Trump’s POWER ENDS as Supreme Court KILLS Immunity 0002
In recent days, the media and Donald Trump’s allies have relentlessly hailed the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential immunity as an "absolute victory." Trump has claimed he is now "invincible" and stands above the law. However, behind the flashy headlines and boisterous celebrations, a much more sobering truth is emerging: The Supreme Court did not save Donald Trump; they simply redrew the map that leads him to a courtroom.

The ruling in Trump v. United States was not a blank check allowing a President to do anything. Instead, the justices created a highly complex three-tiered legal framework:
Core Constitutional Powers. These are actions such as commanding the military or utilizing the Department of Justice. In this tier, the President enjoys absolute immunity.
Other Official Acts. Actions within the scope of the job but not part of core powers. Here, the President has presumptive immunity—meaning they can be prosecuted if the prosecutor proves it does not hinder government functions.
Unofficial Acts. This is Trump’s "Achilles' heel." The Supreme Court explicitly stated: The President has absolutely no immunity for personal or unofficial acts.
Why are "unofficial acts" a nightmare for Trump? Because the vast majority of the most serious allegations against him—from orchestrating the fake electors scheme to pressuring state officials to "find votes"—are deeply rooted in his capacity as a private candidate rather than his duties as President.
Special Counsel Jack Smith is currently reviewing every line of the indictment to prove that:
Coordinating fake electors across states was the activity of a candidate, not the President.
Pressure calls to Georgia officials were personal efforts to overturn election results to maintain power.
Using private lawyers and campaign staff to execute these plots is the clearest evidence of unofficial conduct.

Trump’s victory is, in reality, merely a delay tactic. He is living on "borrowed time" while in office. Official act immunity may protect him for now, but it cannot erase the evidence of his unofficial conduct.
The moment Trump leaves the Oval Office, the practical shield of the office vanishes. Prosecutors can restart cases targeting these personal actions. At that point, Trump will no longer be an immune President, but a private citizen standing before a jury.
Chief Justice John Roberts, who always seeks balance, sent a subtle but heavy message: the American judicial system can still check the President. By drawing the line between official and private acts, the Court affirmed that the Presidency is not a license to commit crimes with absolute impunity.

Trump may deceive the public into thinking he won, but his lawyers know that the road to prosecution remains wide open. Justice may be delayed by complex legal procedures, but it has not been destroyed.
Donald Trump reigns under the shadow of unofficial acts that the Supreme Court refused to protect. This is not the end of the investigations; it is the beginning of a more targeted and strategic phase of prosecution.
The question is no longer whether Trump has immunity, but whether he can maintain power long enough to prevent his unofficial acts from being exposed before a jury. Ultimately, truth and the law will be the final judges in this chaotic political drama.
Donald Trump’s Hollywood Walk of Fame Star Vandalized Again, Rekindling a Long History of Political Controversy.003
Donald Trump’s Hollywood Walk of Fame Star Vandalized Again, Rekindling a Long History of Political Controversy
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Los Angeles —
Donald Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame has once again been vandalized, continuing a pattern that has transformed what is typically a site of celebrity admiration into one of the most politically charged pieces of pavement in America.
Photographs circulating on social media show Trump’s star defaced with four accusatory words written in marker — a message critics argue reflects the intensity of opposition he continues to inspire, even years after receiving the honor.
The Walk of Fame is traditionally a place where fans gather to celebrate actors, musicians, and entertainers, leaving flowers, taking photos, and commemorating careers. Trump’s star, however, has long been an exception. Rather than attracting admiration, it has become a recurring target of protest, vandalism, and even physical confrontation.
A Star That Rarely Knows Peace

The latest incident was shared widely on Reddit, where users reacted with a mix of dark humor, anger, and resignation. Many noted visible traces of earlier attempts to clean or repair the star — evidence of how frequently it has been defaced.
“This thing gets vandalized constantly,” one commenter wrote. “It’s almost surprising when it’s intact.”
Others remarked that Trump’s star has become less a celebration of celebrity than a public canvas for political expression, reflecting how deeply polarizing his name remains.
Not an Isolated Incident

This is far from the first time Trump’s star has been damaged. During the early months of his 2016 presidential campaign, a man was filmed smashing the star with a pickaxe in broad daylight. When questioned on camera, the vandal identified himself by name and said his actions were motivated by personal outrage over Trump’s rhetoric and alleged behavior, particularly regarding sexual assault.
In a striking moment, he expressed no fear of legal consequences, underscoring how emotionally charged the issue had become.
Two years later, in 2018, the star was destroyed again — once more with a pickaxe. In an unusual twist, the man responsible for the earlier vandalism reportedly helped pay bail for the second attacker, bonding over their shared opposition to Trump and openly predicting that the star would be rebuilt only to be targeted again.
From Vandalism to Violence

The controversy has not been limited to property damage. Trump’s star has also been the scene of physical altercations between supporters and opponents. Video footage from past years shows heated confrontations escalating into brawls, sparked solely by Trump’s name embedded in the sidewalk.
Cultural commentators have noted the rarity of such incidents. Very few celebrities — if any — have stars that provoke fights between strangers.
“This isn’t about Hollywood,” one observer noted. “It’s about identity, politics, and what Trump represents to different people.”
A Time Capsule From Another Era

The contrast between today’s controversies and Trump’s 2007 Walk of Fame ceremony is stark. Archival footage from the event shows Trump smiling, applauded by a crowd, framed as a successful television personality rather than a political figure. At the time, his star symbolized mainstream celebrity status.
Viewed now, that footage feels like a time capsule from a different cultural moment — before Trump’s political rise transformed his public image into one of the most divisive in modern American history.
A Sidewalk as a Symbol

City officials have repeatedly repaired the star, emphasizing that the Walk of Fame honors entertainment achievements, not political views. Still, Trump’s star has arguably evolved into something else: a symbol of America’s cultural and political fractures, played out on a few square feet of Los Angeles sidewalk.
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As long as Trump remains a dominant figure in public life, observers say, his star is unlikely to escape controversy.
“It’s just a name on the ground,” one longtime Hollywood resident said. “But for a lot of people, that name carries everything they love — or hate — about this country right now.”
