Friday, March 20, 2026

Supreme Leader - The Politics of Being Loud

 


There are many ways to become famous.


You can invent something useful. You can lead a country with dignity. You can even write a book people finish. 

Nowadays, you can even be interviewed on a scripted podcast on YouTube.

 

But he chose to be a supreme leader.

One who proved that none of the above are strictly necessary.

 

He can say things with confidence without evidence or scientific backing.

 

Most people suffer from self-doubt.

But a supreme leader like him diagnoses self-doubt as a weakness and eliminates it entirely.

 

For him, facts are sometimes optional.

Expertise is used only for decorative purposes.

When he speaks, it often sounds like fake news.

 

He has an ability to speak with absolute certainty about things he clearly doesn’t understand.

Economics, climate science, geopolitics.

All reduced to the intellectual level of a late night WhatsApp forward.

 

He has bullied even those who voted for him to become a supreme leader.

 

Diplomacy is usually subtle, carefully worded, and strategic.

But he looked at centuries of statecraft and said, “What if I just insult everyone?”

 

Old leaders are always to be blamed.

Allies become liabilities.

Critics become enemies.

 

For a man in the highest office, he often sounds like he believes he is a god.

 

If his ego could be converted into electricity, he could power the planet.

Everything is the best, biggest, greatest.

Especially when it involves him.

 

Crowds are always massive (even when they aren’t).

Victories are always historic (even when they aren’t).

His mistakes are always someone else’s fault.

 

He doesn’t just have an ego.

He lives inside it like a luxury penthouse.

 

For most politicians, scandal is a crisis.

For him, it’s background noise.

 

Controversies, personal allegations, and questionable conduct pile up like unread emails.

And somehow, none of it sticks the way it should.

 

In another universe, any one of these episodes would end a career.

In his universe, it becomes content.

 

In recent news, there has been an uncomfortable chapter involving Jeffrey Epstein.

He and Epstein have been part of discussions only on social media.

 

Now, here is where we meet reality and have to slow down.

There is no verified evidence that he was involved in Epstein’s crimes.

 

But the association itself raises questions.

About judgment, about circles of power, and about how casually influence and morality can coexist in elite networks.

 

What makes him unique is not just what he says or does

It’s that everything feels like a performance.

 

For him, speeches are performing art.

Reality becomes negotiable.

Truth becomes flexible.

 

He doesn’t lead conversations.

He dominates them, distorts them, and often derails them completely.

 

And yet, somehow, millions watch. Some cheer. Some rage. Everyone reacts.

Because he understood something most politicians didn’t

Attention is power, even when it’s negative.

 

He is not just a politician.

He is part controversy machine, part cautionary tale.

 

A man who showed that in modern politics, you don’t always need wisdom, restraint, or even coherence.

 

Sometimes, all you need is:

• Absolute confidence

• Zero filters

• And an ego loud enough to drown out everything else

 

And in real wartime, things look different.

 

The Supreme Leader—Trump, who always looked strong. 

Now looks confused and helpless,

as if things are no longer in his control.

 

Iran, which he always presented as a major threat,

now feels more like a story he kept repeating.

 

Because in the real world, power is not about who speaks louder.

it’s about who actually controls the situation.

 

And here, he doesn’t look like the one in control.

 

In the end, Trump looks less like a mastermind

and more like a loud experiment.

 

Maybe that’s the truth of modern politics, 

You don’t have to be right. you just have to be loud enough, so people stop asking questions.

4 comments:

  1. O Tere !!!!!

    Sahi Hai !!!!! Sahi Hai .....

    ReplyDelete
  2. The world would be saner - and safer - once he is dead.

    ReplyDelete
  3. But, isn’t this actually the norm? It’s how the system runs, isnt it?
    Somebody says, world would be safer once he is dead… really?? There were 2 world wars before this one. His dead would make the world safer? 🤣

    Here’s how the system runs…. Put together in the simplest language….

    Out of ten people, maybe two genuinely deserve to be in power based on merit. One of them enters with the intent to bring change, but either ends up becoming like the rest or gets pushed out entirely (some get executed too). The other understands the game too well and chooses to stay out of it—preferring distance and his life.
    The outcome? Power lands in the hands of someone undeserving. And it’s not limited to politics—it’s everywhere. In law enforcement, in local power circles, in corporate offices, even within small housing societies. The pattern repeats itself.
    Those who hold power often seem almost destined to play that role.
    And the rest—the vast majority—are occupied with everyday life: earning a living, planning vacations, complaining about work, discussing the state of the country… maybe venting through a post or a blog—until something else grabs attention and the cycle continues. Wait till the next season of IPL goes live and see how much concern people would have…. About a particular player being so costly and shit. And even in this event, the smarter race will earn wealth and 99% will just end up wasting their time 😂

    ReplyDelete
  4. Got it, the sarcasm and the twist at the end, you are a phenomenal writer I must say!!

    ReplyDelete

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