Monday, August 11, 2025

Trump Promised a Big Beautiful Bill—He Forgot to Mention the Body Count

 

💥 Key Provisions Likely to Stir Backlash Among MAGA Supporters


First, a bit about Trump's behavior of telling vast exaggerations and lies. That is, a little background and color. Remember Trump saying his Professor Uncle taught the Ted Kaczynski (the Unabomber) at MIT? Check this out...

Jeffrey Epstein, during his brief stint teaching at the Dalton School in Manhattan in the 1970s, allegedly told students that a relative of his taught the Unabomber, and that Donald Trump later appropriated that story for himself.

🔍 The Epstein Connection

  • Epstein taught math and physics at the Dalton School from 1973–1975, despite lacking a college degree. He was hired by Donald Barr (father of AG William Barr).

  • Multiple former students have said Epstein was a storyteller and prone to exaggeration, often boasting about scientific connections and rubbing shoulders with intellectual elites.

  • There are unverified claims that Epstein told students or associates that a relative of his was connected to Kaczynski, but no public records or audio transcripts confirm this specifically.


🧠 The Trump Absorption Theory

  • Trump has long talked about his uncle, John G. Trump, an actual MIT professor who worked with the U.S. military on radar and X-rays.

  • As Trump spiraled deeper into self-mythologizing, especially after 2016, he began fabricating wilder claims about his uncle—eventually culminating in the false claim in 2025 that he taught the Unabomber.

  • Some theorists argue Trump may have heard Epstein’s anecdote—possibly secondhand or socially—and co-opted it, inserting his own uncle as the protagonist.

More nonsense: “...President Trump is the most transparent president we have had.” - Sen. Mullin (R) 
Trump (7/27/2025). However, Trump: 
  • Hid tax returns 
  • Obstructed Mueller 
  • Gutted FOIA 
  • Banned reporters 
  • Lied 30,000+ times 
  • Took classified docs 
  • Tried to overturn an election 
Transparent? More like radioactive.

1. Massive Medicaid and Rural Health Cuts

  • The bill slashes federal Medicaid spending by over $900 billion through work requirements, increased copays, eligibility tightening, and other barriers. Estimates show over 10–12 million Americans could lose health coverage by 2034 PBS+15Wikipedia+15Kiplinger+15Yahoo News+1Indiatimes+1.

  • Rural hospitals—where Trump performed strongly in 2024—are facing closures or service reductions due to payment cuts. Democrats are already placing billboards in red states warning voters: “If this hospital closes, blame Trump” The Guardian.

2. Sharp Cuts to SNAP/Food Assistance

  • SNAP benefits are reduced by about $186 billion between 2025–2034, and work mandates jump from 18 to 80 hours/month Kiplinger+4Wikipedia+4Yahoo News+4.

  • States with error rates above 6% now bear up to 75% of administrative costs, passing burdens onto low-income individuals Wikipedia+1Tax Talks+1.

3. Impact on Working-Class Families

  • Though there are new tax breaks like eliminating taxes on tips, overtime, and increasing child tax credits, these incentives are overshadowed by cuts to essential services. Many working families, especially those relying on Medicaid or SNAP, may end up worse off The White House+4Investopedia+4The Wall Street Journal+4.

4. Growing Budget Deficit and Economic Risks

  • The bill is projected to add anywhere from $3.3 trillion to $4.5 trillion to the federal deficit over the next decade, depending on estimates—including interest costs News.com.au+4MarketWatch+4Kiplinger+4.

  • Rising deficits can lead to higher interest rates or cuts to future entitlements, potentially affecting Social Security or Medicare—programs important to aging MAGA constituents WikipediaMarketWatch.

5. Reversal of Clean Energy Incentives

  • The bill phases out many of Biden-era incentives tied to wind, solar, EV credits, and methane regulation. This rollback may alienate blue-collar workers in clean‑energy fields or those living in transitioning regions Wikipedia.

6. Student Loan Caps That May Hurt Working Professionals

  • New annual and lifetime caps are imposed on graduate and professional school loans. Income‑driven repayment programs are restructured. Critics warn this may limit access to higher education for people pursuing jobs in fields like healthcare or trades Kiplinger.


⚖️ Why This May Undermine Trump’s Working‑Class Credibility

Many MAGA voters identify as economic populists, supporting Trump because they believe he champions the working class. But when the legislation delivers tax breaks that mostly benefit higher earners or corporations, while cutting programs that help the poor or vulnerable, that can feel like betrayal:

  • Analysts warn the bill could create "the largest upward transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich in American history" News.com.au+4The Wall Street Journal+4Kiplinger+4Wikipedia.

  • Public sentiment: A Wall Street Journal poll shows 52% of Americans oppose the bill, with only 42% in support. Even among Trump-friendly voters, concerns center on cuts to healthcare and nutrition assistance The Wall Street Journal.


🔍 Summary Table: Likely Flashpoints for MAGA Base Backlash

IssueWhy It Matters to MAGA Base
Medicaid & Rural CutsThreatens access to healthcare in red, working‑class communities
SNAP ReductionsImpacts food security for many working families
Deficit DebtRisk of inflation, future benefit cuts hurting retirees
Favoring WealthyUndermines message of economic populism
Clean Energy RollbacksMay hurt regional job markets or energy‑transition workers
Student‑Loan CapsCould limit upward mobility through trade/graduate education

🧭 What to Watch Next

  • Healthcare premiums rising, hospital closures, or rising food insecurity in rural and working-class areas.

  • Democratic messaging that ties these outcomes directly to Trump and Republican lawmakers.

  • Shifts in support among Blue-Collar, low- and middle-income Republican voters in swing districts ahead of 2026 midterms.


Compiled with aid of ChatGPT

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