How the Constant Noise Distracts From the True Peril of Trump’s Misrule

August 4, 2025

His policies are making Americans less safe, less healthy, and more dead.

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to members of the media as he departs a House Republican meeting at the U.S. Capitol on May 20, 2025
Donald Trump speaks to members of the media as he departs a House Republican meeting at the US Capitol on May 20, 2025, in Washington, DC. Trump joined conservative House lawmakers to help push through their budget bill after it advanced through the House Budget Committee on Sunday evening.(Andrew Harnik / Getty Images)

Epstein’s list, charging Obama with “treason,” on and off Liberation Day tariffs, thuggish ICE raids and its global gulag, abetting Gaza horrors, bullying Columbia, brazen corruption, gelding law firms, depriving millions of healthcare while larding more tax cuts on the wealthy, Truth Social fulminations and lies—the daily Trump grotesqueries drive the headlines, troll the liberals, foul the public debate and trample the laws and the Constitution.

The constant noise often distracts from the true perils of Trump’s misrule. At a time when this country faces ever more threatening interlocking crises, Trump is perversely exacerbating the most dangerous threats to our nation’s security, a dereliction of duty that will cost lives and wreak ever greater destruction.

For example, the congressional presentation of the Annual Intelligence Community’s Threat Assessment in March was consumed with the brouhaha over Defense Secretary Hegseth’s reckless “Signal call.”

In its overview, with new prominence accorded drug cartels in otherwise routine reviews of the threats posed by Islamic terrorists, Russia, China, Iran and North Korea, no mention was made of the two most deadly security threats to Americans—catastrophic climate change and global pandemics.

Climate change had been included for over a decade. Astounded at the omission, Maine Senator August King asked, “Has climate change been solved? Why is that not in this report?” Tulsi Gabbard, Trump’s director of national intelligence, who has debauched the office to cater to the president’s whims, replied that while “we are aware of occurrences within the environment…. we’re focused on direct threats to American safety.”

Over the past 10 years, the US has been hit by 190 separate billion-dollar disasters, that killed more than 6,300 people and cost an estimated $1.4 trillion in damage. This year, fires in California, 200 million suffering under record “heat domes,” more than 120 dead in central Texas Hill country from flash floods. Record temperatures are producing blackouts, buckling roads and filling emergency rooms. Yet somehow this doesn’t count as a “direct threat to American safety.”

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And as any sane person knows, the loss of lives and property will get worse. For example, drought has led to increasing draining of groundwater, leaving millions short of water, and, among other effects, sinking cities—New York, Denver, and Houston among them—threatening havoc in everything from building safety to transit. This real and present national security threat demands an all-of-government mobilization—more intelligence on what’s happening, accelerated transition to renewable energy and energy efficiency, a massive investment in adaptation and resilience to offer greater protection from inevitable calamities, greater global coordination to deal with accelerating dislocation.

Instead, the Trump administration isn’t just ignoring the threat; it is literally dismantling our capacity to address it. Trump calls climate change an “expensive hoax” and has made it part of his assault on “wokism,” scorning “climate lunatics” while suggesting that rising seas would create “more oceanfront properties.”

On his first day in office, he declared a national energy emergency to open the way to more production of coal and oil, even as the US is producing more oil than any nation in history. His EPA is now moving to repeal the 2009 finding that climate change poses a danger to the public which would revoke the grounds for addressing it. The administration will no longer track the major sources of greenhouse gases. “We’re not doing that climate change, you know, crud, anymore,” Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins told Fox Business in May.

His administration has launched an all-out government effort to weaken or eliminate the programs that address it. He took the US out of the Paris Climate Accord and moved to defund the Biden initiatives on alternative energy. As the US and the world suffer the hottest years on record, Trump is dismantling the capacity needed to track the growing threat, gutting the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the nation’s chief climate agency responsible for weather forecasting, slashing capacity at the National Weather Service. The White House moved to dismantle FEMA—the Federal Emergency Management Agency—that deals with weather catastrophes and defunded its program to pay for infrastructure that would help limit disaster damage. Even after backing away from that, FEMA’s dysfunction puts more and more Americans facing catastrophe at risk. And, of course, Trump is assiduously pursuing the oil industries wish list, as he promised when he dunned oil executives for a billion in campaign contributions.

While he is putting lives and property at greater risk, Trump is ceding to China the industries of the future—from solar to wind to electric vehicles to batteries and storage. China will dominate the coming industrial revolution. Trump’s climate denial is an astonishing dereliction of the president’s primary duty to protect and defend the country and its citizens.

Global Pandemics

Covid-19, the deadliest disaster in US history, took the lives of over 1 million Americans, the most of any country in the world and left millions more impaired from long Covid. An estimated 40 percent of those deaths might have been averted if the US response had corresponded to that of other high-income countries.

Americans died in greater numbers in part because of our degraded public health system, exacerbated by the number of people without health insurance. Contradictory public policy—masks, no masks; overselling vaccines—sapped public confidence. Trump’s risible public interjections—predicting the disease would magically disappear, recommending injection of a household disinfectant, pushing responsibility to the states, touting and then souring on vaccines and more—surely contributed.

Pandemics have never been part of the National Threat Assessment, but it is hard to find a greater and more direct ongoing threat to Americans. The potential spread of deadly pandemics is an inevitable product of the modern world—with more international travel, greater urbanization, greater human encroachment on nature. Last year, H5NI bird flu ravaged US chicken farms, and threatened to infect humans. This year witnessed this country’s worst spread of measles this century.

The threat surely demands a strengthening of our public health system, a guarantee of health insurance to all, and a stronger commitment to strengthening global public health programs and alarm systems. International cooperation, greater research early warning capacity and education are vital. Surely a basic first step would be a nonpartisan evaluation of our response to the Covid pandemic, probing the mistakes that were made, the lessons that could be learned, the reforms needed to prepare better for the next challenge.

Perversely, Trump has chosen not to strengthen the institutions tasked with addressing the threat but to lay waste to them. No doubt resentful that his mishandling of Covid contributed to his defeat in 2020, he appears to be retaliating against our public health institutions.

On taking office, he announced that the US would leave the World Health Organization and withdrawing funding for the organization. He eliminated the Directorate of Global Health Security that coordinates government efforts from the National Security Council. The closing of USAID resulted in deep cuts in global health programs, reductions built into his 2026 budget request. His spending legislation will strip an estimated 17 million Americans of health insurance coverage. His HHS Secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr., fired thousands of HHS employees, decimated the FDA, and dismissed the experts on the CDC’s federal vaccination committee, while elevating charlatans and crackpots. NIH and America’s health research programs have also been slashed. The content of the threat assessment was largely ignored. Now the supposed head of the White House Office of Pandemic Prevention and Response Policy has resigned after six months—and it turns out he was never appointed in the first place. The office is leaderless.

This isn’t a sideshow; it is not cutting waste and fraud. It is putting the lives of Americans at risk in the face of real and present dangers. If Trump does pull the US out of WHO, for example, as Gordon Brown notes, US officials—including those stationed abroad—will lose access to its global networks that collect information about infectious threats and respond to outbreaks. Already, with the H5NI bird flu the absence of adequate testing and reporting makes it impossible to know the extent of the threat.

“We have not even remotely maintained the level of pandemic preparedness—which needed a lot of work, as we saw from the Covid pandemic,” reports Angela Rasmussen, an American virologist at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada. “But now, we essentially have no pandemic preparedness.”

Trump’s ruinous policies extend to other elements of the polycrisis. His tax policies and wanton corruptions only exacerbate the obscene inequality that is corrupting our democracy. The preposterous “golden dome”—his recycled version of Reagan’s Star Wars fantasy—and his relish for a “mad man” theory of the presidency only add to the precariousness of a tripolar nuclear arms race that now includes China, a new generation of nuclear weapons, a collapse of virtually all arms control arrangements. This list can go on.

While cursing his supporters for fixating on the Epstein flip-flop, Trump claimed that “we are about to achieve more in six months than any other Administration has achieved in over 100 years.” And no question, in unleashing masked ICE thugs in warrantless raids on American streets, terrorizing government employees, larding tax cuts on the rich while taking food from children, fostering a new era of Gilded Age corruption, Trump has been an “impactful” president. What’s also clear after six months is that his policies are making Americans more vulnerable to real and present threats to our security, making people, as Rasmussen summarized, less safe, less healthy, and more dead.

In this moment of crisis, we need a unified, progressive opposition to Donald Trump. 

We’re starting to see one take shape in the streets and at ballot boxes across the country: from New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani’s campaign focused on affordability, to communities protecting their neighbors from ICE, to the senators opposing arms shipments to Israel. 

The Democratic Party has an urgent choice to make: Will it embrace a politics that is principled and popular, or will it continue to insist on losing elections with the out-of-touch elites and consultants that got us here? 

At The Nation, we know which side we’re on. Every day, we make the case for a more democratic and equal world by championing progressive leaders, lifting up movements fighting for justice, and exposing the oligarchs and corporations profiting at the expense of us all. Our independent journalism informs and empowers progressives across the country and helps bring this politics to new readers ready to join the fight.

We need your help to continue this work. Will you donate to support The Nation’s independent journalism? Every contribution goes to our award-winning reporting, analysis, and commentary. 

Thank you for helping us take on Trump and build the just society we know is possible. 

Sincerely, 

Bhaskar Sunkara 
President, The Nation

Robert L. Borosage



Robert L. Borosage is a leading progressive writer and activist.

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