Donald Trump didn’t hijack the Republican Party. He revealed it. He exposed what it had become beneath the surface: a movement hollowed out by cowardice, addicted to grievance, untethered from principle and hostile to the Constitution itself. What remains is something profoundly dangerous — a fusion of personality cult and corrupted religion, where loyalty to one man supersedes loyalty to law, truth or country.
The latest example is the campaign against Thomas Massie, who was defeated in Kentucky’s Republican primary last night.
Thomas Massie speaks after losing his primary race to Ed Gallrein (Photo credit: Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Thomas Massie is no liberal. He’s one of the most hardline conservative members of Congress, with a deeply libertarian-right record that includes opposing COVID relief spending, voting against gun-control legislation, opposing abortion rights and same-sex marriage protections, resisting foreign aid packages, and maintaining an A+ rating from the National Rifle Association.
What makes his clash with Trump significant is that even a Republican with impeccable conservative credentials became a target the moment he demanded transparency regarding the Epstein files, and refused to kneel before the emperor. For this act of independence, he became a target for destruction.
Think carefully about what this means.
A sitting Republican congressman can support tax cuts, deregulation, hardline immigration policies and nearly every item of conservative orthodoxy. None of it matters if he deviates from the cult’s central commandment: absolute obedience to Donald Trump.
This isn’t politics anymore. It’s submission.
The Republican Party once claimed to stand for constitutional government, checks and balances, moral responsibility and the rule of law. Today, it operates like a protection racket orbiting a single corrupt figure whose every appetite, delusion and impulse must be defended at all costs.
The degeneracy is total.
Donald Trump attempted to overturn an American election. He incited a mob against the United States Capitol. He praised the rioters who assaulted police officers as “patriots.”
He stole classified documents, and treated national security secrets like souvenirs from a casino gift shop. He’s turned the presidency into an engine of personal enrichment unlike anything seen in American history. The pardons, the grifts, the cryptocurrency schemes, the foreign money flowing through Trump-branded ventures, the open extortion of corporations terrified of political retaliation — it’s a carnival of corruption conducted in broad daylight.
And none of it matters to his followers.
Why?
Because cults don’t process evidence. They reject it. They reinterpret it as proof of persecution. Every indictment becomes martyrdom. Every scandal becomes a conspiracy. Every criticism becomes heresy.
This is where the religious element enters.
Trumpism isn’t Christianity. It’s corruption. It’s a political religion built around vengeance, celebrity worship and power. It demands faith without evidence, and obedience without conscience. The old religious warnings about golden calves, false idols and corrupt kings have been discarded by people who now literally compare Donald Trump to divinely appointed figures.
Case in point:
Trump’s longtime spiritual adviser Paula White-Cain has said that, “To say no to President Trump would be saying no to God.”
The spectacle is grotesque.
A man who embodies every vice once condemned from pulpits — greed, adultery, cruelty, dishonesty, vanity and malice — has been transformed into a sacred figure by millions of Americans who insist that they are defending morality.
The contradiction would be laughable if it weren’t so dangerous.
America was founded in explicit rejection of kings. The Constitution was written by men who understood the corruption that flows from concentrated power and blind loyalty to a single ruler. The framers feared mobs. They feared demagogues. They feared exactly this moment — the rise of a figure able to convince citizens that he alone embodied the nation and that opposition to him was treason.
Donald Trump has been immunized from accountability by fanaticism.
No scandal can penetrate it. No crime can weaken it. No humiliation can diminish it.
Imagine any other political figure surviving even one fraction of what Trump has done.
Imagine a Democratic president openly praising rioters who attacked police officers.
Imagine a Democratic president hoarding classified documents in a resort ballroom and bathroom.
Imagine a Democratic president demanding personal loyalty from law enforcement officials investigating him. The outrage would be volcanic and endless.
But Trump exists beyond standards because his movement has abolished standards.
The Republican Party no longer asks whether something is right or wrong. It asks only whether it benefits Donald Trump.
That’s the definition of moral collapse.
The tragedy isn’t merely political. It’s civic and spiritual. Tens of millions of Americans have been conditioned to reject every institution that constrains power: courts, journalism, universities, elections, intelligence agencies, and even the Constitution itself when it obstructs the desires of their leader.
This is how republics die.
Not always through tanks in the streets. Not always through dramatic coups. Sometimes they decay through surrender — through the slow abandonment of principle by frightened people who decide comfort matters more than courage.
The Republican Party once produced leaders who warned against demagogues and authoritarianism. Now it produces men and women who compete for the privilege of humiliating themselves before one.
The degradation is visible daily. Senators who know better. Governors who know better. Television personalities who know better. All of them acting as courtiers in the palace of a corrupt and deviant king — and every act of submission deepens the crisis.
Thomas Massie’s offense wasn’t ideological betrayal. It was independence.
In today’s Republican Party, independent thought itself is the crime.
That fact should terrify every American regardless of party because once a political movement abandons truth, accountability and constitutional restraint in favor of personal devotion, it ceases to be a democratic movement at all.
It really is depressing. What can you say to these people? The cruelty is the worst part... the dereliction of duty and honor. You just don't even want to be near them at all lest you become part of the problem and stand by while they feel justified.
This insanity has to stop.
I think Massie is going to become an even bigger pain for Trump
...he certainly will. He'll either win and piss Trump off, or throw the election to the Dems, which would piss him off even more... SAY ‘NO’ TO WAR! RESIST!
This best nails why MAGAts don't believe hard evidence against trump