Fighting Firing with Firing.

President Trump has begun purging his Cabinet again—an act that feels less like leadership and more like a loyalty test. The revolving door of dismissals has become a defining feature of his administration, a ritual of insecurity masquerading as strength. But there’s a constitutional countermeasure hiding in plain sight: the 25th Amendment.

If they can tear their heavily botoxed lips from Trumps rump, there is a way for these incompetent sycophantic Cabinet members to save their jobs.

When a president’s judgment becomes erratic, when governance turns into vendetta, the Cabinet isn’t powerless. Section 4 of the 25th Amendment gives them the authority to declare the president unable to discharge the powers and duties of the office. It’s the ultimate safeguard against chaos at the top.

Trump’s Cabinet members are watching colleagues fall one by one. They know that loyalty doesn’t protect them anymore, it only delays the inevitable. The irony is sharp: the very people being fired hold the power to fire back. If they act collectively, they can remove the source of instability instead of waiting to be the next target.

The Cabinet can invoke the 25th Amendment, transfer authority to the Vice President, and stabilize the government. It’s not rebellion; it’s self-preservation.

Cabinet members face a choice: endure humiliation or exercise courage. History rewards those who act when the nation teeters. If Trump insists on firing everyone around him, perhaps it’s time for those remaining to return the favor—lawfully, decisively, and in defense of the republic.

Unfortunately, the United States would still be led by a bunch of imbeciles at the top, but we would at least get rid of the absolute worst one, the Mango Moron.

Fight firing with firing. Fire Donald Trump.

Peace & Love, and all of the above,

Earl

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