The MeidasTouch Podcast
The MeidasTouch Podcast

Trump’s Health Crashes in Front Of World on Prime Time TV!!!!

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MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas discusses his opinion about Donald Trump’s health crisis being broadcast on prime time television as the world watched in horror his national address and his other behavi...

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Donald Trump's physical and mental deterioration that we've been covering her...

Midas Touch Network was on full display to the entire world on primetime as Donald Trump gave that disastrous address to the nation. You know, sometimes we forget that while we have a very big audience here, the biggest audience in the Midas Touch Network on YouTube and covering the news. There are some people who just don't watch the news and they may be watching their primetime shows

and Donald Trump interrupted their primetime shows to give this national address where it basically

seems that the United States and Israel are going to continue to escalate the unlawful war

in Iran or there's no sign of de-escalation. But I think Americans got to see the very

slurry, lethargic, the very kind of slow, deteriorating Donald Trump that we've been talking about. I know they've been a lot of friends of mine. Really even watch lots of political news are like, hey, did you see that? I mean, this guy is cognitively declining. This guy is like, rotting before our eyes. Like, what in the world? I said, I know we've been covering it here on the Midas Touch Network and I've been seeing lots of people calling for the 25th Amendment

to be invoked immediately. People like something's got to be done. That's the guy right now who's

making these calls who are putting our troops in harm's way, who's destroying our alliances. I mean, by the way, even people like Alex Jones, okay? They don't get much more kind of right-wing extremist than Alex Jones. He's out there now saying Donald Trump's got some major issues.

Here's what Alex Jones said. Let's play this clip.

Rankles swell up three times the size. They were before it. I mean, it's hard failure. And he does look sick. And he does babble and you don't sound like the brain's not doing too hot. And so we just cut made on Trump and we just mobilize against the Democrats. I mean, that guy was a Trump right. I mean, don't get much more Trump or than that guy right there. I mean, the day began yesterday with Donald Trump talking about the speech he was going to give

him. And he's like, I'm going to give a little speech. It's about how great I am here. Play this clip.

And tonight I'm making a little speech at nine o'clock. And basically I'm going to

I'm going to tell everybody how great I am. What a great job. What a phenomenal job. What a phenomenal job I've done. But seriously, if you, if you didn't have me, if you had some different type of a president, I mean, it's very strange behavior. And the people there laughing and encouraging that behavior. It's not good at all. So then he gives this speech. And I'm not going to do the whole speech again. I'm just going to pick out small portions like when Donald Trump is like, we've got the

cards around. We've got the cards. What cards do you have? They control the straight of our moves.

You're playing this clip. We have all the cards. They have none. It's very important that we keep

this conflict in perspective. And then the way he described the war was blowing up around the country to the stone ages. They're electrical grids. They're infrastructure. It's not saying the regime. He's saying we're going to blow up the country to the stone ages. As I've said, he sounds like the cartoon character, the corny bad guy cartoon characters I grew up with. You're playing this but we're going to hit them extremely hard over the next two to three weeks. We're going to bring

them back to the stone ages where they belong. I'm not going to show you much more of the speech, but earlier in the day, this is where Donald Trump was then kind of saying, we can't take care of daycare. We're a big country, big country. We're fighting wars. So we can't do daycare, Medicaid, Medicare, and all of these things. What do you think the purpose of what you're doing is to take billions of dollars to drop bombs and kill little girls in elementary school? Is that

what you think your job is? You're playing this clip. Because the United States can't take care of daycare. That has to be up to a state. We can't take care of daycare. We're a big country. We have 50 states where all these other people were fighting wars. We can't take care of daycare. You got to let a state take care of daycare and they should pay for it too. They should pay. They have to raise their taxes. But they should pay for it. We could lower our taxes a little bit

to them to make up, but it's not possible for us to take care of daycare. Medicaid, Medicare, all these individual things. They can do it on a state basis. You can't do it on a federal. We have to take care of one thing, military protection. We've got to do the military. We can dig in. He hasn't finished his sentences. I want to bring in Dr. Vingoop, the who leads mightest health. Dr. Goop, it's great to see. I mean, like you and I have been covering this

for a very long time from physical cognitive deterioration by just observing isn't sharing opinions.

I mean, you're a sharing your opinions as well.

that other portions in the country don't necessarily see all of this, although we have a very

big audience. And now lots of people are saying, whoa, I saw that speech. What did you make of the clips I shared in the speech in general, Dr. Goop? Yeah, Ben, you know, there was this sort of just building on our conversations over the last year. You know, I thought today, really brought into start who leave some of these topics we've been talking about. Again, no physical exam. We're taking the optics about what we're seeing, what we're hearing, and we're asking some questions,

but one, you know, some common takeaway is this, the juxtaposition of they were almost done theme with more strikes for coming that's confused to almost incoherent thought processes, not linear thinking, not consistent thinking. He's drifting in his words structure. He doesn't complete sentences as he pointed out. There is sort of a radical decision making. You know, I have my notes here. There are constant examples of inconsistencies in his thought. These just positions

of seemingly paradoxical policy positions, again, sort of things were wrapping up, but we're going to

bond them in his Stone Age. I think all of these, you know, in addition to the world's world-finding

difficulties, the fact that he can articulate basic words clearly does make one, again, ask, is he functioning cognitively? You know, is he fully there? Is he passing, you know, he talks often about passing basic cognitive assessments? That's one thing. You know, flexing that he's passing a basic cognitive assessment doesn't really mean much because you weren't supposed to be repeating those tests, you know, frequently. That doesn't really yield anything from a clinical standpoint

if you were repeating a basic cognitive assessment, you know, every month. That's not something that typically is warranted unless there's a reason first. But then, secondarily, we're clearly saying signs of cognitive decline. You know, these are not normal ways to give a speech, and just his thought process, his sentence structure, his abilities, or articulate a speech, just the

fundamentals of it, are all seemingly impaired. And I think if if anybody's just watching this sort

of politics aside, if you're just listening to the speech, and maybe not even looking at it optically on a TV, you'd be hard-pressed not to come to that decision. You know, especially we see it

later in the nine minutes, always there, but oftentimes any speech that's after, let's say five

PM East Coast, I know some people refer to that as like sun-downing, or, you know, I don't know if that's a medic, you know, necessarily a major story term, but there is, you know, this after five PM, six PM, the slurring really gets pronounced, the dosing off, you know, and then we see him at many times, even in after noon meetings fall asleep, and, you know, then the people around the mirror, he's bragging, "Oh, he just stays awake, he never goes to sleep." I'm like, "We see him sleeping

at meetings quite frequently." And when he gives a speech like that, low energies slurring,

and it gets worse that night, what do you make of that aspect? You know, so I think there is,

here's where I draw a distinction. I agree with everything you just said. I do think that as he is, whenever he is giving a public speech or a presentation in the evening, it doesn't appear to be that there is some sun-downing effect that it seems like he's just not as sharp and spray. Some would say, well, you know what, he's the oldest president in the office, and that comes with age, especially later in the evening. That typically happens as we age. They're not going to be as

vigorous in the later hours of the evening. We might slur our words fine. Somebody may suggest that you're just not as a spray cognitively in the evening hours. Let's take that at face value. Okay, but what we don't expect to happen, then what is not necessarily a sign of normal ageing, is a radical decision-making. This just a position, again, seemingly a paradoxical policy prescriptions, not completing sentences, journaling basic words, inconsistencies throughout. That is not necessarily

a function of age. And so whereas some people may say, "Sundowning is a function of somebody just getting older, not being the same," say it, "10am as they are at 8pm." Fine. From a medical standpoint, we can't expect that with age. We don't expect all the other traits spend. And that

is consistent now over the course of the first year of a second term, where these features of

all the speeches seem to be consistent. You can't get through a speech clearly. He has word-finding difficulties frequently. He can't pronunciate words that aren't complicated words often. And

He seemingly makes one statement that's pretty grandiose and erratic and then...

often, a sentence later. So that's not clear linear thought. And so anybody that was just again listening to the speech and the content of the speech of the reading it, there's just reading the thoughts. You'd have to draw to come to some version of a conclusion that something is not correct

from a cognitive standpoint and that there is evidence of decline. I think we just, you and I've

been talking about this honestly. I think we're asking the right questions. We're wondering why his doctors don't know that he got a CT instead of an MRI, whether putting out editorialized versions of this physical exam and saying he's the healthiest president ever. There's not transparency coming from his physician team. So we're asking questions. That is fair for us as part of the media ecosystem to ask questions and also to call out what's now obvious to all of us that there is

clear evidence of cognitive decline. You know then finally I want to get your reaction to the

statement that he made earlier yesterday about how because we're such a big nation and because we're such a wealthy nation we can't take care of daycare, we can't take care of Medicaid, Medicare, and all of these things because we have to take care of the military. That's exactly what he said

and what's your take on that deck? Really troublesome and I think consistent with the first

discussion here on his cognitive decline and just consistency of thought. I mean here are the facts for our audience. Medicare is a federally one program then created under the Social Security Act back in the Lyndon B. Johnson administration. It's funded primarily through payroll taxes and federal revenue. There's some basic structure nationwide. It's run entirely by the federal government. It is run entirely by the federal government. He is suggesting that states should take it over.

So that can just happen overnight. Medicaid is a federal state partnership but it's largely funded by the federal government. The combined set of programs, 1.5, 1.6 trillion dollars largely federally funded. That's under federal statute as well. This is not something again that states can just increase in state taxes and take this over tomorrow. Know that requires a significant overall of the tax structure that requires congressional approval, which is not easy to do. And

a whole redo of our basically health insurance ecosystem and infrastructure that is now federally

run. So this notion that the states put aside daycare for a second because we have a very sort of password approach to daycare across the country. Medicare Medicaid are formal programs run by the federal government largely and he is now saying that the states that these are now the responsibilities of states. That is a significant statement. And if he meant it, one wonders who is advising him or is he riffing? Does he know what he's actually talking about? Does he understand

the implications of what that statement that he made today, seemingly off the cuff, those implications?

Does he understand any of that? Because if you're a Democrat running in 2026, you should be running

on that statement that he wants to transition Medicaid and Medicare to state-based programs. And here's why this matter's been. If that's actually what he's saying in states are now, he wants states to run them. State taxes to somehow make up for federal taxes. Clearly, the wealth of your states are going to be able to provide greater benefits, greater health care. If this were to happen one day to their people, then non-wealthy states, if this is truly a state-based program,

so that means frankly, purple and red states are likely going to struggle a lot more giving basic health care to their Medicare and Medicaid recipients than blue states, which tend to be richer and frankly, a far more resource. And so this has enormous consequences. So just like he has

$200 billion dollars for three months of the Iran war, and that is clearly a priority. The fact that

he's saying this at free Democratic candidate, frankly, the American public should be paying attention to this statement. He's not interested in making Medicare and Medicaid as strong as possible. He wants states to take it over. That's fundamentally not what's in the statutory law today and two, there's no way states can actually do what he's suggesting that they can do well. It's not possible, and people will suffer if that actually would have come to pass one day.

Dr. Min Gupta, one more clip I just want to share before we go. There was just another moment during his speech that I know a lot of people are pointing to it to say, is he talking, saying, nuclear black belt, like what is he even talking about here? Just play this clip. The brilliance of the United States military. Tonight, every American can look forward to a day

When we are finally free from the wickedness of Iranian aggression and the sp...

black belt. Because of the actions we have taken, we are--

Yeah, I mean, he's trying to say blackmail. I mean, it's you know what he's trying to say,

but the words don't-- anyway, you've covered it all. We appreciate your Dr. Gupta as always.

Thanks for breaking it down. The things were also addressing that point where Trump says,

"We're such a big nation, we're so wealthy, we just need weapons and we can't do any of these programs."

Thanks for joining us, Dr. Min Gupta. Myadis Health, make sure you watch and listen to his

Myadis Health, that we release here on the Myadis Touch Network. His videos, his audio podcast,

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