Saturday, November 9, 2024

Donald Trump last commandments.

As the night descended over Washington, D.C., the world held its breath, waiting for the dawn that would bring Donald Trump’s second inauguration. But as the day approached, a shocking announcement was broadcast across major networks and social media: Donald Trump had vanished.


Two weeks before the inauguration, after a controversial and hard-fought election, Trump began releasing cryptic messages from an undisclosed location, echoing through the digital realm with rebellious fervor. Using platforms like X (formerly Twitter), he began calling for a “new era” in American governance, pledging revolutionary changes that would “return America to its true roots.” Messages promised sweeping reforms that would abolish the Federal Reserve, cut political ties with large corporations, and expose corruption in American institutions. His words ignited an already tense atmosphere, fueled by a mixture of passion, distrust, and a thirst for transformation.

Supporters, growing in numbers and intensity, saw him as the herald of a new American renaissance. Opponents saw his words as a dangerous escalation, fearing he was turning democracy into a personal battleground. Trump’s messages grew more radical with each post, speaking to the disenfranchised and promising that they, not politicians or corporate elites, would hold power.

Days before the inauguration, Trump’s messages hinted at a “Day of Reckoning” where he would reveal evidence of widespread corruption and treason among America’s political and economic elite. But, on the eve of the inauguration, Trump’s transmissions stopped. Silence fell over his encrypted channels, leaving his followers with a final post: “Truth and Liberty shall reign once more.”

The country watched in shock as Vice President-elect took the stage on inauguration day, hoping to address the nation and provide clarity on Trump’s whereabouts. But as he began his speech, chaos erupted. Gunshots rang out from the crowd, and explosions rocked the Capitol steps. The Vice President-elect collapsed as panic swept over the spectators. In the midst of the fray, it was confirmed: Donald Trump had been assassinated.

The effect was instantaneous. America erupted in a state of confusion and rage, with supporters taking to the streets, demanding answers, believing that powerful enemies had silenced Trump’s vision for the country. Anti-establishment militias formed overnight, barricading towns and demanding independence from “the corrupt regime.” Conspiracy theories flooded social media, fanning the flames of division and mistrust. 

Political leaders struggled to maintain control, but city after city declared allegiance either to the revolutionary cause or the government. The federal government scrambled to restore order, deploying the National Guard and mobilizing all remaining loyal forces. 

As riots escalated to warfare, many wondered if Trump's disappearance and assassination were part of a greater, unseen plot. Had he indeed been silenced by hidden powers he had sworn to expose? The mysterious messages, now analyzed endlessly, became sacred texts for rebel forces. Trump's final words echoed in the hearts of his followers: “Truth and Liberty shall reign once more.”

As the battles raged on, a darker narrative began to settle over the fractured nation. For years, America had intervened in foreign lands, toppling governments, destabilizing societies, and leaving countless lives shattered in the pursuit of its own interests. This turmoil, some said, was the ultimate karma for a nation that had destroyed one country after another to satisfy its insatiable greed.

It was nature’s revenge for the cold words of Madeleine Albright, who deemed it "worth it" to sacrifice the lives of Iraqi children. It was the retribution for Hillary Clinton’s chilling triumph: "We came, we saw, he died." And it was the reckoning for using Ukraine as a proxy in a war with Russia, a conflict that had already left hundreds of thousands dead or maimed. America, at last, was reaping what it had sown for others.

Now, within its own borders, the nation was forced to confront the agony it had so often inflicted abroad. It was a reckoning not only of power but of conscience, a reminder that no nation can escape the consequences of its actions forever.

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