The Great Iraterš
- Andy Pate

- Aug 4
- 2 min read
By Putt

Somebody ought to be counting; for it may be a record: Most Times Evoked to Anger.
The broomstick Trump used to keep his fellow high school cadets in line is history. But he has developed other means of venting his anger.
Also, in his second presidential term, Trump has a larger world stage upon which to vent his frustrations with anyone or anything that gives the slightest hint of opposing what he wants.
As our selected photos clearly show, no matter how well things might be going for him Trump can get "madder than hell," to cite a traditional anger phrase.

Trump may. indeed, need to vent in order to be a healthier man.
But does his venting even help in that way? Is it such a good thing for him, that he so frequently lets everyone know he is angry. For when venting, he sometimes appears out of control, paralyzed, with his words being the primary and only tools he has available to strike back at people with whom he is upset.
Senator Schumer may not be hurt very much, if at all, by the anger Trump recently vented in his direction. but the senator has been around; he has tools with which to strike back.
But others not so experienced can be badly hurt by Trump's anger aimed at them, especially can this be the case for the individuals who may be new or relatively inexperienced members of the Trump clan or entirely new to politics period. He or she may well lose his or her job immediately; or at a minimum, allowed to keep it only if he or she keeps his or her mouth shut.
Most important is the revelation that Trump's anger strongly suggests that he is not a healthy man. He seems not to know what to do when he's opposed; he can only finger-point.
And, to top it off, the longer he lives, the angrier Trump gets. And what we get as a result, more pictures of how unhappy #50 really is.

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