|

by John and Nisha Whitehead
May 11, 2026
from
TheRutherfordInstitute Website
Article also
HERE

"Disinformation
does not mean false information.
It means misleading
information - misplaced, irrelevant, fragmented or superficial
information - information that creates the illusion of knowing
something, but which in fact leads one away from knowing."
Neil Postman,
Amusing Ourselves to Death
Call it what it is:
a heist...!
The corruption, cronyism, and self-dealing that
now define the American government - under
Donald Trump in
particular - amount to a slow-motion stick-up carried out in broad
daylight.
But here's the trick:
it's a heist hidden behind
spectacle.
The Trump administration is flooding the stage with noise
so "we the people" don't notice what's happening behind the curtain.
We're being manipulated into watching the wrong
thing.
The distractions are part of the plan to rob us
blind.
You don't have to look far to see how the con
works.
Nowhere is the hustle more obvious than in how the presidency
itself is being used.
For the Trump family, the presidency isn't public
service.
It's an all-access pass to wealth, power, and privilege -
an ongoing exercise in how to squeeze maximum personal gain out of
public office.
Taxpayers foot the bill for this massive grift:
We pay for it. They profit from it.
Even Congress is in on the game.
In a blatant act of political pandering, Senate
Republicans are trying to slip a provision into an ICE funding bill
that would direct
$1 billion in taxpayer money toward Trump's long-desired White House
ballroom - bypassing debate and oversight.
A billion dollars...!
Not to lower your grocery bill.
Not to fix
your healthcare.
Not for infrastructure that serves the public.
For a ballroom...
A taxpayer-funded space where donors, insiders,
and elites can gather and trade access - while the average American
is left outside looking in.
The grift has become so obvious, Americans are
finally taking notice.
Poll after poll shows the same thing: people are
fed up.
Not just with the economy but with a president
who seems more focused on himself, his image, and his vanity
projects than on the people he's supposed to serve.
A Washington Post poll puts it clearly:
disapproval with Trump's job performance is rising
with,
-
62%
unhappy about his job as president
-
76% dissatisfied with how he's
dealing with the cost of living
-
72% unhappy about his handling of
inflation
-
65% against his handling of the economy
-
66% opposed
to
the war with Iran...
They're right to be unhappy.
While Americans struggle to make rent, pay for
groceries, and stay afloat, the government is bankrolling ballrooms.
But here's what most Americans are missing:
the
ballroom isn't just a vanity project.
It's
a distraction...!
So are his plans to redo the East Potomac
Golf Course.
So is his repainting of the
Reflecting Pool.
So is the spectacle of him staging a
UFC fight on the White House lawn.
So are his endless, bombastic,
outrage-driven, manic, headline-making Truth Social posts.
Trump is good at pushing people's buttons.
He
knows exactly what will outrage, distract, and drag people into one
more pointless argument.
The bigger and louder, the better.
That's the
show.
And while we're watching Trump's bread-and-circus
antics, something else is happening.
The real damage to our republic is being buried -
delayed, redacted, denied.
This shell game keeps our attention fixed on
Trump's costly antics while his partners-in-crime use the diversion
to lock down the country and strip us of what's rightfully ours.
It's not just one elaborate ruse, either, but a
series of cover-ups and obfuscations meant to keep us from looking
too closely or asking too many questions about what's really going
on.
What began as a scramble to redirect public
attention - from questions about Epstein to war, White House
spectacles, immigration crackdowns, and culture-war theater - has
become an ever-widening web of manufactured distractions and
diversions.
Consider what's happening behind the scenes.
Investigative reports reveal that the Trump
administration has
refused to fully disclose the extent of the damage inflicted by Iran
on U.S. military installations.
Satellite imagery has been
restricted.
Access has been limited.
Reporters are forced to
rely on foreign aerial images and secondhand accounts just to piece
together what's happening.
And the lack of transparency doesn't stop there.
Reports suggest the Pentagon has
downplayed casualty figures of U.S. troops killed or wounded
during the Iran war.
Oversight of DHS, ICE, and private contractors is
being
curtailed.
Human rights abuses are mounting, while accountability
disappears behind a wall of secrecy.
They don't want us looking too closely - because
the less we see, the easier it is to take from us.
We're meant to watch the show - not the
government ledger.
When we can't see the damage - at home or abroad
- we can't measure the cost.
But we're being asked to pay, and the
price is mounting daily.
The same man who
bankrupted his own businesses is now running the same play on
the U.S. government.
Consider the Trump economy by the numbers. They
tell the real story.
The government is spending more than it takes in.
By a lot.
The national debt is now
bigger than the entire U.S. economy. For the first time since
World War II, the debt has
surpassed 100 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP).
This is no small thing.
The federal government is now
spending $1.33 for every dollar it collects.
And interest payments on that $31 trillion
national debt are consuming one out of every seven dollars spent by
the government.
As Robert Reich, a former Secretary of Labor, warns,
"That's
money we don't spend on education, healthcare, roads and
bridges, social safety nets, or (if we actually needed more
spending on it) national defense."
We don't need an economist to spell it out for
us, but there are ample warnings about the toll Trump's costly
policies are taking on the economy.
As Douglas Elmendorf, former director of the
Congressional Budget Office, explains, rising debt fuels higher
interest rates and inflation,
driving up the cost of mortgages, car loans, and everyday life
for ordinary Americans.
This is not sustainable...!
While both political parties share responsibility
for decades of fiscal mismanagement, the Trump administration has
accelerated the crisis through a toxic combination of reckless
spending, tax giveaways, and costly, unauthorized wars.
Promises to "drain the swamp," balance the
budget, and restore fiscal discipline have given way to ballooning
deficits and trillion-dollar spending packages dressed up as
economic revival.
Even the administration's so-called cost-cutting
measures fail to hold up under closer scrutiny.
Despite the propaganda pushed by
DOGE and its
supporters, nothing about the Trump administration has added up to
savings for the American people.
Instead, Americans are seeing cuts to healthcare,
education, housing assistance, and programs that provide economic
stability.
At the very moment Americans are struggling to
make ends meet, the Trump administration is spending big - at
taxpayer expense - on projects that appeal to Trump's ego, stoke his
vanity, consolidate his power, reward his allies, or entrench the
police state's machinery of control.
Nero fiddled while Rome burned.
Trump is playing golf while America burns - and
he keeps striking the match.
While "we the people" are paying more for
everything, Trump is getting richer off the presidency - at taxpayer
expense.
Much richer.
Billions added to his fortune - while in office.
His family's wealth has exploded.
Trump's net worth has
surged to an estimated $6.5 billion.
According to Forbes,
Trump added $1.4 billion in a single year by
leveraging the presidency for profit - fueled by cryptocurrency
ventures, revived licensing deals, favorable legal outcomes, and a
rush of foreign business interests seeking proximity to power.
Trump's family is also cashing in, doubling their
net worth since the 2024 election to an
estimated $10 billion.
While the Trumps aren't the first family to
leverage the presidency for profit, as Forbes points out, "no
first family has used the office to make as much money as Donald
Trump's."
You know who's not profiting?
We the people.
Especially those of us that do not
belong to the political and corporate elite.
For most Americans, life is getting harder.
Gas prices are up.
Groceries are up.
Healthcare
costs are up.
Paychecks? Not keeping up.
And what is the government doing?
Not easing the
burden. Not restoring balance.
And Trump?
He jets off to Mar-a-Lago at taxpayer expense.
He golfs while dragging a full security detail along.
He's turning the
White House - and by extension, much of the nation's capital - into
his personal domain, redecorating according to his personal tastes,
with little concern for the wishes of the American people.
He lives like a king, while we pay for his
excesses, one way or another.
He's slashing government spending for programs
that educate, protect, and support Americans, while building a
$1.5 trillion war machine and
boosting all aspects of the police state that treats us like
suspects - locking us down and locking us up.
He's building monuments to his own ego: a $400
million ballroom - now potentially a $1 billion taxpayer-funded
monument to access and influence if Senate Republicans get their
way; professional, taxpayer-funded golf courses that take the place
of public parks; a new Trump-class "Golden Fleet" of battleships,
costing $13 billion each.
He's pushing for airports and train stations and
other infrastructure to bear his name, then
tacking on dubious licensing agreements for the so-called
privilege.
At the same time,
medical research is gutted.
Job
training gets cut.
Environmental protections get axed.
Disaster
relief gets hollowed out.
Welfare for the most vulnerable gets
short-changed.
This isn't just mismanagement. This isn't just
bad policy.
This is a system that takes from us and gives to
the corporate and political oligarchic elite.
We pay more. "They" gain more.
Wars only make it worse.
Every missile. Every deployment. Every
"operation."
Paid for by "we the people." Not just in taxes -
but in higher prices, higher debt, and fewer services.
Pete Hegseth has been boasting that thanks to
Trump's $1.5 trillion defense budget, the Department of War is
running war like a business.
The truth is, they're turning war into big
business and cashing in.
In one of the most glaring examples of this, the
Associated Press reports that Trump's sons have, in his second term,
expanded their business interests beyond hotels and golf courses to
a
broad range of investments that include,
Conveniently timed to coincide with Trump's war
on Iran, his sons have also gotten into the drone manufacturing
business, selling to countries in the Middle East eager to curry
favor with the Trump administration.
As Richard Painter, a former chief White House
ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush, observed,
"These
countries are under enormous pressure to buy from the sons of the
president so he will do what they want.
This is going to be the first family of a president to make a lot of
money off war - a war he didn't get the consent of Congress
for."
This is how you turn government into a profit
machine.
Once again, we find ourselves confronted by the
age-old debate over our national priorities and the choice between
investing heavily in
guns or butter - military might or domestic needs.
Once again, we find ourselves watching from the
sidelines as big-talking politicians justify stealing from "we the
people" in order to pad the pockets of the military industrial
complex.
As The Guardian notes, to help pay for
his expanded military budget,
"Trump is seeking a 10%
cut in discretionary domestic spending, chopping such popular
programs as medical research, job training, home heating assistance,
environmental protection and disaster relief after hurricanes."
This is exactly the moral theft President Dwight
D. Eisenhower warned about:
stealing from social and domestic needs
in order to build up the military-industrial complex.
In Trump's case, he wants guns and caviar:
military might for the empire, wealth for himself, and less for
America's most vulnerable.
"We're
fighting wars", Trump announced at an Easter luncheon.
"It's not possible for us to take care of
daycare, Medicaid, Medicare... They can do it on a state basis.
You can't do it on a federal. We have to take care of one thing:
military protection."
Unfortunately, Trump's version of military
protection is a costly display of macho posturing.
Rebranding the Defense Department as the
Department of War
will cost taxpayers upwards of $125 million in new signs and
stationery.
As Steven Greenhouse concludes for The
Guardian,
"In seeking a mammoth increase in military spending
while cutting social programs,
Trump is again showing how hollow his promises were about making
life better for typical Americans."
Marjorie Taylor Greene was right to
course-correct.
"I don't have Trump Derangement Syndrome," she said.
"I have
Trump Disappointment Syndrome."
Trump Disappointment Syndrome is spreading...
This is, unfortunately, how the game works:
less
for us, more for them - paid for by "we the people."
Yet just as important as the math involved in
bleeding us dry is the conspiracy of distraction that keeps us in
the dark about the theft in our midst.
That's where the distractions come in:
the
ballroom, the golf course, the spectacles on the White House lawn.
Give the public something to watch.
Something to
argue about.
Something impossible to ignore.
They want our outrage, not our scrutiny.
Keep the spotlight bright, so no one notices
what's happening in the shadows.
While the public watches the spectacle, the money
is moving.
The spectacle is the decoy. The theft is the
point.
The damage is being hidden - but the bill is
still coming due.
We're told this is policy.
This is leadership.
This is necessary for "national security" and the good of the country.
But what we're really being given is a show, with
Trump playing the part of the greatest showman...
The show has to be loud enough to keep the
public's attention.
It has to be constant enough to keep us from
asking the real question:
where is the money going?
Because while we're watching the show, the
hold-up is taking place. The tellers are filling the bags with
stolen loot. And they're using the government as the get-away car.
That is how the con works.
As we warned in
Battlefield America - The War on the American
People and its fictional counterpart
The Erik Blair Diaries, this is how the machinery of
the police state expands:
not just through endless war, unchecked
power, and a government that no longer answers to the people - but
through insider profiteering, cronyism and corruption disguised as
reform, efficiency and nationalism.
That's the Trump hustle:
while we're being distracted by the
spectacle, they're emptying the vault.
|