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One Month, and Trump’s Already Dominating the Competition!

A month into President Donald Trump’s return to the White House, the difference from the Biden years is striking. Leadership is back. For four years, Americans were left wondering who was truly in charge. Policies seemed to come from the shadows. Now, with Trump at the helm, there’s no mystery. He is doing exactly what he promised—leading from the front, making decisions, and setting the course for the country.

The pace of his administration is relentless. Executive orders, policy shifts, and bold statements have dominated the headlines. Some are thrilled. Others seem to pine for the days of silence, when the president rarely spoke, rarely appeared, and the media ran interference. CNN host Brian Stelter voiced that sentiment on Super Bowl Sunday, posting on X: “Think about it: A year ago you could go days without seeing or thinking about Biden. Now you’re lucky if you can go hours without thinking about President Trump. He’s inescapable. And that’s just how he likes it. Today: The Super Bowl is also the Trump Bowl.”

Well, yes. A year ago, the sitting president was barely visible. His mental decline was the worst-kept secret in Washington. The public didn’t fully grasp the situation until June, when the illusion finally crumbled. The Biden years were anything but normal—hiding the president away, shielding him from scrutiny, and punishing those who asked hard questions. That was the strategy, and for a time, it worked.

Before Biden, presidents made it a point to speak directly to the people, especially during major events like the Super Bowl. Barack Obama did it frequently. He understood that the country was watching. He wanted to be seen. It was never “The Obama Bowl.” The media didn’t frame it that way. But now, with Trump back in the picture, they act like a president being present is a problem.

There’s a bizarre claim that the last four years were a break from politics. Reality says otherwise. Inflation soared. Illegal immigration surged. The Afghanistan withdrawal was a disaster. Americans weren’t disengaged; they were struggling to survive policy failures. Politics wasn’t something people could tune out—it hit them in their wallets, their communities, and their daily lives.

Parents especially couldn’t afford to ignore what was happening. Under Biden, children became targets—indoctrination in schools, questionable policies in libraries and doctor’s offices, and even corporate giants like Disney sneaking in ideological messaging. The culture war wasn’t an abstract fight; it was happening in living rooms and classrooms.

Then there was the overreach. Schools transitioned children in secret, changed their names, and provided clothing to hide their biological gender—all without parental consent. When parents fought back, the Biden administration treated them as threats, even considering them for “domestic terrorism” investigations.

And long before that, Biden came into office promising to reopen schools. Instead, he let the head of the American Federation of Teachers, Randi Weingarten, influence CDC policies to keep them shut. Kids suffered, parents scrambled, and the so-called “break from politics” never existed.

The truth is, there’s no break from history. Leadership matters. The last month has reminded America what a president is supposed to be. Trump isn’t hiding. He isn’t running from the press. He is governing—and after four years of confusion, Americans can finally see the difference.

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