DNYUZ
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Television
    • Theater
    • Gaming
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Contributor: As Trump’s reign implodes, tell MAGA ‘I told you so’

October 7, 2025
in News, Opinion
Contributor: As Trump’s reign implodes, tell MAGA ‘I told you so’
495
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

I once held what seemed to be a perfectly rational belief: that even the staunchest supporters of Donald Trump would change their minds once his incompetence and hatred directly affected them. That logic tracked with the dominant narrative of the last decade, going back to when pundits first claimed that Trump supporters were motivated not by hatred but by something called “economic anxiety.”

Trump’s economy has now arrived, and it’s as catastrophic as the experts predicted. Despite his promises not only to curb inflation but also to bring prices down, there is no relief in sight, because Trump never had a plan for dealing with any of that. Housing remains out of reach for many, unemployment is rising, and, thanks to the Big Beautiful Bill Act, Medicaid is about to eject millions of recipients to help offset a budget-busting tax cut for rich people.

Across the country, Republicans are discovering that their loyalty was a one-way street. A red county in Maryland lost its badly needed FEMA aid. A Nebraska clinic closed due to imminent funding cuts. In North Dakota, Trump’s tariffs have cost soybean farmers the Chinese market. An Indiana cement factory lost a $500-million grant to reduce its carbon footprint because the administration doesn’t believe that climate change is real. And now, a government shutdown hinges on Trump’s refusal to provide subsidies to people on Obamacare — many of whom voted for him.

This time, the stagnation cannot be pinned on a once-a-century pandemic. Instead, it’s the self-inflicted wounds — government layoffs, education cuts, tariffs, deporting essential workers — that are causing havoc. But there should be good news too, right? We’ll see that the Trump movement really was about economic anxiety all along, because supporters will surely renounce Trump now that his promise to fix the economy on day one (along with Ukraine and Gaza) is more than 200 days late.

But no. We all know what’s going to happen instead. Trump supporters will progress through the same stages of denial that we saw during the pandemic. First, they’ll say that what’s happening isn’t really happening. Then they’ll say it’s not that bad. Then they’ll accuse Democrats of politicizing the issue. All while their own lives are threatened. Or destroyed.

While that position evolves, we’ll continue to hear the tired claim that left-leaning politicians and celebrities are to blame, because they pushed people away with their wokeness. According to this interpretation, Trump supporters have been mostly concerned with kitchen-table issues, and charges of cultish behavior and xenophobia are overblown accusations from the left. If only the mean liberals would stop complaining about racism, then MAGA would be nicer!

In other words, if you believe this interpretation, saying “I told you so” to MAGA fans will only make things worse.

I disagree. We should be shouting “I told you so” from the rooftops. Hashtag it. Flood TikTok with it. Slap it on every piece of merch from hats to chip clips. Make it rattle in people’s heads through the next few election cycles.

For anyone reluctant to do that, for anyone still hoping for constructive dialogue after a decade of lies, consider the fact that for years now conservatives have been lecturing the country on how to respectfully talk to MAGA supporters and — surprise! — it turns out that they’ve been acting in bad faith all along. Instead of encouraging better conversations, Trump apologists sought to control the discourse by invalidating any and all criticism, and by cultivating a sense of apathy so bottomless it could excuse anything. In their world, Trump supporters can never be held responsible for what they’ve done. In their world, calling out bigotry is the real bigotry. They see resisting cruelty as worse than actual cruelty.

I often wonder if that kind of permissive “you made me do it” mentality is what is truly to blame for our current predicament. Saying “I told you so” rejects that condescending idea. It may not change minds, but it treats Trump voters like fellow adults for once. Call it the opposite of gaslighting. It is a basic sanity check that resists the administration’s efforts to rewrite history. And it reminds everyone that no matter how frustrated we may be with politics, we have a responsibility to learn, and to think of others, rather than burning everything to the ground out of spite and tribal loyalty.

But far more important is this reality: Our country really is sliding toward autocracy, a system that thrives on dead silence. In the span of a few months, Trump has usurped fiscal and law enforcement power from both Congress and the states, while unleashing bands of masked police harassing and deporting people without due process. Trump has made billions of dollars since returning to power, while stifling the Epstein investigation that he promised to resolve, and while threatening to censor networks that question him. As Trump has demonstrated, authoritarians don’t handle criticism well, especially when it can be packaged in a simple phrase.

Saying “I told you so” may feel like holding a single candle in the dark. Enough of them would generate some badly needed light.

With dialogue at a stalemate, we might as well reduce what we need to say to simple truths: We tried to warn you. You didn’t listen. Now the consequences are here. So we’re going to keep saying, “I told you so.” Maybe this time you’ll listen to your neighbors who are affected by all this, or to the people who interact with immigrants, or who work in jobs that Trump has deemed a waste, or who live in cities that Trump claims are overrun with crime. Or maybe you won’t. But I suggest you get used to hearing us say it. “I told you so.” After all, you made us do it.

Robert Repino is an editor of religious studies and history for Oxford University Press. His essays have appeared in Slate, Religion Dispatches, the Baltimore Sun and Sojourners.

The post Contributor: As Trump’s reign implodes, tell MAGA ‘I told you so’ appeared first on Los Angeles Times.

Tags: ContributorsOpinion Voices
Share198Tweet124Share
Don’t Let Chinese Fears of a U.S. Decapitation Strike Lead to Nuclear War
News

Don’t Let Chinese Fears of a U.S. Decapitation Strike Lead to Nuclear War

by Foreign Policy
October 7, 2025

When Chinese military planners, and probably even the Chinese leadership itself, think about a hypothetical future war with the United ...

Read more
News

Robin Williams’s Daughter Hates Your AI-Generated Videos Of Her Father

October 7, 2025
News

N.Y. Stock Exchange Parent to Buy Stake in Polymarket, as Prediction Markets Go Mainstream

October 7, 2025
News

Career criminal reportedly with 99 arrests allegedly stabs 69-year-old man; FOP president blames ‘woke, broke’ system

October 7, 2025
News

Five Nights at Freddy’s Fortnite Collaboration Gets Disappointing Update

October 7, 2025
Listen Live: Supreme Court hears arguments on Colorado “conversion therapy” ban

Listen Live: Supreme Court hears arguments on Colorado “conversion therapy” ban

October 7, 2025
Trump Plans to Stiff Furloughed Workers to Pressure Dems on Shutdown

Trump Plans to Stiff Furloughed Workers to Pressure Dems on Shutdown

October 7, 2025
I’m an American who moved to France 4 years ago. My lifestyle and routine have improved in so many ways.

I’m an American who moved to France 4 years ago. My lifestyle and routine have improved in so many ways.

October 7, 2025

Copyright © 2025.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
    • Television
    • Theater
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2025.