.
This isn’t “justice.” It’s sabotage. It’s the judicial system being weaponized to grind the gears of government into dust, all so they can scream “dictator” while ignoring the actual laws already on the books.
The Bottom Line
Trump isn’t the problem. He’s doing the job he was elected to do: enforce the law. The real problem is an unhinged political class infected with Trump Derangement Syndrome, so consumed by their hatred that they’ll burn down cities, bankrupt the country, and shred the Constitution just to stop him from fulfilling the promises voters asked him to keep.
Enforcing the law is not tyranny. Enforcing the law is the foundation of freedom. Pretending otherwise? That’s the real danger.