Analysis
‘The
president is unhinged’: Trump’s online behavior grows increasingly odd
Adam
Gabbatt
in New
York
The US
president’s recent behavior is strange to many, from reposting a false AI video
of himself to confusing comments during press conferences
Sun 5 Oct
2025 10.00 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/oct/05/trump-behavior-online-posts
To many
observers, both in the US and abroad, Donald Trump has been behaving strangely
recently. Especially online.
As a
government shutdown loomed in the US last week, the president posted an AI
video which depicted Hakeem Jeffries, the first Black House minority leader,
wearing a sombrero and exaggerated moustache, with mariachi music playing in
the background.
Hispanic
groups criticized Trump’s posts as “racist”, “dangerous” and “reprehensible”,
but Trump doubled down, posting a new video which showed himself wearing a
sombrero and playing the guitar behind a rendering of Jeffries.
It wasn’t
the only situation where Trump’s behavior has seemed unusual. Last weekend
Trump reposted to Truth Social an AI-generated fake video which promoted “med
bed hospitals”. Trump has reposted AI content before, but the difference was
that this video showed an AI version of himself speaking.
“Every
American will soon receive their own med bed card,” the AI rendering of Trump,
apparently seated in the Oval Office, said. “With it, you’ll have guaranteed
access to our new hospitals led by the top doctors in the nation, equipped with
the most advanced technology in the world.”
Setting
aside the fact that the idea of “med beds” is a rightwing conspiracy theory –
one version of the theory posits that the government and/or a group of wealthy
Americans have access to medical bed-like devices that can cure almost every
illness, but are withholding the technology – Trump’s post prompted a number of
questions.
Did
Trump, 79, believe that the video really showed him announcing med bed
hospitals? Does the president think he gave a speech about med beds at the
White House? Does he believe that his government is about to send “med bed
cards” to every US citizen?
The post
was ultimately deleted, but it remains baffling, and the White House’s response
did little to allay the confusion.
“I think
the president saw the video and posted it, and then took it down,” Karoline
Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said when asked about the video on
Wednesday.
“And he
has the right to do that. It’s his social media. He’s incredibly transparent,
as you all know. You hear from him directly on social media. He likes to share
memes, he likes to share videos, he likes to repost things that he sees other
people post on social media as well and I think it’s quite refreshing that we
have a president who is so open and honest.”
Leavitt’s
words did little to explain Trump’s thinking as to why he might have posted the
fake video. But, in truth, it was only the most recent example of increasingly
odd behavior from Trump, who has – like his predecessor Joe Biden – been
subject to questions over his mental acuity in recent months.
In a
recent speech at the White House where Trump claimed – against most existing
evidence – that Tylenol could contribute to autism if women take it during
pregnancy, Trump confusingly spoke of “certain elements of genius that can be
given to a baby”.
Announcing
that 13 grants would be awarded to investigate autism, Trump added: “They have
to move quickly. They, they – when the alternative is that nothing bad can
happen, let’s do it now. I was just saying to Bobby [health secretary Robert F
Kennedy Jr] and the group, let’s do it now. Nothing bad can happen, it can only
good happen.”
A week
earlier, during a press conference with British prime minister Keir Starmer,
Trump confused Albania with Armenia when discussing a peace deal struck between
Armenia and Azerbaijan – a mistake Trump also made during an appearance on Fox
News.
Back in
the social media world, on Sunday Trump wrote on Truth Social that he had “been
briefed” on a shooting at a Mormon church in Michigan which killed four people.
“The Trump Administration will keep the Public posted, as we always do,” Trump
wrote.
He did
indeed post again. But it was not an update on the still unfolding tragedy in
Michigan. Instead, three hours later, he shared a video which showed an array
of gold fixtures and fittings.
“Some of
the highest quality 24 Karat Gold used in the Oval Office and Cabinet Room of
the White House. Foreign Leaders, and everyone else, ‘freak out’ when they see
the quality and beauty. Best Oval Office ever, in terms of success and look!!!
President DJT,” he wrote.
He did
not comment again that day on the Michigan shooting, although he did complain
about the new NFL kickoff rule.
Setting
aside Trump’s confusing online behavior, the president’s in-person appearances
have also become odd.
On
Tuesday, Trump summoned the country’s top military commanders to a meeting in
Virginia. Addressing the top military brass, Trump, sounding drained, touted
his alleged successes and lauded the US bombing of an Iran nuclear facility –
something which may have violated international law – before saying:
“America
is respected again as a country. We were not respected with Biden. They looked
at him falling down stairs every day. Every day, the guy’s falling down
stairs.”
Trump
continued: “I said: ‘It’s not our president. We can’t have it.’ I’m very
careful, you know, when I walk downstairs for – like I’m on stairs, like these
stairs, I’m very – I walk very slowly. Nobody has to set a record, just try not
to fall because it doesn’t work out well. A few of our presidents have fallen
and it became a part of their legacy.
“We don’t
want that. Need to walk nice and easy. You not have – you don’t have to set any
record. Be cool, be cool when you walk down, but don’t, don’t bop down the
stairs. That’s the one thing with Obama, I had zero respect for him as a
president, but he would bop down those stairs, I’ve never seen – da da da da da
da, bop, bop, bop, he’d go down the stairs, wouldn’t hold on. I said, it’s
great, I don’t want to do it. I guess I could do it, but eventually bad things
are going to happen and it only takes once, but he did a lousy job as
president.”
In the
same speech, Trump claimed that cities including San Francisco, Chicago, New
York, Los Angeles are “very unsafe places and we’re going to straighten them
out one by one”. The president then casually mentioned that he had told Pete
Hegseth, the newly-annointed secretary of war, that “we should use some of
these dangerous cities as training grounds for our military”.
The
address prompted immediate concern, including from former military members.
Barry McCaffrey, a retired general, told MSNBC that Trump’s performance was
“one of the most bizarre, unsettling events I’ve ever encountered”.
“The
president sounded incoherent, exhausted, rabidly partisan, at times stupid,
meandering, couldn’t hold a thought together,” McCaffrey said.
Trump’s
speech was enough for Madeleine Dean, a Democratic congresswoman from
Pennsylvania, to confront the Republican House speaker, Mike Johnson, in
Washington on Wednesday, although Johnson appeared unconcerned.
“The
president is unhinged. He is unwell,” Dean told Johnson, in an encounter filmed
by journalists.
“Well a
lot of folks on your side are too,” Johnson responded.

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