A Truth Social video goes up. People point out the racist imagery. The response sequence is… familiar: deny it’s a problem, mock the outrage, then pivot to the cleanest escape hatch, “an anonymous staffer did it.”
David and Rob use the whole mess as a case study in how ambiguity becomes protection: the conversation slides from why it was posted to who posted it, and suddenly the cover story becomes the story.
From there, they widen the lens: what it means when the presidency stops sounding like an institution and starts sounding like a late-night group chat; impulsivity, attention economics, and “I didn’t even watch the full 60 seconds” as a leadership liability. They also dig into the National Prayer Breakfast moment where the president explicitly frames decisions through ego, and what that signals to allies and adversaries in a world that used to depend on U.S. predictability.
No diagnosis. No pearl-clutching. Just a calm look at what gets rewarded, what gets punished, and why chaos keeps winning.