DONALD TRUMP, DUE TO MENTAL ILLNESS, IS UNFIT TO BE U.S. PRESIDENT
As suspected, Donald Trump is of unsound mind, a man with multiple mental problems which have manifested themselves multiple times in the past and ever more frequently over the last 24 hours.
Trump is unfit for office. Have your eyes been opened to this yet?
Scott Ritter’s eyes certainly have.
If Donald Trump is not removed from office immediately through the 25th Amendment then there will have been a gross and unconscionable dereliction of duty at the top of government in the USA.
AI Overview
The 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1967, establishes the legal framework for presidential succession and procedures for handling a president’s inability to perform their duties.
Section 1: Succession: Addresses what happens if the president dies, resigns, or is removed, with the vice president taking office.
Section 2: Vice Presidential Vacancy: Details how a new vice president is chosen if the office becomes empty.
Section 3: Voluntary Transfer of Power: Allows the president to temporarily hand over power to the vice president. This is often used during medical procedures.
Section 4: Involuntary Removal: Outlines a process for removing a president deemed unable to serve, involving the vice president, Cabinet, and Congress. This section requires a two-thirds vote in both the House and Senate if the president contests the removal. As of 2026, Section 4 has not been successfully invoked.
The fact is that for all intents and purposes Donald Trump is insane. He has a mental condition that makes him unfit for any public office of the United States and particularly unfit to be president.
Donald Trump is clearly not of sound enough mind to be trusted with his duties as president as he clearly conceives of no restrictions to his powers, not even in regard to international law. This from his own lips as recently as yesterday.
AI Overview
In a significant interview with The New York Times (published/updated January 10, 2026) and in social media posts through January 12, 2026, Donald Trump has asserted that his own mind and morality are the ultimate arbiters of his power.
On His Own Mind and Authority
When asked specifically if there are any limits to his global power as commander-in-chief, Trump stated:
“My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me.”
He described his power as constrained only by his “own morality,” dismissing the idea that external legal frameworks are the primary check on his actions.
On International Law
Trump’s recent comments reflect a dismissive stance toward international legal standards following the U.S. military operation in Venezuela:
Direct Dismissal: He explicitly stated, “I don’t need international law.”
Subjective Definition: When pressed on whether his administration must still abide by international law, he conceded “I do,” but immediately qualified it by saying, “It depends what your definition of international law is”.
Sovereign Claims: On January 11 and 12, 2026, Trump posted a digitally altered image on Truth Social portraying himself as the “Acting President of Venezuela,” a move analysts describe as a “symbolic performance” with no basis in international law.
It should be clear from the above the kind of danger the world is facing from a man who considers himself completely unrestrained by international law, following only the vagaries of his own mind when making decisions and instigating action on the global stage.
Having what is essentially a madman as the chief executive of the most powerful nation on the planet should send shivers down every spine worldwide and confirm what Trump’s critics have been saying ever since his first presidency and long before.



