He posted it without a single word. A 79-year-old president, a war with Iran on a knife’s edge, and then Frank Sinatra’s “My Way” – opening with “And now, the end is near.” Supporters insist it’s swagger. Critics see a chilling farewell. His aides call it strategy. Millions fear it’s a cry fo… Continues…
For years, Donald Trump has cultivated chaos as a political weapon, veering from threats of annihilation to sudden talk of peace, often within the same news cycle. Officials now admit much of this is improvised, not scripted strategy, yet some insist the unpredictability is intentional – a way to keep Iran, and the world, permanently off balance. T
hat’s why a wordless post of Sinatra’s “My Way” in the middle of a grinding conflict felt so unsettling. The lyrics sound like a man writing his own epitaph, boasting of a life lived on his terms, regrets too few to mention. To worried viewers, it raised specters of failing health, fatalism, or a leader prepared to drag a crisis to the brink simply to prove he’ll never bend.
Whether it was bravado, foreshadowing, or just nostalgia, the unease it stirred reveals a deeper truth: when a president’s inner state becomes a mystery, every cryptic gesture feels like a warning. READ MORE BELOW