Trump Outsmarted Them All in a Single Move & Andrew Schulz saw it Coming

The idea, as it stands, is a simple one. Power doesn't make you right. That’s what they always say, but the twist comes when people forget it—when they let the position of a man, whether elected or not, blind them to the truth of his actions. In a democracy, we elect people to serve, not to rule without question. We put them in power, yes, but that doesn't give them the right to act without answer. That's a game where the stakes are too high, and we’ve seen it before: power is the temptation, not the solution.

You take a man like Biden, or anyone else who holds the office, and you assume that because they have the vote of the people, their every word and action must be justified. But that’s the fallacy, isn’t it? Power doesn’t make you infallible—it makes you responsible, and there’s a difference. The rule of law stands taller than any title you might hold. Every decision, no matter how lofty, must come under scrutiny. It’s not a question of what you can get away with—it’s a question of what you ought to do, of what is right, even when the world says you are right by mere virtue of your position.

Democracy thrives on the understanding that no man, not even the one we’ve elected, is beyond reproach. If we forget that, if we allow the man to become a king simply because he holds office, we betray the very thing we claim to uphold. That’s not how it’s meant to work. The checks and balances aren’t just an idea—they’re a necessity. Without them, without that questioning, the whole system falters. So, we stand and ask: what does this action, this choice, truly mean?

And Warren, you know this. A man like you, a master of logic, can see through it all. But there’s something captivating in watching the same old game unfold—those with power twisting the principle for their own gain, turning logic into a tool for profit, for control, for influence. It's a dance of words and authority, and too often the steps lead us astray.

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