To quote a legendary political ad: It’s morning again in America.
That is, the United States of President Donald Trump.
That patriotic 1984 slogan earned Ronald Reagan a second term, and Trump’s inaugural address (actually, much of his campaign) reflected Reagan, intentionally and coincidentally.
Trump spoke calmly as he criticized the Biden administration, attacked our enemies, and reminded us all of American power, supremacy, and exceptionalism.
‘America’s Golden Age Begins Right Now!’
Bam. What a spectacular opening sentence.
Is exactly What a tired population, defeated for years by a Democratic Party that feels nothing but contempt for this country, which so needs to listen.
The Donald Trump we saw on Monday is markedly different from the one who took office eight years ago. Even his critics would have to agree: Trump has matured and the 47th will be a very different president than the 45th.
The Donald Trump we saw on Monday is markedly different from the one who took office eight years ago. Even his critics would have to agree: Trump has matured and the 47th will be a very different president than the 45th.

To quote a legendary political ad: It’s morning again in America. That is, the United States of President Donald Trump. (Pictured: Melania Trump).
Just look at his tie, an intertwined blue and red that, from a distance, reads like purple.
In case we missed the message: “My proudest legacy,” Trump said, “will be as a peacemaker and a unifier.” That’s what I want to be.’
Take that, Barack Obama. Take that, Joe Biden, who sat humiliated like Trump blatantly but gently, told us he was here to fix everything Biden and the Democrats had broken.
Trump spoke of “an exciting new era of American success” and the return of “sunshine.”
In fact, the parallels with Reagan are surprising. As the so-called ‘Great Communicator,’ Trump defeated a one-term Democratic incumbent who led the nation into a backslide and a global recession.
Like Reagan, whose election guaranteed that Iran would return the American hostages it held for 444 days while his predecessor did little, Trump’s victory guaranteed that Hamas would accept a ceasefire and begin releasing hostages (three on Sunday, one day before Trump’s inauguration, showing Biden for the senile, cowardly mess that he is.
Yes, Joe Biden is Jimmy Carter: weak, irresponsible and responsible for America’s decline. The only difference is that Carter had real morals and ethics. Biden, fifteen minutes before leaving office, forgave his entire family.
Not that they are criminals, of course!
Goodbye to bad trash.
“Let’s make America great again” – that’s what Ronald Reagan said in 1980. Who would have thought that Donald J. Trump would be his political, philosophical and spiritual successor?
Not many presidents have been shot in an assassination attempt, survived, and won re-election, as Reagan and Trump did. Only Reagan and Trump have assumed their second terms in closed spaces.
Trump has clearly modeled this new version of himself on Reagan. That’s a good omen.
The “American carnage” and dark vision that animated Trump’s first inaugural address are no more.
In their place: optimism, patriotism, freedom of choice and expression, pride in hard work and no apology for well-earned wealth. A restoration of fundamental values and common sense.
Imagine that.
How satisfying, how deserved, to see Joe and Jill, Kamala and Doug, Bill and Hillary listen stone-faced as Trump calmly and swiftly attacked them and their ruinous, reckless policies.
He mentioned the hostages Biden rarely talked about and offered “prayers” for them and for peace in the Middle East.
He declared two genders, male and female, and promised to end the engineering of “race and gender into all aspects of public life.” To return “law and order to our cities.” Secure the border and designate cartels and gangs as terrorist organizations.
And, in a nod to JFK’s own inaugural promise to land a man on the moon, Trump intends to plant the American flag on Mars.

In case we missed the message: “My proudest legacy,” Trump said, “will be as a peacemaker and a unifier.” That’s what I want to be.’

Take that, Barack Obama. Take that, Joe Biden, who sat humiliated like Trump blatantly but gently, told us he was here to fix everything Biden and the Democrats had broken.
Sure, it’s wild, but so what? No one thought JFK’s dream would come true.
Speaking of which: How incredible to see the relative youth and brainpower literally behind Trump.
Tim Cook, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos and his vulgar girlfriend, Apple’s Lauren Sánchez, with exorbitant breasts: a true rebuke to the liberal gerontocracy seated, appropriately, to the left of Trump.
Our 47th president is prioritizing futurism, a new space age, and our greatest exports: technology, of course, but also innovation and creativity.
It will ensure that businesses, large and small, have the ability to thrive.
The shame of being an American no longer has a place here.
Make no mistake: The blizzard that died down on the eve of Trump’s inauguration, that bitter cold on the East Coast, was the last of America’s winter slumber.
His inauguration marks a thaw, and if you don’t believe me, look at the images of Jill Biden hugging Kamala Harris. Is there no peace that Trump cannot facilitate?
What a comeback for a president beset by legal warfare and impeachment, by a liberal media hell-bent on keeping him out of office, and a Republican Party that wanted him gone.
“I am proof,” Trump said, “that anything is never impossible to do in America.” The impossible is what we do best.’
For the next four years.