WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2026
Cupp says it's Trump being Trump: CNN's Aaron Blake is a good, decent person. He's also a perfectly capable political journalist.
That said, Aaron Blake's persistent behavior continues to get a pass! We base that assessment on Blake's new essay for CNN. The headline above it says this:
President Trump’s bizarre behavior often gets a pass.
Actually, that's just part of the CNN headline. Full headline included, Blake's essay starts like this:
Trump’s bizarre behavior often gets a pass. That’s starting to change
The week is still young. But it’s already been a humdinger for President Donald Trump.
In the span of 24 hours, he appeared to doze off (again) while his top health official espoused the dangers of declining teenage sperm. He called the White House a “shit house.” He mused about making Venezuela the 51st state (after having already captured its leader). He struggled to identify Indiana University football coach Curt Cignetti, despite standing right next to him and having seemingly looked directly at him moments earlier.
And late Monday night, he unleashed a wild social media flurry that stood out even by his often-outlandish standards: posting and reposting more than 50 times in less than an hour. Those included long-debunked theories about Dominion voting machines deleting millions of votes in the 2020 election, posts about the decade-old Hillary Clinton email server controversy, a made-up claim about a GOP senator from a hoax website, unflattering AI images of prominent Democrats, three derogatory videos about Black people (including one captioned “Always scheming…”) and two separate posts advocating for the arrest of former President Barack Obama.
It’s the kind of behavior that undeniably prompts concern. But Trump, who turns 80 in June, has so far avoided a true reckoning about it. And that’s in large part because he’s spent more than a decade doing bizarre things in public, long before he was considered elderly.
Blake continues from there at substantial length. He cites data from opinion surveys to drive his principal claim, according to which the public is growing more concerned about the possibility that the president may be "well, a bit off."
Could Blake's journalism possibly be "a bit off"—be a bit too soft? For the record, here are the findings in question:
A recent poll from Reuters and Ipsos showed 61% of Americans and even 30% of Republicans said Trump had become “more erratic with age.”
Another showed Americans said 71%-26% that Trump is not “even-tempered”—wider than the 62%-37% split that the Pew Research Center showed after the 2024 election.
A Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll last month showed 59% of Americans said Trump didn’t have the mental sharpness required to serve as president—the highest such number to date and a full 16 points higher than in 2023.
And the same poll showed 67% of Americans said Trump doesn’t carefully consider important decisions. Even 30% of Republicans agreed with that statement.
Plainly, those are unflattering survey data—but citizens, is it true? Is it true that the president's behavior has become "more erratic?"
We aren't entirely sure. He's been erratic for a good long while. Nor is that the obvious point.
We do know that Blake stays on the same old path. For better or worse, he carefully uses euphemisms to hint at the possibility of cognitive decline, and he never mentions the fact that major medical observers began suggesting, long ago, that dangerous mental health / mental illness problems may have been there all along.
Remarkable, isn't it? Even after the experience with President Biden, today's muckrakers can't even bring themselves to use straightforward language is discussing the less complicated, more familiar matter of possible cognitive decline!
No medical specialists were cited in the course of Blake's lengthy report.
As for the refusal to see what's right before them, there went S. E. Cupp again! Last night, she guested on Erin Burnett OutFront—and it seems to us that she took the predictable dive.
To her credit, Burnett went out of her way in her opening segment to describe the president's many strange behaviors during the previous 24 hours.
To our ear, Cupp decided to run off and hide:
BURNETT (5/12/26): That's the president of the United States, and his behavior today came after he spent much of the night seemingly awake. Maybe that's why he's so testy, posting and reposting on social media. In fact, since 10 o'clock last night, overnight, [he's posted] more than 75 times.
Do you know anybody who does that, including posting a picture of a $100 bill with his own face on it? He posted that.
He also posted Mount Rushmore with his face being etched into the stone, and then he posted an A.I. generated image of former Presidents Obama and Biden, along with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, swimming in sewage. So, he posted all of those things in those 70-plus posts.
The president had been up all night, offering remarkably strange Truth Social posts. Below, you see what Cupp said when she was asked to comment:
BURNETT: ...I mean, 75 posts overnight!
CUPP: Yeah.
BURNETT: Look, that's disturbing. Yes. Okay. I find that disturbing. Any American should find that disturbing, right? That means you're not sleeping. It means you're not in a good place. Yes. And these include Mount Rushmore with his face, $100 bill with his face. It's not as if he's not posting deep policy thoughts.
CUPP: If our child or our parent were doing this, we'd be very worried about them. But this is a pattern of Trump's. You can always tell when his back is against the wall. He goes on these late night binges to flood the zone.
Go back to all the late-night binges. He was really up against it, either in polling or in terms of messaging, selling something that he couldn't sell, having to answer questions he didn't want to answer, whether it was Epstein or the war or tariffs. I mean, he's done this before and he really is losing a lot of the support he could once count on, both from his own voters on the war, but also you know, influencers and Fox News.
You know, he's railing against Fox News constantly because they are not helping him sell this war or this economy. And he's up against it. This is what he does.
Our translation would go like this:
If your parent did it, you'd be quite concerned. But this is just Trump being Trump!
It's also the press corps doing what the press corps does. For better or worse, this familiar practice—the practice of agreeing not to see and not to say—doesn't seem likely to stop.