TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 2025
We'd call it Squalor Red: It's one more example of "the problem we all [currently] live with."
We can't find it in today's New York Times. But as reported by Mediaite, there he went again:
Trump Drops All-Time Whopper About Israeli Hostages...
President Donald Trump falsely took credit for all Israeli hostages being released, even though more than 100 were freed during the presidency of Joe Biden.
[...]
“Every hostage, just about, that’s been released was released because of me, Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner, my whole team, Marco Rubio, Pete Hegseth,” Trump replied. “They were all released because of us. None were released in the Biden administration. None. They were all released because of us.”
It was an absurdly inaccurate claim. Appearing yesterday with Bibi, he made it two separate times.
Full disclosure! On this campus, we're inclined to think that the president may even believe his various crazy claims.
Presumably, medical specialists could offer some perspective on that possibility. But, for better or worse, major news orgs have agreed that such discussions must never happen.
We've turned to Mediaite for that absurdly inaccurate claim. In fairness to the New York Times, they were at least reporting another such misstatement, right there on the front page of today's print editions:
Families of Murder Victims in Washington Say Trump Is Ignoring Them
[...]
“We haven’t had a murder in six months,” Mr. Trump said of Washington.
It was the kind of glaringly false claim about crime in the capital that Mr. Trump has made repeatedly since August, when he deployed the National Guard and took federal control of the police force...D.C. police have recorded 127 murders through Dec. 26, including 28 since Mr. Trump announced his federal takeover.
The president's claim is "glaringly false"—but he's been "repeatedly" making it.
We've started with a pair of claims which are crazily inaccurate. In this morning's print editions, the Times is also reporting a different kind of presidential misstatement:
Russia Threatens to Toughen Its Stance on Ending the War in Ukraine
With talks on ending the Ukraine war making little progress on the toughest issues, Russia issued a dramatic threat on Monday to harden its stance, linking the potential change to what the Kremlin called a failed Ukrainian drone attack overnight targeting a rural residence of President Vladimir V. Putin.
Ukraine immediately denied any such attack...
[...]
Mr. Trump said that he heard about the alleged attack from Mr. Putin himself during a previously scheduled phone call early Monday to discuss the peace talks. “I was very angry about it,” he told reporters at Mar-a-Lago, though he conceded that he had no independent confirmation that it had occurred.
Can we talk? Aside from what Putin had said, he didn't even claim to know some such (alleged) attack had actually occurred! But so what? In the absence of any evidence—in the absence of anything resembling knowledge--the president went on and on, seeming to assume that Putin's statement was true.
In short, there are various kinds of public misstatements. There are claims which are plainly false, but there are also claims for which there seems to be no evidence.
Under current arrangements, these claims emerge from the sitting president on a regular basis—but does any of this really make any difference?
Uh-oh! On page A12 of this morning's Times, this profoundly unfortunate news report suggests that the answer is yes:
Suspect Confessed to Planting Pipe Bombs Near the Capitol Before Jan. 6
The Virginia man arrested this month on charges of placing two pipe bombs in Washington on the night before a pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, has given a detailed confession, according to court papers released on Sunday night.
In the public first hint at a motive in the case, the documents said that the man, Brian J. Cole Jr., felt he needed to “speak up” after he began to suspect that the 2020 election, in which President Trump was defeated, had been “tampered with.”
Fortunately, those pipe bombs failed to detonate. But according to his confession, Cole decided to plant the bombs because he had come to believe that the 2020 election had been "tampered with"—in more familiar parlance, had been stolen.
Five years later, the sitting president was still making that inflammatory claim when he held a press event this Sunday, right there at Mar-a-Lago.
He appeared there with President Zelensky. Inevitably, he was soon saying this:
TRUMP (12/28/25): I've said, and nobody has disputed it, that if the election weren't rigged and stolen, 2020, you wouldn't have had this war. It would have never happened. And it didn't happen for four years. Never was even thought to happen.
And I spoke with President Putin. I got along with him very well despite the Russia, Russia, Russia hoax, which was a total hoax. He used to say, "What is going on over there?" But it was a total hoax, as he knew and as I knew.
[...]
Don't forget, we went through the Russia, Russia, Russia hoax together. And he'd call me, I'd call him. I said, can you believe the stuff that they're making up? And it turned out we were right. They made it all up...
But the Russia, Russia, Russia hoax, which was a terrible made-up fictional thing by Crooked Hillary and by Adam Shifty Schiff and bad people, sick people, they made it up. It was all a made-up hoax.
For starters, the election "was rigged and stolen!" There he went again!
This sitting president has now had more than five years to present a white paper in which he could attempt to justify that inflammatory statement. No such presentation has been made.
He just keeps repeating the statement. People like Cole believe what he says and may even decide to react.
Such people may also believe the other ludicrous claims the president made in that same press event. That includes the endless (and endlessly vague) assertion about "the Russia, Russia, Russia hoax," which was "a total hoax," the sitting president once again said.
What exactly was "the Russia hoax?" As far as we know, the president has never tried to say. He just keeps making his fuzzy claim concerning that undefined "hoax."
That said, the wonderfully useful, imprecise claim gets repeated all day and all night by the messenger children at the Fox News Channel. All across the fruited plain, people like Cole hear the vague claim, and they may not realize that the claim is so poorly defined as to be basically meaningless.
Also, "Russia wants Ukraine to succeed!"
Yes, he actually said it! But so it goes, day after day, as we the people deal with the pernicious effects of "the problem we all currently live with."
Let us count the ways:
Some of his statements are "glaringly false." But no matter how many times this gets pointed out, he just continues to make them.
Some of his bogus statements could be true, at least in theory—but he makes no attempt to offer evidence in support of his inflammatory claims. Also, some of his claims are so vague, so poorly defined, that no one can really say what they actually mean.
This situation has continued, day after day, dating back to the four or five years when he kept appearing on The Fox News Channel to claim that Barack Obama, who was then the sitting president, had been born in Kenya. His willing enabler during those years was Greta Van Susteren, who's now employed as a news anchor by Newsmax TV.
More on that matter will follow. For today, we call your attention to this:
Dating back to 2011, our nation has suffered under the reign of misstatement authored by the sitting president. We would describe this reign of misstatement as the principal component of (moral and intellectual) "Squalor Red."
The president's remarkable conduct qualifies as Squalor Red. As we noted yesterday, it took a remarkable squalid form on August 10, 2019—on the day when Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in his prison cell.
The squalor was general over the next several days as the president messaged his gullible followers concerning Epstein's death. As you may recall, here are two of the things this (colloquial) madman did:
Trump retweets conspiracy theory tying the Clintons to Epstein’s death
President Trump used his Twitter account Saturday to spread a baseless conspiracy theory about the death of Jeffrey Epstein, a wealthy and politically connected financier who had been facing multiple charges of sex trafficking involving underage girls.
Trump’s Justice Department announced that Epstein, who was being held in a federal corrections facility, died by “apparent suicide.”
But Trump appeared to disregard his administration’s statement, instead retweeting a message from conservative actor and comedian Terrence K. Williams, who suggested that Epstein’s death might be tied to former president Bill Clinton...
The claim is completely unsubstantiated...
On the day that Epstein died, that's the way the squalor started. Three days later, this:
Trump defends sharing Clinton-Epstein conspiracy theory
President Donald Trump on Tuesday defended his decision to share a tweet suggesting Bill and Hillary Clinton were involved in financier Jeffrey Epstein’s suicide, and stoked speculation about the former president’s relationship with the deceased convicted sex offender.
“The retweet—which is what it was, just a retweet—was from somebody that’s a very respected conservative pundit, so I think that was fine,” Trump told reporters, referring to a conspiratorial message by comedian and commentator Terrence K. Williams, which he re-posted Saturday.
Trump, who has been criticized for promulgating the unfounded theory that the Clintons had a hand in Epstein’s death, said on Tuesday that he had “no idea” whether they played a role in the high-profile prisoner’s demise.
On that same August 10, he messaged his poisonous claim about Bill and Hillary Clinton. Three days later, he acknowledged that he "had no idea" if the "theory" he messaged was true.
Even today, the creepy host of the Fox News Channel's Gutfeld! program repeatedly reinforces the astonishing claim that Hillary Clinton is a person who murders her opponents. But even back in August 2019, the sitting president was messaging a second accusation about Bill Clinton—an accusation based on bungled data, an accusation which is almost certainly false.
He returned to that poisonous messaging this summer, then again in recent weeks. The hacks who amplify his disorder were happy to repeat his various claims on the Fox News Channel. This is the problem we've all been living with over the past fifteen years.
We would regard this as Squalor Red. No large modern nation can expect to function under such a squalid regime.
We regard that as Squalor Red, but what in the world is Squalor Blue? We'll tell you that in our first report of the new year.
Tomorrow, we'll review the other claim being peddled about concerning President Clinton.
Once again, a bit of disclosure:
In our view, he may even believe the various things he says. In our view, the refusal to come to terms with that possibility is part of Squalor Blue.
Tomorrow: Facts and fact checks are utterly useless in the face of these Squalor(s).